John 20 v 1/18
This Sunday we celebrate the resurrection of
Jesus as countless millions have done so over the centuries, but we face a
battle to proclaim our message as secular extremists try to create a spiritual
vacuum. Our message is that Jesus Christ is the One who died on a Cross for the
forgiveness of our sins and rose again on the third day. That is a unique feat
which no other religion can match.
The story begins with Mary Magdelene, the one who loved Jesus dearly because of
the help He had given her, being last at the Cross and first at the tomb crying
bitterly. She ran for Peter who with John ran to the tomb, and John being the
younger got their first, but he let Peter enter the tomb being the stronger
character. They realised Jesus must have risen as He had foretold, for there
were no clothes present.
We notice here two believers, one gentle and reserved as John, whilst Peter was
always more impulsive and decisive, each revealing their devotion in different
ways. There is room for all characters in the Church. The men left the scene,
but Mary stayed and was rewarded when she became the first person to meet the
risen Lord. Jesus spoke one word to her and she flung herself at His feet. He
told her to go and tell the disciples what she had found.
This is what Easter is all about, the real spiritual message that Jesus rose
from the dead, not the money making enterprise it has become. Easter is
celebrated to remind us that when our days on this earth are over, we have the
assurance we shall live with our Lord, if we have accepted Him as Saviour. The
resurrection is the foundation of Christianity.
Whilst there is much about our faith that is respected by people who are not
practising, Christians, such as being forgiven of sin, hearing that God is love
(very popular), but they think that is a free for all without any commitment.
They will come to Church for a baptism and make all sorts of promises simply
because it is a necessary requirement, but they don’t take things seriously or
literally. Things are not made any easier by the irresponsible liberals within
the Church who themselves question much of the faith.
If someone had said a hundred years ago that we could sit in our homes and by
watching a box in the corner of the room show events then happening on the
other side of the world; or that by taking a small handset pressing a few
buttons you could speak to someone in any part of the world they would have
been deemed to be insane. Yet it happens every day by man’s efforts, and we
still question what the Almighty God can achieve.
If Easter had not happened; if Jesus had not been raised from the dead, then we
have no faith. Christianity rises and falls on the resurrection of Jesus. This
has been proclaimed down the ages and if not true, the Bible writers would have
lied and millions of people would have made great sacrifices in the cause of
the faith in vain. Why would educated men like Paul, and down to earth
fishermen, lie when they had nothing to gain by doing so? Paul had a brilliant
mind, one of the finest minds of his day and was a determined opponent of
Christianity, yet God convinced him and in consequence Paul suffered very much
for the sake of the gospel.
If Jesus had not been raised there would be nor forgiveness, we would have no
future, but the evidence is overwhelming in favour. First century witnesses and
documents tell. We have testimony from men present at that time that the
resurrection of Jesus was real, objective and physical, This is what the Church
has always believed in over two thousand years of Christina witness that has
sustained the hearts of millions.
The Apostles Creed does not say I believe in the forgiveness of sins and the
spiritual resurrection of Jesus, it says I believed in the resurrection of the
body.
After the resurrection we find the Apostles preaching openly and fearlessly,
and suffering violently for doing so. Men do not invent stories to be put in
prison and get beaten up, or hung on a cross like Peter.
Through centuries that have followed, brilliant men and women have experienced
the same fellowship and power in their lives, often giving up lucrative careers
to serve as missionaries and in Christian ministry.
When the stone was rolled away, it let not only Jesus out, but let Him into our
hearts. The resurrection happened 2,000 years ago, but the risen Lord Jesus has
continued to meet with those who seek him ever since
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