April 8 we celebrated the high holy day of Easter. The time when we celebrate the resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ. Unfortunately, this day's significance to the Christian faith is overshadowed by the commercialism we've come to know in painting eggs, giving all glory laud and honor to The Easter Bunny, and decorating baskets with green Easter grass. The scene is quite pretty and safe. And that's what the resurrection is not. It is not safe. When we talk about the resurrection, we are saying that God took an unjustly condemned man named Jesus who was killed for being merciful, good, and compassionate and brought him back to life. Often we equate familiarity with safety and so if I saw a once dead man walking around again I would say that that is an extraordinarily unfamiliar experience and, therefore, not safe- even dangerous. I am used to dead people staying dead. But God raises this Jesus and if God will do that to a dead man, then it becomes even scarier to think about what God will do with my life. The idea of God raising Jesus from the dead got me thinking: I know for certain that when God raised Jesus from the dead, it was God's way of thumbing His nose at the world. By its nature the world deals in the ways of death and it is most sobering to figure out that when we believe we are alive, we are actually dead. When we are busy hunting for approval from our friends, wallowing in our greed to fill God's vacancy in our hearts, and saturating our souls with temporary pleasures, we are indulging the ways of the world. And Jesus' own words illustrate that these death-filled cream puff pursuits can never undo the life we find in Jesus Christ: "For those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who lose their lfie for my sake will save it." Gain through loss. Hmmmm....

1 Comments:
Denny:
Yes, the frilliness of commercial Easter is annoying. As well, I think that as followers of Christ we should remember what a radical thing the resurrection was. There is no other singular moment like it in the history of existence!
My brother in law pointed out that others in the Bible were raised from the dead (e.g. Lazarus) and that, while this was an uncommon event (for sure!) that it was not anything near the resurrection of Christ. Others brought back from the dead were still mortal and died again (bummer!). However, Jesus' resurrection was in an incorruptible, immortal body that could not perish. Thus, he paved the way for our own resurrections and ultimate defeat over death.
Given this, I think that Christians need to live in the uncommon experience of being blessed with this saving grace. It was interesting to watch the documentary "Bonhoeffer". I was especially moved by his statements about the Christian journey, that we need to be committed to follow Christ even to death. This of course foreshadowed his own death by the Nazis. I'd like to think that I have that faith, but I know my own fears and weaknesses... That is what Jesus was willing to do for us, should we not also be willing to literally "take up the cross"?
Randy
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