John 14:15-31 · Jesus Promises the Holy Spirit
Crowned With Victory
John 14:15-31
Sermon
by O. Garfield Beckstrand, II
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Easter is the greatest of all holidays. It is the greatest because it celebrates the most outstanding event which ever happened in this world. There has been nothing in all history which has been more significant, more meaningful to people than Christ’s victory over death. Today marks the birthday of our eternal hope. Today is the anniversary of the victory of the human soul over death. It was on that first Easter morning, when the angel calmly and briefly announced, "He is not here, he is risen," that human history and life’s meaning changed completely. The words Jesus spoke to his disciples only a few days earlier in the Upper Room were now stamped indelibly across every person’s life: "Because I live, you will live also."

Let us try to capture the feelings and thoughts of those first disciples prior to Easter morning. It is hard for us to imagine what it would be like to see our closest and truest friend seized as a criminal, condemned to death unjustly, and then nailed to a wooden cross. What chills must have flashed through their bodies as he called out from that cross, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" What lumps must have been in their throats as he cried out in agony, "I thirst." Then they heard, "It is finished," and saw his thorn-crowned head drop lifelessly upon his breast. Friends as well as enemies watched as they stabbed his side with a spear before removing that mangled body from the cross. They stood silently as his body was being carried to the tomb. They saw the enormous stone rolled against the opening. Then the soldiers sealed the tomb from light and air and placed the Roman Governor’s seal upon the entrance. Now Jesus of Nazareth was dead and buried. Their master and friend was gone. The curtain of death fell upon their hopes, dreams, and joys. They, like many people, mumbled to themselves through their tears as they dragged to their homes, "Why live? Life is only one big headache and heartache! Why not just give up, too? What meaning or value has life? Joys only end in nightmares." Then came the morning of the first day of a new week. Suddenly they discovered the sunrise that morning was more than a sunrise of another day. It was the sunrise of life’s eternal hope. Jesus, like all men before him, had died and was buried; but, unlike other men, he came back to life. They couldn’t believe their eyes. Jesus was alive - yes, alive! Christianity is a faith which centers upon the risen Lord, the victory of live over death. Let us look at a few aspects of the victory of Easter.

First, the Resurrection of Christ is not a myth, but a fact - the most amazing fact known to mankind. There is no single fact in our Christian faith which has greater proof both inside and outside of the church than the physical resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. People to this day have never been able to deny or disprove this amazing event. There is no other fact in the entire Christian faith which is more widely accepted than Christ’s Resurrection on that first Easter morning. When the disciples met to choose a successor to Judas, the basis for their choice was first of all - he had to be an eyewitness to the Resurrection. No second rate opinion or hearsay was accepted. He had to know from his own personal experience.

G. K. Chesterton, the English journalist, wrote: "If a dozen men tell me that they have climbed the Matterhorn, I am satisfied that the summit is accessible, though I may never get there myself." More than a dozen honest people testified they saw Jesus Christ alive after he was pronounced dead. We can do no better than to hear their testimony.

Let us ask: "Mary Magdalene, tell us your experience of the Resurrection." Mary answers, "I went to the tomb early in the morning on the first day of the week. We carried spices hoping the soldiers would let us into the tomb to anoint the body of our Lord, but the place was deserted. The stone was rolled away, and the tomb was empty. Believing that someone had stolen the body, I threw myself on the ground and wept. A man approached me and said, ‘Mary,’ and it was Jesus."

"John, you were one of those who was closest to Jesus, what do you say?" John answers, "We were frightened after the crucifixion so we hid ourselves in the Upper Room. I told the others about the tomb being empty, but we became all the more afraid. Suddenly, Jesus stood in our midst. We thought it was a ghost, coming through locked and barred doors. But he talked with us, ate with us, and gave us his blessing. We believed."

"Thomas, you are a practical man who doesn’t accept anything without proof, what do you say?" Thomas replies, "I wasn’t in the Upper Room when Jesus appeared the first time. I found it difficult to believe what the others told me. I was ashamed of myself as he asked me to touch his wounded feet, to feel his nail-pierced hands, and to see where the spear stabbed his side. It was Jesus, and I was ashamed."

We could go on and on, but the reports are all the same. "Jesus Christ came back to life and called us by name." Death did not destroy him. He became more wonderful than ever before. Easter not only confirmed Christ’s Resurrection, it gave new life to his disciples. The disciples died spiritually with him on Good Friday. They became simply walking corpses following his burial. But when Christ came back to life on Easter, something happened to them. Those confused, fear-stricken, heartbroken disciples were actually born again. Their weakness suddenly became their strength. Their despair turned into hope. Their doubt became fearless certainty. The change was so great that bystanders said, "They were born again." New life flowed through their bodies, minds and souls. Nothing, absolutely nothing, could shake their faith, destroy their courage, or dampen their enthusiasm. He who was dead was alive.

Peter wrote: "We have been born anew to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead" (1 Peter 1:3). The little band of trembling cowards became heroic witnesses and living examples of the Resurrection news. With their Lord returned to them, life became exciting and worth living again.

But the Resurrection of Christ not only gave new life to those first disciples. He also gives new life to us today. Several years ago a funeral director called me to a home where some young parents had just lost a little son. He said they were bitter, and it was impossible for him to make the necessary arrangements. When I arrived, the air was blue as they condemned God, mocked his church, and bad-mouthed those who believed. They called out every foul name in the book of verbal garbage, and by any human standards I was a fool to stay, an innocent victim of their uncontrollable rage. But God gives patience, and their words affected me no more than raindrops on a wet window. When they had unwound, I calmly said, "I have been in your shoes. I have known what it was to carry an only son for two hours in a hospital room and experience unforgettable closeness. The next time I was near our son, his lifeless body was wrapped and placed on the back seat of our car for a seven-hour drive home." Suddenly they began to listen. Then I told them about leaving his body at the snow-covered cemetery and about the next day when I stood with our son’s two pastor grandfathers before 1,200 people at the Christmas Eve service, praising and thanking God for the birth of Jesus Christ. I told them my heart was sad and lonely because something I had wanted more than anything else in the world had been taken from me. But I knew God had acted in love - love for our son and love for us. We can trust God in all things. The stricken parents listened to me. There was a dramatic moment as suddenly the risen Lord came to them in their loss and assured them: "Because I live, your child will live also."

That is the meaning of Easter. Life is only temporary. One day through the love of Christ we will be together again. While we are here, we are not to fuss or grumble, complain or act like spoiled children. Our life here is temporary. We are to do today the tasks he would have us do and thank him for the opportunity to proclaim his love. One day our life here will be over. Then we can enjoy the blessings he has in store for us. But while we are here, let us make our life count for God and for the welfare and betterment of all people. Let us remember that only a giving life is a happy life, and a giving life always has a happy ending.

The victory of Easter removes, then, all fear of death. Death in the eyes of God is his promotion from the trials of earthly life to the joys and blessedness of his eternal home. Easter gives us assurance that one day, in a realm free of pain and sorrow, heartache and affliction, tribulation and pain, we will enjoy a new life beyond our fondest dreams and dearest hopes.

Let me tell you a beautiful story which describes our Easter victory. When John Todd was six years old, his father and mother died and the children were divided among the relatives. John went to live with his aunt. He later became a minister. When his aunt was near death, she wrote him about her fear of death. Dr. Todd wrote his aunt and said: "Dear Auntie, it is now nearly 36 years since I, as a little boy of six, was left all alone in the world. I will never forget that day when I made the long journey to your house. I can still recall my disappointment when, instead of coming for me yourself, you sent your colored man Caesar to get me. I can still remember my tears and anxiety, as perched on your horse and clinging tightly to Caesar, I started for your house. Finally, I asked Caesar, ‘Do you think she will go to bed before we get there?’ ‘Oh, no,’ he answered, ‘she’ll stay up for you. When we get near the house, a candle will be burning in the window.’ After a long ride I saw the candle light in the distance. I remember you were waiting for me at the door. There was a fire in the hearth, a warm supper on the stove. After supper, you took me to my room, read me a story in your arms, and heard my prayers. Then you sat in the rocker until I went to sleep.

"Some day soon, dear Auntie, God will send for you to take you to a new home. Don’t fear the summons, the strange journey, the dark messenger of death. At the end of the road you will be safe in God’s love and care."

That is the Easter victory and the Easter message. "Because I live, you will live also." Lift up your heart, cast out your discouragements, get rid of your blues, throw away your doubts. Fight the good fight of faith. Let the song in your heart this day and every day be: "Alleluia, for the Lord God omnipotent reigns."

Our Father, we thank, you for this day,

for the joy that it brings and for the hope which it gives.

We praise you for the risen Lord.

As he revealed himself to his disciples of old,

we pray that he will reveal himself to us.

Go with us now as we leave this house of worship.

May we know and feel that we have been with you this day.

In the name of the risen Lord, we pray. Amen.

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Word From The Upper Room, The, by O. Garfield Beckstrand, II