Wednesday, April 3, 2024

Easter Thursday

Easter Thursday 2024 - (Slightly reworked from Easter Sunday)

Easter means many different things to many different people.  A sign of new life.  The defeat of darkness.  I like to help our school visitors to remember that the word Easter contains the word East.  We look to the East, to the rising Sun, to remember the Son who rises.   Or perhaps the word Easter is based on the pagan goddess Eostre (that’s what the 7th century historian Bede believed – although later scholars have debunked him).   It is therefore, perhaps, a celebration of the return of the sun, with all the fecundity of new life, celebrated through bunny rabbits and eggs.  What do you believe, I wonder?

It turns out that what we believe is a rather subjective thing.  And when beliefs clash, things can get pretty dicey, as we’ve seen horrifically in Gaza of late. What we believe about the death and resurrection of Jesus matters.  But in our incredible shrinking world, we are bombarded with competing truth claims. 

There are of course a whole range of views about the actual truth of the Resurrection.  Frankly, we cannot tackle the sceptics’ questions with anything other than the answer of faith.  We were not there, and all we have is the rather variable accounts of those who wrote about these events some decades later.  What matters most, to all followers of The Way, is NOT whether something HAPPENED, but that it HAPPENS, still, today.  In others words, all of the stories of Scripture have the power to speak into our lives, right here and right now.  There is truth within every story, whether or not it can be scientifically or historically proved.  The deep truth of each story happens to us, today, if we will open ourselves to it.

There is one historical fact on which we can rely – and that’s that the ancients who wrote our Scriptures were much less concerned about literal, historical truth than we tend to be.  They were much more concerned with the power of story – its inner power, its deeper truth, its potential to shape and direct our lives.  So when the Gospel writers tell us of the death of Jesus, they are pointing to a deeper truth…which is that God died.  This is a way of saying there is no situation which God cannot inhabit and embrace.  Even in death, God holds us, walks with us, along our human road.

But the Gospel writers are also warning us – that there are consequences to excluding Jesus from any community’s life.  By ignoring him, and his wisdom, we effectively shove Jesus out of our City, out of our society, out of our politics.  We abandon him to die on a lonely hill, outside the city.

The resurrection story, on the other hand, points us to the rejuvenating potential of all life, in and through God.  Even if we push him outside our City, God cannot be kept out.

St Paul used the example of a seed, pointing out that just as Jesus died and then rose, so a seed has to die in the soil before it is transformed into a mighty tree.  In doing so, Paul points us to an even deeper reality than the miracle of raising Jesus from the dead. 

Paul teaches us a truth that science has since proved to us: the fundamental truth that all matter in God’s universe is constantly in flux, constantly being reshaped and reformed and given new life.  Dust from the Big Bang coalesces into stars, from which new elements are then blasted out into space.  Those elements get formed into planets, and new suns, from which we and all life finally emerge.  

The even deeper truth of the Resurrection is that as the divine presence behind all the universe, God also transcends creation.  God calls us beyond creation, into a realm as yet undiscovered by science; the realm we call the kingdom of heaven.  The resurrection then, as the infamous David Jenkins, Bishop of Durham once said, is more than a ‘conjuring trick with bones’.  It points us to a deeper and more profound reality – the reality that the life God gives to the Universe never stops being created and recreated anew.  Out of all deaths comes new life.  Life goes on, constantly being reshaped and reborn, and even drawn into new realities, new realms, whatever Death tries to do.  And so with St Paul, we can indeed stick out tongues out at death, and cry ‘Where, O Death, is thy sting?  Where, O grave is thy victory?’. 

But what does this mean, for you, and for me?  It surely means that there is no situation in life, no state of mind, no great human conflict, no failure, no sin, no level of depression, no Gazan famine, no Russian invasion, no family-member’s death, which cannot be transformed by the power of the Kingdom of God.  The great myth and the mystery of God is alive, among us, constantly calling us to resurrection – to the reforming, and the transforming, of human-made misery into new life and new possibility.  

Can we imagine a world in which guns are melted down to make tractors?  Can we imagine a world in which we spend more on healthcare and research than on weapons? Can we imagine a world in which there are no poor among us?  Can we imagine a world in which the mighty and the corrupt are voted out of their seats, and the meek and humble take their place?  For those are precisely what the Bible imagines, when it uses the metaphor of the Kingdom of God.

This then is the deeper truth of the Resurrection – a truth that goes beyond the sceptical questions we might have about the fuzzy, competing biblical stories.  The resurrection shows us Creation, and re-creation, through God’s eternal eyes.  Indeed, the whole trajectory of Scripture is that all life, all creation, all re-creation and re-birth finds its culmination in the Divine energy at Creation’s heart, and in the person of Jesus Christ. 

For it is before him, as the closing chapters of the Bible declare, that one day every knee will bow.  Every tongue will confess that Jesus, the divine man, the God made human who finds his way back to eternity, and draws us with him into the as yet unseen realm of the Kingdom of heaven: HE is LORD, and rightly the source of our joy, when we declare….Alleluia...Christ is Risen!  He is risen indeed, Alleluia!


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