John 20:1-9 · The Empty Tomb
Eyewitness News
John 20:1-9
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Country music star Kenny Chesney sings a song that contains this refrain,

Everybody wanna go to heaven; Hallelujah, let me hear you shout;
Everybody wanna go to heaven; But nobody wanna go now. (1)

Deep in our hearts we know it’s true. We talk about heaven, but regardless of how wonderful we have heard it described, most of us are not eager to make the journey.

We’re like the man who was sentenced to death. He was asked if he had any last requests. He said that he loved to sing and wanted to sing his favorite song one more time. He was asked what his favorite song was. He replied, “One Billion Bottles of Beer on the Wall.”

We don’t know how long it would take to sing all the choruses to “One Billion Bottles of Beer on the Wall,” but suffice it to say, he wasn’t eager to face death.

And that’s the way most of us are. And the question is, why? Isn’t the grave simply a passageway to eternity? Isn’t that which awaits us far superior to what we have now? Could it be that in spite of our protests to the contrary, we have a subtle fear down in our hearts that the Gospel is simply too good to be true?

Author Ron Mehl writes about a bridge in his home town of Portland, Oregon that goes nowhere. When the bridge was built back in the mid-1960s, it was designed to accommodate a freeway running east, but the freeway was never completed. “The result is an exit that drops off into empty space. You can see where the road was supposed to go. It juts out just a bit from the bridge structure, then it is cut off as though sliced by a giant knife. The entrance ramp permanently blocked, the exit now goes nowhere except into the waters of the Willamette River far below.” (1)

That’s how some people view the grave an exit off the freeway of life that goes nowhere. That is our fear but our hopes reside elsewhere. Deep in our hearts is the longing that the bridge of life has been completed. That life goes on. That those we have lost in this world will be reclaimed in the world beyond.

It’s like a story that pastor Edward Markquart tells about a young American author who had written a short story that was a masterpiece. Like so many young authors, he borrowed a plot from a more famous, older author. He borrowed this plot but wanted to improve it and change it. The young author was a realist, not a romantic at all like the older author. He took the plot of the older author and he wrote it more realistically, so he thought.

One day, the older author, a college professor, invited the younger author to come and read his new, revised story to him. The plot was this: It was a story of a son of a poor widow who lived in a village in Pennsylvania. One day, the young boy set out for New York to seek his fortune, and as he left home, his mother said to him: “Johnny, you are going to New York but I want you to remember one thing. If life ever really gets bad for you in the big city, I want you to know you can come home and there will always be a light on in our house for you. There will always be a light in the window of our house to remind you that you are always welcome home.” According to both versions of the story, Johnny went to New York and he had a very horrible experience. Life went from bad to worse, and the bottom dropped out and he ended up penniless and friendless. He finally remembered: “I’ll go home. There will be a light in the window for me.” But . . . in the new version of the story, the young man returned to his village in Pennsylvania and he came up over the crest of the hill, and his house was dark. There was no light in the window.

Slowly, the old professor rose quietly to his feet and spoke softly but firmly to the young author: “You put that light back into the window. I don’t like your story the way it is.” (2)

That is why we make our way to church on Easter Sunday to be reassured that the light still burns in the window. We come to this place to be reminded that Jesus really did rise from the grave and that, because he lives, we too shall live.

But how do we know? How do we know the resurrection is true? To answer this question author Kent Crockett points us to a more recent dramatic event.

On April 15, 1912 The RMS Titanic, the largest passenger steamship in the world at that time, sank in the Atlantic Ocean. The Titanic was on her maiden voyage from Southampton, England to New York City.

The Titanic was designed by some of the most experienced engineers of its time. These engineers used the most advanced technologies available to make it allegedly the safest ship ever built to that time. Many thought it to be virtually invincible. Thus the world was shocked with news of its sinking. Aboard the ship for her maiden voyage were many celebrities. Among them were Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet. Well, not really. But they certainly brought the tragedy to life on the silver screen. The sinking of the Titanic is one of the best-known events of the twentieth century.

But how do we know for sure that the Titanic really sank? Lillian Asplund, the last US survivor of the Titanic, and the last living person to remember its sinking, died in May 2006. Therefore, no one alive today can give us an eye witness account. So does that mean it never happened?

Of course not. Approximately 1,500 passengers drowned in the sea that terrible day, but 700 passengers survived. Those survivors were eyewitnesses to the accident and even though none of them are alive now, newspapers recorded their comments about what they saw. No one living today questions whether or not the Titanic sank because we have a record of the eyewitness reports.

NOW, HOW DO WE KNOW THAT JESUS ROSE FROM THE DEAD? HOW DO WE KNOW IT’S REAL? JUST LIKE WE KNOW ABOUT THE SINKING OF THE TITANIC, THROUGH EYEWITNESS REPORTS. There were people who were there. They saw him. They saw the nail prints in his hands and the mark of the sword in the side that was pierced. Their eyewitness testimonies have been preserved for us in Scripture.

The Apostle Peter was one of those eyewitnesses. We have his testimony in Acts 10. He was preaching in Caesarea to a Gentile audience at the home of Cornelius, a Roman army officer. Listen to his words: “You know the message God sent to the people of Israel, telling the good news of peace through Jesus Christ, who is Lord of all. You know what has happened throughout Judea, beginning in Galilee after the baptism that John preached how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and power, and how he went around doing good and healing all who were under the power of the devil, because God was with him. We are witnesses of everything he did in the country of the Jews and in Jerusalem. They killed him by hanging him on a tree, but God raised him from the dead on the third day and caused him to be seen. He was not seen by all the people, but by witnesses whom God had already chosen by us who ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead.”

Simon Peter was there! He was there in the courtyard when Jesus was falsely accused. He was there when they nailed Jesus to the ugly cross. He was there when the women went to the tomb and found it empty. He was there when Christ appeared after his resurrection to his disciples. He was there. The words from Acts are an eyewitness report. Paul tells us in I Corinthians 15:6-8 that there were 500 such eyewitness to Christ’s resurrection.

Eyewitness testimony just as convincing as the eyewitnesses to the sinking of the Titanic. No, these witnesses are even more convincing than those of the Titanic. Here’s the real proof. These eyewitnesses were so insistent that Jesus rose from the dead that they were willing to die rather than recant their testimony. When they were threatened with death and offered their release if they would deny Christ, they refused. And for that reason most of them died cruel deaths. Peter was crucified upside down. Paul was beheaded. Thomas was killed with a spear. James was executed with a sword. Phillip was crucified. (3)

It’s hard to dispute the testimony of an eyewitness, particularly one who will die rather than recant his testimony. And why would we want to dispute their testimony? ALL OF CREATION TESTIFIES TO THE WONDER OF THE RESURRECTION.

Pastor Billy D. Strayhorn tells about a visit he made to a woman whose husband had died and whose funeral he’d held about two months before.

It was one of those dark, drizzly days. Pastor Strayhorn wasn’t even sure if Emma was home. The house was dark and all closed up; all the blinds and curtains were drawn. He rang the doorbell, nothing. He knocked and then heard a quiet voice say, “I’ll be with you in a minute.”

Emma finally came to the door. As they walked down the hall to the living room, Strayhorn couldn’t help but notice the whole house was dark. It was all sealed up like a tomb. They sat down and went through all those first few minutes of formalities that you go through when you have guests. And then all of a sudden Emma burst out with a question for her pastor. “Is the resurrection real?” she asked.

Strayhorn answered, “Yes.”

She asked, “Well, how do you know?”

They talked about the passages of scripture that dealt with the resurrection. They talked about those where Jesus foretold his own death and gave us the promise of the resurrection. They talked about how they had to accept it on faith. It was all very Biblical and theologically correct.

Evidently, it was not enough. With a deep sigh Emma said, “I want a sign.”

Strayhorn told her the only sign he knew of was the empty tomb.

Emma said, “That’s not enough. I want more than that.”

As they talked, the rain had been coming down harder and harder. It had gotten even darker. The day seemed to match their moods. Strayhorn himself was depressed. He’d come to help and hadn’t done a very good job. Before he left, they prayed and he prayed for a sign for Emma. Something to ease her grief and to help her know the truth of the resurrection. As they walked down the hall, he felt sort of useless because he hadn’t been able to reach her.

When he opened the door, the first thing Pastor Strayhorn noticed was that it had stopped raining and the sun was starting to peek out of the clouds. The sky off in the east was still dark and stormy but the western sky was beginning to lighten up. About the same time that he heard the door close, he looked up. And he immediately turned around and rang the doorbell.

The door opened and he took Emma’s hand. He pulled her outside and pointed. They both stood there in stunned silence as they looked at one of the most beautiful rainbows either one of them had ever seen. It was a full horizon to horizon rainbow. The colors were brilliant. Emma started crying. And then she started laughing. She looked at her pastor and through her tears and laughter said, “He’s alive!!!” She gave him a hug and immediately ran inside and started opening curtains and blinds. (4)

I am glad that rainbow appeared in the sky for Emma, but really all of creation testifies to the resurrection. The rhythms of winter and springtime. The beauty of a sunset and the certainty of sunrise. You don’t have to be a poet or a painter to recognize that it is all too wondrous to have happened with no design. He’s alive! The birds returning from their winter homes and the tiny buds of the flowers that peek out from the earth so recently cold and lifeless testify to all who will listen, He’s alive. All of creation bears eyewitness testimony to the truth of Christ’s resurrection.

But there is one more eyewitness that we need to take into account. IT IS THE TESTIMONY OF THE HOLY SPIRIT WITHIN THE HEARTS OF THOSE WHO BELIEVE. Paul writes in Romans 8, “And if the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead is living in you, he who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies because of his Spirit who lives in you . . . The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are God’s children (11, 16).”

This is the ultimate witness to the truth of the resurrection the Holy Spirit of God alive within us. Years ago a songwriter named Alfred Ackley put it in a simple Gospel song that expressed it for many Christians, “You ask me how I know he lives? He lives within my heart.”

I love the way Pastor Rick Calhoun has put it. He writes, “The Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead was never meant to be proved but experienced. As a matter of fact it cannot be proved, as no one of us was there. We have to take the word of others who were. Those early witnesses were very passionate about their testimonies. Many were to be martyred in defense of their convictions. But ultimately the resurrection is to be experienced not proved. The most convincing evidence of the Resurrection of Christ is the transformation of the people who know Jesus and believe in Him. I decided long ago, the only proof of Easter I will ever need is memory. I remember what my life was like before I met the living Christ and I know what my life is now, as I share it with Him. I would not stand here and tell you I am always the man I should be. But thanks to the living Christ, I am not the man I used to be either. The risen Jesus Christ has made all the difference.” (5)

Christ living within us does make all the difference. And so we come this Easter Sunday to reaffirm what the Bible, creation and our own hearts tell us is true: Jesus Christ is alive!

Author Jim Moore tells about a woman who was a member of the choir in his church. One day she was diagnosed with a terminal illness. She lived only a few weeks after that. When he visited her in the hospital she told him that she wanted to be buried in her choir robe. She said, “I’ve heard that in heaven all God’s children have robes, and I want to take mine, just in case.” (7)

That’s how a saint of God faces death. With humor and anticipation with joy and expectation. The light still burns in the window. A bridge is completed between earth and eternity. Rather than singing with terror, “One billion bottles of beer on the wall, one billion bottles of beer,” we sing triumphantly, “I got a robe, you got a robe, All of God’s children got a robe; When I get to heaven Gonna put on my robe, I’m gonna shout all over God’s heaven . . .” He is alive!


1. Ron Mehl, Love Found a Way (Waterbrook, 1999), pp. 20-21.

2. http://www.sermonsfromseattle.com/easter_fountain.htm.

3. written by Jim Collins and Marty Dodson. http://www.lyricsyoulove.com/k/kenny_chesney/everybody_wants_to_go_to_heaven/

4. Thanks to pastor and author Kent Crockett for this illustration. http://www.kentcrockett.blogspot.com/.

5. http://www.epulpit.net/billy100.htm.

6. http://www.firstumcpueblo.org/php/see_sermon.php?sid=10295.

7. Mark Trotter, http://clergyresources.net/Trotter/Trotter%20Easter%20Sunday.htm.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Sermons Second Quarter 2011, by King Duncan