1 Corinthians 15:12-34 · The Resurrection of the Dead
But…!
1 Corinthians 15:19-26
Sermon
by Steven E. Albertin
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I think anyone who has tried to teach a class or make a presentation to a group has experienced something like this. You have a perfectly planned lesson. You have your presentation all worked out. Then as you begin, there is always this one student, this one participant, this one character in the audience who interrupts you and begs to differ with what you have to say.

"But pastor, what about this? What about that? I see things differently."

At first you may be pleased that there is actually someone who is paying attention and is giving what you have to say some thought, even if they beg to differ with you. But the interruptions persist. Their questions become an irritation. Suddenly what you thought you had under control is rapidly becoming chaos.

Likewise, many of us think we have Easter all figured out and everything is under our control. Then we miss the fact that this day is essentially a celebration of the unexpected, unnatural, and uncontrollable. Today is God's big but, God's great "nevertheless," "however," "on the other hand," "to the contrary notwithstanding" ... to a life we thought was well planned and under our control.

Isn't it interesting how most in this world prefer to call this day "Easter" and not "The Resurrection Of Our Lord"? You are not going to be able to go into the CVS/pharmacy and buy "Resurrection Of Our Lord Chocolate Rabbits." There are no "Resurrection Of Our Lord Sales" at JC Penney this week. The name "Easter" comes from a name used by the ancient nature religions to refer to the season of Spring. As a result, our society finds it easy to celebrate this day with eggs and bunnies and flowers, all those symbols of new life that everyone can understand. It doesn't matter if you are an orthodox Christian or a tree-hugging Wiccan, you get the picture. I heard a commercial in which a child asks his mother if the Easter Bunny comes down the chimney just like Santa Claus bringing gifts. And he wanted to know why a rabbit brings eggs. Wouldn't a chicken do that? He was all confused. Whatever the confusion that might be in the symbols and rituals of Easter, it is our rite of spring that celebrates the return of life and warmth after the death and cold of a long winter.

The fact that the Resurrection Of Our Lord is the only festival of the church year that is set by the cycle of nature (Easter always falls on the first Sunday after the first full moon on or after the vernal equinox) reinforces this tendency to understand this day as merely a commemoration of the larger cycle of nature and the change of seasons.

As complicated as that sounds, it makes good sense, since it means that Easter coincides with the greening of the earth. Christ is risen and the whole, natural world around us seems to come to life. Sap will be rising in the dormant trees and bushes. The crocus and daffodils will be peeping out of the soil and bringing the first colors to the brown, dead landscape. The lilies that adorn our sanctuaries with their fragrant smell remind us of the flowers and fragrances that soon will be filling the spring air. It seems like a natural connection between faith and the creative power of God.

It is also a misleading connection. Spring is a natural event. Its return every year is inexorable and irreversible. Buy a tulip bulb in fall and it looks dead. Well maybe it looks a little like an onion with its thin skin and scraggly roots. That's the way bulbs are. You know that all you need to do is plant them and wait for spring. When spring comes, sure enough, they will shove through the soil alive and burst with color. It seems like a miracle, however we know that it is a completely natural and inevitable process.

Resurrection is another matter! It is utterly unnatural. When someone dies and is put in the ground, that's it. We do not wait for the person to reappear next spring along with the daffodils and crocus. When someone dies, we say, "Good-bye" and go on with our lives trying to adjust to a life without someone you know will never return. As far as we know the only place spring happens in a cemetery is on the graves and not in them.

For much of the church's history there have been those who have tried to make the Christian faith less offensive by reinterpreting the resurrection of Christ to make it easier to swallow. Some ask, "Is it really necessary to believe that Easter took place to be a Christian?" After all, most Americans believe they will live on automatically after death. Out-of-body and near-death experiences certainly prove that. Why add the unnecessary baggage of belief that Christ was raised from the dead?

And that story of the empty tomb? Was that not just a symbol that the writers of the gospels made up to affirm the fact that love is stronger than hate and life stronger than death? Is it really necessary to believe in the bodily resurrection of our Lord? Is not resurrection impossible from the point of view of modern science? So is not the New Testament story of the empty tomb simply a symbol of the continuing spiritual presence of Jesus whom the disciples felt to be with them after he died? Surely that is just a pre-scientific belief that we can now discard as primitive and superstitious!

If it happened, fine. So this wonderful event happened in the distant past but it does not have anything to do with how we live our lives now. Maybe it assures us that when we die, we will go to heaven. But in as far as this world goes and how to survive in this dog-eat-dog world now, it is a nice thought but ultimately irrelevant.

Saint Paul in today's lesson has a different point of view. If Christ has not been raised from the dead, if we have only hoped in Christ and his body is still dead in the grave somewhere, then we ought to be pitied for being such naive fools. Then we are still stuck with our sin. Then we are doomed to the cemetery with no hope of life ever being anything else than dog-eat-dog, grab all you can, eat, drink, and be merry for tomorrow we die ... and that's it.

But ... and what a big but it is. It is God's big but, God's protest against this world as it is. It is God's way of reversing the inevitable: irreversible and inexorable. "But," says Paul, "in fact Christ has been raised from the dead!" The ironclad law of cause and effect, the ironclad law created by God himself, "that the wages of sin is death," has been broken and shattered by the resurrection of Christ. And as a result, the world is different. Now we can be the ones who raise our hands and ask those embarrassing questions of those who thought they ran the world. Now when the rest of the world assumes that you only go around once in the life so grab all you can, that you get what you pay for and there is mercy for no one, we can beg to differ. We can join Paul in declaring, "But ... Christ has been raised from the dead." A new kind of world has now begun!

I have had this article in my files for years. It comes from some USA Today article in the mid 1990s. It exemplifies so well the foolishness and absurdity of our resurrection faith to the modern world. The article was about the family of the Reverend Scott Willis, a Baptist minister in Chicago. In a freak accident with a truck on I-94, the Scott car exploded killing their six youngest children. The headline was "Still Thankful in a Sea of Sorrow: Family's Faith Unshaken By The Loss of Six Children." In the account, Willis and his wife testify to their abiding faith in Christ and the eternal hope that tempers their grief. Apparently this was confusing to the USA Today reporter, so she consulted a psychiatrist.

"Different people have different ways of dealing with grief," says Dorothy Starr, a psychiatrist who had not met with the Willises. But she expected they would have an angrier reaction at some point. "They may well be numbed, and it may take some time for it to sink in," Starr said. "I would still expect these people to have trouble, even with their incredible faith."

I found this whole article terribly condescending toward Christianity. On the other hand, maybe the reporter and her editors were genuinely puzzled by the phenomenon of vibrant Christian faith in the face of tragedy. It is after all, a form of deviant behavior. Perhaps it is admirable in some ways, but nonetheless deviant. It required explanation by an expert, and the relevant expert in a therapeutic/feel-good society is the psychiatrist. Enter Dr. Starr, who sympathetically explained that the Willises had not yet had time to understand what really happened. The inference was that their affirmations of Christian faith were a form of denial. Such denial disguised as faith is a common stage in the grieving process, and so forth.

However, the Willises spoke forthrightly about their grief and their loss. There was no evidence of denial. The sticking point with the USA Today people was that the Willises confidently confessed the great "but," the great "nonetheless," "however," "to the contrary notwithstanding." They had suffered a great tragedy, but they were confident of God's continuing love that triumphs over tragedy. It was that apparent confidence, combined with a readiness to forgive the truck driver who caused the accident, that USA Today thought needed to be explained by a psychiatrist. The "healthy" and "normal" reaction to what happened to them was anger and rage against the meaninglessness of the universe.

It is the Christian thing that poses the problem. I can just imagine the exchange in the newsroom.

"Yes, maybe it's true that the great majority of Americans go to church and sing songs like ‘Jesus Christ Is Risen Today,' but these Willis people actually seem to believe that stuff. It isn't real. Anyway, we can't go with a story that looks like it is pushing religion. We need to get a more impartial take on this. Better call Dr. Starr to give you something to put this in perspective. We frequently run across this kind of thing in the grieving process. They may well be numbed and it may take some time for that to sink in."

But ... and what a big but it is ... but not for the Willises, but not for you and me! We know precisely what Reverend Willis is talking about. Jesus lives! He is not to be found among the dead artifacts and dusty memories of history. He is alive! He is here now ready to greet you in the waters of the font and the bread and wine of the table in people like Reverend Willis and his wife ... and in the people gathered with you this morning.

You may have difficulty believing ... not just the resurrection of our Lord but how God can continue to love you in the midst of the mess that is your life. But you came here this morning because you knew that here you would once again hear that unnatural, unexpected but. You came longing to hear that this world and your life are not inexorably, irreversibly, and inevitably bound for death. And you were not disappointed. "But ... in fact Christ has been raised from the dead!"

There is only one way to respond to that good news. For the last six weeks we haven't been able to shout it, let alone say it. But ... because of God's big but, we can. Let us say it. Let us shout it: Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays in Lent and Easter: But!, by Steven E. Albertin