Luke 20:27-40 · The Resurrection and Marriage
Easter In November
Luke 20:27-40
Sermon
by King Duncan
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In a cemetery in Ribbesford, England, this epitaph was found on the tombstone of one Anna Wallace: "The children of Israel wanted bread /And the Lord sent them manna,

Old clerk Wallace wanted a wife, And the Devil sent him Anna."

A widow wrote this epitaph in a Vermont cemetery:

"Sacred to the memory of /my husband John Barnes /who died January 3, 1803

His comely young widow, aged 23, has /many qualifications of a good wife, and /yearns to be comforted."

A woman wrote in to a Minnesota newspaper to tell of an unusual funeral she attended. A prominent woman in the community had died. Crowds of people filled the church for her memorial service. At one point in the service, the pastor planned to play a record of the classic song, "Wind Beneath My Wings." But the pastor's assistant accidentally placed the wrong record on the stereo. The song that came out instead was "Under the Boardwalk." (1)

An elderly mother, planning her funeral, told her pastor that she wanted to be cremated and her ashes scattered around Wal-Mart. "That way," she said, "I can count on my daughters visiting me twice a week." (2)

In 1942, one of Hollywood's greatest actors, Sir John Barrymore, died.

Actor Errol Flynn and a few of his friends held an Irish wake for Barrymore. Flynn and his friends got quite drunk at the wake. After Flynn left, director Raoul Walsh and actor Peter Lorre decided to pull a prank on Flynn. They "borrowed" Barrymore's body from the funeral home, drove it to Flynn's house, and sat it in a chair by his fireplace. When a drunken Flynn came home, he got the scare of his life. As he would say later, "I aged thirty years on the spot." The man he thought he'd just said goodbye to was sitting in his house. (3)

Pardon me for having a little fun with the very serious subject of death. But why should we reserve the best news humanity has ever received to one Sunday in the church year? Christ is alive! And because Christ lives, we shall live too.

Some Sadducees confronted Jesus. These were Jews who believed that death is the end of existence, that there is no resurrection. They posed what they thought was a trick question for Jesus: "The laws of Moses state that if a man dies without children, the man's brother shall marry the widow and their children will legally belong to the dead man, to carry on his name. We know of a family of seven brothers. The oldest married and then died without any children. His brother married the widow and he, too, died. Still no children. And so it went, one after the other, until each of the seven had married her and died, leaving no children. Finally the woman died also. Now here is our question: Whose wife will she be in the resurrection? For all of them were married to her!"

Jesus was not tricked. He knew these Sadducees did not even believe in the resurrection, but note his patient answer: "Marriage is for people here on earth," he said, "but when those who are counted worthy of being raised from the dead get to heaven, they do not marry. And they never die again; in these respects they are like angels, and are sons of God, for they are raised up in new life from the dead." (LB)

What a profound answer. Heaven is a place of the spirit. Marriage, on the other hand, is a physical relationship. We will recognize one another in the realm beyond the grave, we will be reunited with one another, but the issue of who is married to whom will not arise.

Then Jesus dealt with the Sadducees' real question--whether or not there is a resurrection. Jesus does not equivocate. He turns to the scriptures that all Jews hold dear for his authority: "Why, even the writings of Moses himself prove this," he said. "For when [Moses] describes how God appeared to him in the burning bush, he speaks of God as `the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.' To say that the Lord is some person's God means that person is alive, not dead! So from God's point of view," Jesus concludes, "all men are living."

Again, what a unique argument. The Old Testament actually says very little about life after death, but Jesus indicates that it is implied. If God is `the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob,' then Abraham, Isaac and Jacob must still be alive.

It is an argument which would not sway people who do not accept the authority of the Bible, but for the Sadducees, who did believe in the scriptures, it was a difficult argument to refute. In fact, some of the experts in the Jewish law who were standing there declared, "Well said, sir!" It was clear that Jesus had won the debate. Then Luke adds, "And that ended their questions, for they dared ask no more!" (v. 40)

We need to recognize that not everyone believes in life beyond the grave. You do not have to be a bad person, or even a stupid person to deny the truth of the resurrection.

Warren Buffett, a financial investment genius and the second-richest man in America, has his doubts about life beyond the grave, and it worries him. Buffett admits, "There is one thing I am scared of. I am afraid to die." His biographer Roger Lowenstein, writes: "Warren's exploits were always based on numbers, which he trusted above all else. In contrast, he did not subscribe to his family's religion. Even at a young age, he was too mathematical, and too logical, to make the leap of faith. He adopted his father's ethical underpinnings, but not his belief in an unseen divinity." And thus Warren Buffet, one of the most successful men in the world, is stricken with one terrifying fear--the fear of dying.

On a lighter note, Buffett once said, "What I want people to say when they pass my casket is, "Boy, was he old!" (4)

Buffett is not alone in his doubt and his fear. Even though the majority of people in this country--and even in the world--believe in God and believe in life after the grave, there has always been a minority who finds this too great a leap of faith to take. And the natural response to such doubt is fear.

As comedian Woody Allen has said, "Not very many people can whistle a tune and contemplate their own mortality." Not everyone believes in immortality. And some of these are the finest people you would ever want to meet.

A prominent minister once told about his father's death. His father had also been an outstanding clergyman. But on his death bed his father had confessed to his son that even though he fervently subscribed to all the rest of Jesus' teachings, in his heart he had never been able to trust in life beyond the grave. Maybe there is someone here today who finds themselves in the same boat.

The Sadducees were deeply religious people. They simply could not accept the proposition of life after death. Notice that Jesus does not make a big deal about this. He does not condemn them. He does not make them feel uncomfortable. He simply answers their question. Could it be that Jesus was more concerned about how people lived than how they died?

The Christian faith is about living, not dying. We need to understand that. It is about living confident, courageous lives here and now. Many Christians act as if the only thing that mattered is getting people into heaven. It is clear from Jesus' teachings that he was more interested in getting heaven into people. In fact, as we have noted before, most of the time when he talked about the kingdom of God--or the kingdom of heaven, the terms are interchangeable--he talked about a kingdom of this world--not of the next. "The kingdom of God is like a mustard seed, the kingdom of God is like a pearl of great price, the kingdom of God is like yeast which a woman put in bread, the kingdom of God is within you, you are not far from the kingdom of God . . ." Jesus said very little about the next world. He knew that if we took care of business in this world, then heaven would take care of itself.

Christian faith is about living. It is about loving God and loving people. It is about making sure that the entire world knows that Jesus Christ is Lord--that he is the way, the truth and the life. It is troubling when people are so fixated on the next world that they ignore their responsibilities in this one.

A story came out of China sometime back that was heartbreaking. Fifty-one peasant girls seeking a better position in life committed suicide in 15 separate group drownings in Jiangxi province, China. Many of the despairing teenagers dressed in their best clothes before jumping in order to present a good image to the gods of the other-world. They were hoping to be reincarnated as rich, sophisticated city women. (5)

Now we could dismiss this as a tragic distortion of a pagan belief, but there are many Christians who have no joy or vitality in their Christian faith. They are leading colorless, ineffective lives bound by legalism and senseless conformity, because their main concern is to please God so that they can get into heaven. As people used to say, "They are so heavenly-minded that they are no earthly good." We need to recognize that for those who are in Christ, heaven is a "given." Relax. You're in. Now let's get on with the more serious business of living in the world here and now.

Having said that, let me put your mind to rest on the central message of today's lesson from Luke's Gospel: the Gospel is unequivocal. Those who are joined with Christ will live with him in eternity.

Jesus Christ was victorious over the grave. And because he lives we too shall live.

A pastor was talking to a group of young people about the high cost of dying. "People today waste thousands of dollars on coffins and monuments," the pastor said. "Jesus was so unconcerned by His death that He had to use a borrowed tomb."

A teenager raised her hand and said, "But Jesus only needed it for three days." (6) Yes, he did, and that is good news for us who are his disciples.

Author Philip Yancey's wife, Janet, runs a program for senior citizens at a nursing home. One of the women who attends her weekly meetings is an Alzheimer's patient named Betsy. One day, Janet asked Betsy to read aloud the hymn, "The Old Rugged Cross."

Betsy read the first two lines:

"On a hill far away stands an old rugged cross, /the emblem of suffering and shame . . . "

Suddenly, Betsy stopped reading and began to cry. " can't go on! It's too sad," she explained.

Everyone stared in amazement. This was the first time in years that Betsy had communicated in an intelligible manner. Each time Betsy tried to read, she stopped at this second line and began to cry. Yet as the group broke up and Betsy headed back to her room, she began to sing in a clear voice. And as she came to the last, hope-filled lines of the hymn:

"So I'll cling to the old rugged cross "˜til my trophies at last I lay down.

I will cling to the old rugged cross and exchange it some day for a crown."

Betsy cried tears of joy. (7)

It's enough to make anyone cry tears of joy. It is the best good news in the world. For those who are in Christ, this world is only a prelude to a better world yet to come.


1. The Best of Bulletin Board (Kansas City: Pioneer Books, 1994), p. 145.

2. Joyful Noiseletter, 3-2000, p. 2, "The Lord's Laughter." Contributed by Dr. John Bardsley.

3. Bruce Nash & Allan Zullo. The Hollywood Walk of Shame (Kansas City: Andrews & McMeel, 1993), pp. 55-56.

4. Roger Lowenstein, Buffett: The Making of an American Capitalist, found in Thoughts of Chairman Buffett, compiled by Simon Reynolds (New York: HarperBusiness, 1998).

5. The Comedian Who Choked to . . . by the Editors of Fortean Times, Cader Books, New York, 1996, p. 57.

6. Joyful Noiseletter, 4/2001, p. 2, "The Lord's Laughter." Contributed by Dr. John Bardsley.

7. Philip Yancey. Reaching for the Invisible God (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing, 2000), pp. 286-287.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan