Saturday, April 25, 2020

Rise Up: Easter


Easter Sunday
April 12, 2020
Colossians 3:1-4; Matthew 28:1-10

            In reading our Easter Scriptures, I was struck by the movement in them, especially the vertical movement. At dawn, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary went to the tomb. There was a great earthquake. An angel of the Lord descended from heaven, rolled back the stone, and sat on it. His movement was over, but he was not done talking about movement. He tells the women, “Do not be afraid. I know you’re looking for Jesus who was crucified. He is not here. He has been raised. Go quickly and tell the disciples, ‘He has been raised from the dead.’” The angel descended [downward movement]. Jesus rose up [upward movement]. And then in Colossians, we also rise up [upward movement]. It says, “We have been raised with Christ.”[1] And so, our movement is also upward, rising up.
‘Rise up’ is our theme this Easter season. I chose it back last August at that worship planning retreat I went to in Oklahoma, (which you’re either tired of hearing about or glad it was money well spent!) and I think it’s still appropriate even as we enter an Easter season like no other. It especially begs the question, how do we rise up when our physical movements are restricted? What does it look like to rise up during a season of physical distancing? Well, there’s a song by contemporary Christian artist Lauren Daigle called “Still Rolling Stones.”[2] The first verse begins: “Out of the shadows/ Bound for the gallows/ A dead man walking/ Till love came calling/ Rise up (rise up)/ Rise up (rise up)/ Six feet under/ I thought it was over/ An answer to prayer/ The voice of a Savior/ Rise up (rise up)/ Rise up (rise up). And the refrain goes: “All at once I came alive/ This beating heart, these open eyes/ The grave let go/ The darkness should have known/ (You're still rolling rolling, you're still rolling rolling oh)/ You're still rolling stones/ (You're still rolling rolling oh)/ You're still rolling stones.”
Now, I recognize it’s a mixed metaphor, which can complicate things a little bit. Rolling stones roll horizontally, maybe even downwardly, but certainly not upwardly. Yet those rolling stones only get rolling because they rise up out of the grave. The bridge of the song, towards the end, says: “I thought that I was too far gone/ For everything I've done wrong/ Yeah, I'm the one who dug this grave/ But You called my name/ You called my name.” And then returns to the refrain: “All at once I came alive/ This beating heart, these open eyes/ The grave let go/ The darkness should have known/ (You're still rolling rolling, you're still rolling rolling oh)/ You're still rolling stones.” The stones are buried six feet under in the ground. They’re as good as dead and its their own fault. Yet Jesus calls our name. Jesus calls us by name to rise up! It’s the same thing he told his friend, Lazarus, after Lazarus had died. He went to the edge of the tomb and called for Lazarus to rise up and come out! Jesus is still calling for us to rise up! We are still rolling stones. Even in our homes, even physically distancing ourselves from each other, we are still raised with Christ. We are still Easter people. So, how do we move and roll and rise up now?
Well, we move horizontally and reach out to our neighbor and those in need. This was the last commandment Jesus gave his disciples at the Last Supper. It’s actually why Maundy Thursday is called Maundy Thursday; in Latin the word ‘Maundy’ is a variation of the word for ‘commandment.’ In John’s version of the last supper, Jesus tells his disciples, “I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another.”[3] I know many of you are already reaching out to your neighbor, sharing food, checking in on each other, driving by. Several of you have asked about ways to help those who are in need. As a church we’ve given grocery gift cards to the Judy Center in Columbia. Individually, I know many of you have been helping in other ways as well. If you’re interested, give me a call or call Gayle Carter, our Outreach Coordinator.
Second, we also move vertically and reach up to God. Our Lenten theme was about reconnecting with God, and I pray many of you were able to take the time to draw closer to God. If you did, I encourage you to continue in the practices that drew you closer so that you can stay reconnected. If you didn’t, then there’s no time like the present to start strengthening your connection to God. Set aside time to pray and read your bible every day. Journal and reflect on what you read. Make sure your prayers aren’t all requests but also include prayers of gratitude, praise, and confession. Regularly gather for worship. Find ways to serve your neighbor and love them just as Jesus does. Talk about Jesus with your family and friends. And find ways to give that meet the needs around you. As Christians we reach out to our neighbor not because it’s a good thing to do but because it’s what Jesus asks us to do. Doing what Jesus asks of us helps to strengthen our relationship with him.
Finally, we rise up as God’s people, as Easter people, as people of hope and faith and love. We don’t play games with other people’s lives. When it’s within our power to help, we help. Colossians 3:2 says, “Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth.” That means we let partisanship die. It means we are quick to listen, and slow to anger. It means we seek to understand, and we offer grace and compassion. We help others rise up, too, and don’t ignore those who need help nor put a stumbling block in their way. We help each other rise up, regardless of what church they go to or don’t go to, whether they look like us, talk like us, think like us, vote like us, do things like us. The positive thing I’ve been hearing the newscasters say is that we’re all in this together. So let’s rise up and help each other rise up. Let your faith shine, let your light shine, rise up that the world may know the good news of Easter and the reason for our hope.
I don’t know how many of you saw it, but this past week went around a poem that was a variation of Dr. Seuss’s “How the Grinch Stole Christmas.” It’s called “How the Virus Stole Easter” by Kristi Bothur[4]:
Twas late in ‘19 when the virus began
Bringing chaos and fear to all people, each land.

People were sick, hospitals full,
Doctors overwhelmed, no one in school.

As winter gave way to the promise of spring,
The virus raged on, touching peasant and king.

People hid in their homes from the enemy unseen.
They YouTubed and Zoomed, social-distanced, and cleaned.

April approached and churches were closed.
“There won’t be an Easter,” the world supposed.

“There won’t be church services, and egg hunts are out.
No reason for new dresses when we can’t go about.”

Holy Week started, as bleak as the rest.
The world was focused on masks and on tests.

“Easter can’t happen this year,” it proclaimed.
“Online and at home, it just won’t be the same.”

Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, the days came and went.
The virus pressed on; it just would not relent.

The world woke Sunday and nothing had changed.
The virus still menaced, the people, estranged.

“Pooh pooh to the saints,” the world was grumbling.
“They’re finding out now that no Easter is coming.

“They’re just waking up! We know just what they’ll do!
Their mouths will hang open a minute or two,
And then all the saints will all cry boo-hoo.

“That noise,” said the world, “will be something to hear.”
So it paused and the world put a hand to its ear.

And it did hear a sound coming through all the skies.
It started down low, then it started to rise.

But the sound wasn’t depressed.
Why, this sound was triumphant!
It couldn’t be so!
But it grew with abundance!

The world stared around, popping its eyes.
Then it shook! What it saw was a shocking surprise!

Every saint in every nation, the tall and the small,
Was celebrating Jesus in spite of it all!

It hadn’t stopped Easter from coming! It came!
Somehow or other, it came just the same!

And the world with its life quite stuck in quarantine
Stood puzzling and puzzling.
“Just how can it be?”

“It came without bonnets, it came without bunnies,
It came without egg hunts, cantatas, or money.”

Then the world thought of something it hadn’t before.
“Maybe Easter,” it thought, “doesn’t come from a store.
Maybe Easter, perhaps, means a little bit more.”

And what happened then?
Well....the story’s not done.
What will YOU do?
Will you share with that one
Or two or more people needing hope in this night?
Will you share the source of your life in this fight?

The churches are empty - but so is the tomb,
And Jesus is victor over death, doom, and gloom.

So this year at Easter, let this be our prayer,
As the virus still rages all around, everywhere.

May the world see hope when it looks at God’s people.
May the world see the church is not a building or steeple.
May the world find Faith in Jesus’ death and resurrection,
May the world find Joy in a time of dejection.
May 2020 be known as the year of survival,
But not only that -
Let it start a revival.

Amen

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