I write
these words on the Friday we as Christians call Good. I write at the end of a week that has been
anything but good. Four funerals in five
days. A 90 year old woman. A 53 year old man. An 85 year old woman. A 19 year old. Funerals are never easy for me. I think that is probably the case for most of
us. It is really, really hard when someone
we know and someone we love dies. It is made
even more difficult when death come suddenly with little to no time to
prepare.
I wonder if that’s how it was for
those followers of Jesus as well. It all
happened so very quickly. The entry into
Jerusalem with the crowds of people gathered about singing their praises to
Jesus turned suddenly into a solemn and what must have been an awful situation with
Jesus’ arrest in the Garden, his rushed trial, and then his death the next
day. How do you move forward when life
changes so abruptly?
We know how the story turns
out. None of us are surprised to worship
on Easter and find out that Jesus is risen; the tomb is empty. The risen Jesus is a reminder that every one
of us needs. The empty tomb changes
everything!
God is in the business of bringing life from
death. It’s not just the physical death
at the end of our lives in which the resurrection matters. We all die hundreds of little deaths before
we take our last breath. And each time
we die, God is at work to raise us up as something new. The apostle Paul says that in Christ we
become a new creation; the old passes away (2 Corinthians 5.17, if you care to
look it up).
When I was a child, I had dreams of playing football,
or at least of coaching football. My
family had dreams of my being in the medical field. Then this happened
and that happened and along the way God tapped me on the shoulder and called me
to be a pastor. And then this happened:
that little boy died. He died. God raised him up again as a new creation
where I was a student at a college in Decorah, Iowa.
I went to college
with the hopes of making my parents proud.
I was going to be a doctor or perhaps a veterinarian. God again tapped me on the shoulder and
called me to be a pastor. A few years
later the college student died, and God raised him up as a seminary student in
St. Paul, MN.
About five years
later the seminary student died, and I was raised up again as an associate
pastor of a church in Westby, Wisconsin.
The old passed away.
Along the way the
solitary young man died and was raised up first as a husband and then as a
father. The Wisconsin pastor died whom God
raised up as a pastor in Caledonia.
At some day in
the future, I’m hoping it is the distant future, I will die again what this
world calls a physical death, and then, sure enough, God will raise me up yet
again to the life God has had in store for me all along.
God is in the
resurrection business. God brings new
life from death. God brings new life
from our physical deaths and from the thousands of deaths we all experience as
we live this life.
Easter changes everything. It does not take away the grief we feel and
we experience anytime someone close to us dies.
It does not change the grief we experience when some part of us dies and
God brings something new. It’s
hard. It’s painful. It does not mean
that we need to be happy. It is,
however, a promise that we hold to and that I invite you to embrace this
day. God is always at work to bring life
to you and to me.
May God’s promise
of resurrection life be yours today and every day.
FYI ....when you left Westby...a parting was just like you really did die...but it is with Great Excitement and Joy in my heart each time we meet ...sometimes in the strangest. Places ...
ReplyDeleteThank you, good words for this Holy Saturday.
ReplyDelete