Matthew 28:1-10 · The Resurrection
He Presented Himself Alive
Matthew 28:1-10
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
Loading...

Robert Lewis Stephenson, on one of his voyages to the South Seas, told about a terrific storm that frightened all the passengers. One man finally went out on deck and watched the captain pace the bridge, calm and undisturbed. He came back to the cabin where the passengers were huddled together and said to them: “I have seen the captain’s face, and all is well.”

It was that kind of word that Mary Magdalene and the other Mary carried back to the disciples on that first Easter morning. How remarkable that, in a time when women were less than second—class citizens, the first people to whom Jesus’ resurrection was revealed were faithful and devout women.

The women went to the cemetery with no faith and no expectations yet, they were hardly there before they were met by an angel who responded immediately to their fear: “Do not be afraid, for I know that you seek Jesus who was crucified. He is not here! For He is risen as He said. Come, see the place where the Lord lay.”

It was from that experience of despair that had been transformed into hope that those women ran quickly with fear and great joy to carry the word to the disciples. But the presence of the angel was not enough. As the women ran wildly from the Garden, Jesus met them, saying, “Joy to you! And this introduces the title of the sermon today. The sentence comes from the Acts of the Apostles, chapter 1, verse 3: “He… presented Himself alive after his suffering by many infallible proofs.” Here we have the pivotal event in the Gospel story, for the story of Jesus does not end with his death. That story gets a new chapter with the resurrection. That’s the reason we refer to the book of Acts on this Easter day. The crucified Lord is risen and back in business! He presented himself alive.

I don’t know a more powerful line in the Bible, or in all literature for that matter: “He presented Himself alive.” Just let that truth tumble around in your mind.

He. . . presented Himself alive.

He... presented Himself alive.

He... presented Himself alive.

If we could appropriate today just a portion of that truth, it would transform our lives, and this Easter Sunday would be God’s great surprise of Joy! Let’s try. Even if we touch just the hem of this garment of magnificent truth, great healing and renewing will be ours. “He presented Himself alive.”

Three words I’m suggesting as the hinges on which this to life— giving meaning swings: Place, Presence, Promise.

I

First, place.

I begin here because the Gospel must always be kept down to earth. This was a concrete experience in a place — the Garden where Jesus had been buried in a borrowed tomb.

The women had come there in grief. Deeper than that, grief shrouded in despair. Their loved one was dead - and grief is the expressed pain of a broken heart. But there was added to that a numbing despair. Jesus had kindled in them the burning hope of a Messiah’s reign. They had begun to see him as the “Promised One.” They had forgotten, and had probably never understood his word in the first place. “Destroy this temple and it will be raised again in three days.”

So, it was in a place, Mary and Mary Magdalene’s place, that Jesus presented Himself alive.

I like the way Robert Luckock put it: “If I were to try to put the ‘Hallelujah’ of Easter into one sentence, it would be this way: To everything that we and all the circumstances of life and death have put, and can forever put into one side of the equation, God has shown that He is never less than equal on the other side.” (The Power of His Name. p.137).

Get the picture clearly. On this side – everything life and death pours out upon us, bringing us to this place, this time, this moment. On this side – “He presented Himself alive.”

Not long ago, I walked into the hospital room of one our members, Libby Burch. She fought valiantly in a raging battle with cancer. I’d seen her gritted teeth stubbornness, had watched her refuse to be emotionally beaten down by this energy-sucking attack on her body, had witnessed a beautiful woman refusing to be humiliated by this force that ravaged even her physical appearance. Today there was something different about her, subtle but distinctly different. “How are you?” I asked.

“I’m praying, and I want you to pray that Jesus will come soon and deliver me.” We did that together.

It wasn’t a surrender to despair; it was a yielding to certain hope, It was her ultimate commitment. For over a year she had fought a courageous battle, and lived the strength of her faith. And now, she had moved to another level of commitment. She prayed confidently and in hope. Her prayer was answered. Jesus “presented Himself alive.”

But not just in death —— at whatever place we are, Jesus presents Himself alive.

There was an article in Time Magazine some time ago about the problem of stress in today’s society. A University of Michigan researcher surveyed unemployed workers in the Detroit area. He talked one day with a hard-luck victim, who, way back in 1962, was laid off by the Studebaker Corporation when it was about to fold. Then he lost his job with a truck manufacturer that went under in the 1970’s. Recently, Chrysler had cut out his job. The researcher said, “By all accounts he should have been a basket case, yet he was one of the best adjusted people I know.”

When he was asked his secret, the man replied, “I’ve got a loving wife and go to church every Sunday.”

That’s the picture. I don’t know what church that man went to, and I suppose it doesn’t really matter. He’d found a place which helped him rise above the storms and misfortune of life. Win his place, Christ presented Himself alive.

Somebody once asked Mother Theresa what she would do if some great calamity were to come into her life. She said, “All I would need is a place to kneel for five minutes, then I would be all right.”

At whatever place we are, Jesus presents Himself alive.

And that brings us to the second hinge on which the Easter door of life-giving meaning swings: PRESENCE.

Note the movement of the story.

As Mary and Mary Magdelene arrived at the tomb, nature explodes to participate in this mighty act of God. A great earthquake announced the coming of an angel to roll back the stone that sealed the tomb.

Matthew describes the angel as removing the stone and sitting on it. I’d never noticed that in the Scripture before this week, and I think it expresses loads of meaning. In fact it gathers up the Easter story. I can just see the angel sitting there – a sly kind of grin on his face. Saying with that grin and sitting with that confident sitting – legs crossed on that huge stone. Where is ultimate power? What are you going to do now Pilate? What will be your response now?

Have you ever thought of it that way? Jesus didn’t need the stone removed to get out. He could have passed through that stone as he did the closed door later when he appeared to the disciples in the room where they had shut themselves up in fear and trembling, in deep despair. But God didn’t miss a trick, so he sent the angel to remove the stone not to let Jesus out, but to let the women in. The empty tomb was to be a vivid witness to all. So the angel invited the women to “come, see the place where the Lord lay.

Here we come to a pivotal element in the story. They commissioned the two Mary’s to go and tell the other disciples that the risen Jesus was going before them to Galilee. Don’t miss the big point here — the identification of the risen Lord as the Jesus with whom they had associated. This was a final confirmation that Jesus was indeed the Messiah, the Lord. And again, so that there would be no doubt, Jesus Himself appeared to the women. He presented Himself alive Look at verse 9: “And behold, Jesus met them and said, “Hail And they came up and took hold of his feet and worshiped him.”

II

PRESENCE!

Though certainly we don’t need to get into a hassle about proving the resurrection. This belief is central to the Christian faith. The fact is that a group of people were convinced that they had seen the risen Lord. “It resulted in a terrified band of fugitives becoming messengers, with total disregard for danger to themselves as they spread the gospel of the risen Jesus throughout the world. The significance of the empty tomb to the whole event is that it is not immortality without a body that we affirm, but the body resurrection of Jesus (Luke 24:39).

As Calvin reminds us in emphasizing the ascension, “Jesus took humanity to heaven as the guarantee that you and I can be there someday.” (Augsberger, Ibid., pp. 326 327)

We’ll come back to that in a moment, but let’s keep our focus: PRESENCE. Jesus presented himself alive. That’s what the resurrection is all about. Jesus is set loose in the world as the eternal Christ, not limited by time and space, set loose to be a very present help in every time of trouble.

Here is a moving illustration of it. I had had two or three counseling sessions with the young man. He had revealed some hidden corners of his life, had talked at length about his sin and failure, including an adulterous relationship, saying that he had prayed and confessed his sin to God. On this day I pressed him. “But have you repented? And have you received God’s forgiveness?”

“I’m not sure,” he said, with a bit of puzzlement on his face. That was the tell-tale sign that he hadn’t really repented - he hadn’t really received Christ’s forgiveness.

When I saw him again, a couple of weeks ago — early in our conversation, he insisted on telling me something special. I never will forget the look on his face as he told the story.

Remember your question to me about my repentance and receiving God’s forgiveness?!’ I nodded. A broad smile was on his face. “It happened. In the middle of the night as I sat alone in the darkness, it happened. Jesus came to me, and I knew it. I’d been reliving my sin and failure, feeling desperately sorry, and so pained at what I’d done. Then it was as though a great burden had been lifted. My morbid depression dissolved. I knew what had happened.”

He didn’t use Luke’s word in Acts, but he said the same thing: “Jesus presented Himself alive.”

Don’t miss that this Easter, because that’s the heart of it. There’s nothing, absolutely nothing that you need to face alone. There are no dark valleys of hopelessness and despair through which you have to travel by yourself; no mountains of difficulty and testing that you must climb alone and in your own strength. Jesus presented Himself alive. His presence can be yours.

III

Place, Presence, and now this third hinge on which the Easter door of life-giving meaning swings: PROMISE.

Return to our scripture lesson. Look at verse 7 the promise of the angel: “Then go quickly and tell his disciples that he has risen from the dead, and behold, he is going before you to Galilee; and there you will see him. Lo, I have told you.”

Now go to verse 10, Jesus’ confirmation of the Promise:

“Then Jesus said to “Do not be afraid; go and tell my brethren to go to Galilee, and there they will see me.” Ah, this could be the whole sermon, PROMISE. Jesus presented Himself alive “He is going before you.

The promise is compressed and capsulated in that marvelous word of Jesus in John’s Gospel when he was talking about his coming death and resurrection: “Because I live, you will live also.” (John 14: 19). The promise is life. There is nothing we need to make life full and abundant, joyful and packed with meaning that is not promised by Jesus.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Maxie Dunnam