Mark 16:1-20 · The Resurrection
The Marvelous Message of Easter
Mark 16:1-20, Matthew 28:1-10
Sermon
by Eric Ritz
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Some events in life are bigger than we are able to fully comprehend. We understand, but our understanding of the event continues to enlarge. No matter what we do, some of life''s events escape an adequate celebration. When I finished at Drew Theological Seminary, I thought that I should be able to find some way to celebrate that moment. Fifteen long years have now passed and I never could find a way to adequately celebrate how I felt graduating Magna Cum Laude with a Master''s of Divinity Degree. That''s the way it is with 50th wedding anniversaries. There is no way to really celebrate the love, the commitment, and the history that is wrapped up in that kind of marriage.

It''s that way with the birth of our children. We celebrate their birthdays every year, but somehow the celebration always falls short of our love for them, because we are called to love and discipline them 365 days a year--not just one day.

It is the same way with Easter. Easter, you see, is far too big for us to adequately celebrate. No matter what is specially planned, no one service of worship can fully capture the meaning and symbolism of the resurrection event. That is why Christianity cannot be limited to an occasional visit to the church house. It is a good start, but you need more for the journey of life.

In a few minutes, we will leave this beautiful sanctuary. The Word of God will have been spoken and sung. The lilies will have been taken home. The doors will be fastened, the perfume from the flowers will soon fade, the lights will be turned off, and your preacher and church staff will gladly breathe a sigh of relief that one more Easter will have been observed here at First Church.

But, no matter how many times we have gathered for this big event; no matter how often we have sung, "Christ the Lord is Risen Today," or respectfully listened to the gospel lesson, there is always the possibility that we will experience some disappointment when it is all over.

One year after a festive worship experience, a kind member of our church left the sanctuary through the door where I was shaking hands and said to me, "Pastor, it did not happen for me this year." And sometimes it doesn't--when we are honest about it. Sometimes we leave Easter Sunday morning feeling disappointed. Could it be that one of the reasons we leave disappointed is that we come looking for Christ with the wrong attitude and purpose?

Perhaps some have come to be entertained rather than to worship. Perhaps you have come today because you were forced to come. If you are disappointed with Easter, it might be the first sign you are beginning to hear God. You might be under "Holy Spirit Conviction."

If Christ is not in the new clothes, the hymns, the anthems, the flowers--then where is He? Yes, where is He? I believe He is where He has always wanted to be--in YOU, around YOU, through YOU. He wants to live through YOUR hands, YOUR feet, YOUR life, so YOU are real and can be the most wonderful, beautiful person YOU can be.

However, you are not the first person to become seemingly disappointed at Easter. When Mary Magdalene first arrives at the scene, she is still hurting from the tragedy of seeing her Lord crucified on an old rugged cross. To make matters worse, she is afraid that they have even stolen the body and further humiliated this man called Jesus from Nazareth.

However, in the midst of her biggest disappointment, an Angel of the Lord appears to Mary and tells her that Christ is not dead. He is ALIVE! Not only is He alive and well, but He is on His way to Galilee where His friends will see Him. The risen Christ has already started to meet the disciples in their own backyards. He is also willing to meet you in your backyard today. Your disappointment might be His appointment to transform your existence.

This morning I want to share with you four reasons why the message of Easter is marvelous.

First, the Easter message reveals to us that we no longer need to be paralyzed by fear.

As I thought about our text for today, it occurred to me that there is a striking parallel between the Christmas and Easter stories. On the night that Jesus was born, a group of shepherds were lounging around their campfire. The night was dark. Suddenly, they were overwhelmed by a brilliant light and then an angel of the Lord appeared. In those descriptive words of the New Testament, they were "so afraid." They weren't accustomed to seeing angels. It was the last thing they expected. But as they huddled together, the angel told them not to be afraid.

On Easter morning, Mary and her friend were huddled together outside the tomb, when suddenly an angel appeared. Like the shepherds, they were afraid. But the angel''s message was the same, "There is nothing to fear." You are looking for Jesus and He is not here. He has been raised from the dead even as He said He would be. If you are responding to the power of the resurrection with your life, you won''t be afraid. Stop being a victim of a Good Friday world and enjoy the victory of the Easter message.

Second, the Easter message teaches us as a faith community that God alone transforms awful realities into awesome opportunities.

There is a true story about a kindergarten teacher in a Christian school who was determining how much religious training her new students had. While talking with one little boy, to whom the story of Jesus was obviously brand new, she began relating the story of Jesus'' death on the cross. When she was asked what a cross was, the teacher picked up some sticks, fashioned them into a crude cross and then explained how Jesus was actually nailed to a cross and then died. With downcast eyes, the little boy quietly acknowledged, "Oh, that''s too bad." In her response, the teacher related how He rose again and came back to life. Then the little boy''s eyes got as big as saucers. He lit up and exclaimed, "Totally awesome." (1) Now, I have seven years of theological training but that is one of the greatest definitions of Easter that I have ever heard.

You see, ever since that first Easter morning, Satan can make lots of awful noise, but only Jesus has the awesome power.

Psychologists have discovered that the most immobilizing emotion is the fear of death. The great enemy that was spoken about in our Old Testament lesson this morning from Isaiah has been conquered and defeated by the Lord, Jesus Christ. That is why we sang the great Easter Hymn which declares:

The day of Resurrection! Earth, tells it out abroad
the Passover of gladness, the Passover of God
from death to life eternal, from earth unto the sky
our Christ has brought us over, with hymns of victory.

Jesus can always transform fear into faith. There is no need to be afraid of death, because Jesus Christ is your passport to heaven.

In the tradition of the ancient Russian Orthodox church, the day after Easter was devoted to telling jokes. Priests would join with people in unveiling their best jokes for one another. It was an interesting tradition of imitating the cosmic joke that God pulled on Satan in the Resurrection. Satan thought he won on Friday but God had the last laugh on Sunday. That is a marvelous and awesome perspective on life to have.

Third, Easter day makes a marvelous difference, because it declares that God''s truth always has the last move and word--not Satan''s lies.

Let me share an illustration here from my colleague, H. Stephen Shoemaker:

Remember, the secular prophets of the modern age, Freud and Marx, prophesied that "man come of age" had outgrown religion, but they are gone, and so is their modern age with its contempt for religion, and religion flourishes still. Chinese communism was determined to stamp out Christianity, and all notions of God. But the gospel grew in the underground and house churches kept the faith going until today there is a new springtime of faith in China. Eastern Europe suffered under communist oppression and suppression of religion for forty years. But now the wilderness experience has ended and a wall in Berlin has come down, because God''s truth can never be stopped or defeated. (2)

This truth is also reflected in our reflective moment of meditation that we printed and shared in the bulletin this morning by Donald Harvey Tippet: "If Easter means anything to modern man, it means that eternal truth is eternal. You may nail it to the tree, wrap it up in grave clothes, and seal it in a tomb; but truth crushed to earth shall rise again. Truth does not perish; it cannot be destroyed. It may be distorted; it has been silenced temporarily; it has been compelled to carry its own cross to Calvary''s brow . . . but with an inevitable certainty after every Black Friday dawns truth''s Easter morn."

One of the greatest upset victories in sports history occurred in the 1969 Super Bowl. The New York Jets of the upstart American Football League were scheduled to play the mighty Baltimore Colts. Almost every newspaper columnist and sportscaster was predicting the Colts to kick the wings off the Jets. However, Joe Namath predicted a victory. John Dockery, who was a member of the 1969 Jets team, shared this account: "It was late in the third quarter when I looked up at the scoreboard and a message flashed through my mind. We are going to win. Easter shares with us that Jesus won--not Satan." That is the reason we can shout and sing today. Yes, Easter morning reveals that God''s truth will always win in the battle against evil. The important question this morning that only you can answer is this: DOES IT LIVE IN YOU?

This is why Mary could now run to Jerusalem with the good news of God''s victory made known in the Resurrection of Jesus Christ. This is the TRUTH that can put some steel in your spine --some power in your footsteps.

Finally, the Easter message is marvelous because it is the key to living each day to the fullest.

How often we forget this side of the Easter story. A number of years ago, a story appeared in the newspapers which told of a young man who picked up a beautiful rock from a North Carolina stream bed and used it as his cabin''s door stop. A little while later, a skilled geologist was hiking in the area and stopped at the cabin for a glass of cold water. He immediately recognized the rock as a huge lump of gold. In fact, it proved to be the largest gold nugget ever found east of the Rocky Mountains. Like the man who failed to recognize gold when he held it in his hands, the disciples failed to recognize the true nature of our Lord after spending three full years with him. Jesus holds all the keys of life; He holds life and death, heaven and hell, the abundant life, the authentic life, all of them are in the hands of Christ. This is the most important truth that God has made known to man.

I once had the privilege of seeing an off-Broadway play in New York City titled, Closed Because of Death. In the play, history had ended. Everybody dies. The earth is barren. In the last act, the scene shifts to Heaven. Then God is depicted--sitting with a baby on His lap--staring off into the far horizon. Two angels fly by. One angel whispers to the other, "He isn''t going to start over again, is He? Doesn''t God ever learn?" The second angel declares, "That''s precisely the difference between God and us. God always sees a chance to start all over again."

We may not know what is beyond the grave--but we do know who is beyond the grave.

You can know today!

The next time you are facing an awful reality in your life--when there is nothing but fear in your soul, remember the marvelous difference that Easter can make in your life and how you can be grasped by the awesome power of the resurrection and its truth:

God has freed us from fear. We are not victims of life--but victors in life. Because Jesus holds the key, God always sees a chance to start over again!

This, I believe, is the marvelous message of Easter!

Amen and Amen.

Dynamic Preaching, The Ritz Collection, by Eric Ritz