Easter Sunday/April 12, 2020
In the name of Jesus. Amen.
In St Matthew’s version of the Resurrection of our Lord…the
first Easter morning began with an earthquake.
Now I’ve never been in one of those—thank heavens!—and we
don’t exactly live in an earthquake zone. But I bet at least some of you HAVE
experienced an earthquake, somewhere!
There’s a famous firsthand account of an earthquake written
by the great American author Mark Twain when he was visiting San Francisco in
October of 1865.
Twain writes: It
was just after noon, on a bright October day…[and] all was solitude and a Sabbath stillness.
As I turned the corner, around a frame house, there was a
great rattle and jar…[and then]there came a terrific shock; the ground seemed to
roll under me in waves, interrupted by a violent joggling up and down, and
there was a heavy grinding noise as of brick houses rubbing together….and as I
reeled about on the pavement trying to keep my footing, I saw…the entire front
of a tall four-story brick building on Third Street sprung outward like a door
and fell sprawling across the street, raising a great dust-like volume of
smoke!
And [then]…every door, of every house, as far as the eye
could reach, was vomiting a stream of human beings; and…there was a massed
multitude of people stretching in endless procession down every street my
position commanded. Never was a solemn solitude turned into teeming life
quicker. [1]
I especially like that last line of Mark Twain’s
account: Never was a solemn solitude
turned into teeming life quicker.
Well Mr. Twain, maybe there was another time when that
happened—when a “solemn solitude turned into teeming life!”
It happened at a garden tomb, just outside Jerusalem, on the
first Easter morning. Soldiers were snoozing
by a carefully-sealed grave. Those guards
had been posted there by the Roman Governor Pontius Pilate in order to thwart anyone
outside Jesus’ grave from trying to break into Jesus’ grave.
But what those Roman soldiers failed to realize was that the
biggest danger they faced wasn’t any grave robber on the outside trying
to get in.
No, the biggest danger was the Grave-Robber who was already inside
that sealed-up tomb!
This Grave-Robber had for three days been
dead-as-a-doornail.
But he didn’t stay dead!
God saw to that! Jesus—having
experienced the “extreme makeover” of death—came back to “rob the grave,” to
deprive death from ever again having the power it once enjoyed!
And that event, that world-turning, ground-pounding event
could only be accompanied by an earthquake--measuring over 10 on the Richter
Scale (a scientific scale, mind you, that only goes up to 9!)
When Jesus arose, the earth shook because death was
losing its grip on us, once and for all.
But that’s not all:
because that Easter morning earthquake was itself an aftershock of an
earlier earthquake—described only in Matthew’s gospel.
The Easter morning earthquake was a reverberation of the
Good Friday earthquake—a cataclysm that struck the moment God’s Son breathed
his last. Then, too, the ground
rumbled—powerfully enough, Matthew tells us, to “wake the dead!” (Mt. 27:51-53)
When Jesus died, the earth shook because sin and the
devil were being displaced—set aside—defeated for good.
Two earthquakes within three days—and here’s the
kicker: Unlike every other earthquake
this old world has ever known, the after-shocks from these two quakes have yet
to end.
The after-shocks of Jesus death and resurrection are still
rolling across the landscape of human history.
The tremors are still being experienced by ordinary persons like you and
me.
Even in this week when another world-turning event has been
unfolding….when a global coronavirus pandemic has stricken over 1.5 million
human beings, killing over 100,000 of them, while terrifying everyone else.
Even during this awful time we’re experiencing here on
planet earth….the reverberations of the first Good Friday and Easter Sunday
earthquakes have not faded away.
- For
whenever Jesus’ saving death sets one more sinner free—the earth continues
to roll beneath our feet.
- And
whenever someone finally “gets it” that the Devil’s reign of terror is
over—a seismograph needle bounces wildly!
- And whenever
Jesus’ grave-robbing resurrection frees up some sufferer to laugh in the
face of death—the earth keeps rumbling beneath us.
- And whenever
we make our own way to a cemetery to bury a loved one—whenever we stare
down into that black hole in the ground and shout the Apostles Creed into
that fierce darkness—another aftershock of Easter rearranges our whole
landscape!
It’s happening right here.
Jesus the Risen One is among us even now. Can you detect the aftershocks of his
death-defying love?
And can you feel your own knees knocking—as the same God who
raised up his Crucified Son, is resurrecting you into new life, boundless hope,
and undefeatable love?
In the name of Jesus.
Amen.
[1] Excerpted
from Mark Twain's book, Roughing It
(Hartford: American Publishing Company,
1872). Accessed on 4/8/2020 at https://projects.eri.ucsb.edu/understanding/accounts/twain.html
No comments:
Post a Comment