______________________________________________________
EASTER SUNDAY
Easter Sunday! For some, this is the most anticipated, celebrated and joyful day on
their Christian day-timers. Like race horses pawing the ground ready to take off after the
final organ piece, they wish every Sunday could be like this high pitch day of
resurrection. Others are more quiet proclaimers; They may feel stress building by the
fourth Sunday in Lent as they contemplate Easter. Sweaty palms and cold sweat form as they
think about resurrection angles, Easter dramas and Philip Souza anthems for Easter
Sunday. However you welcome Easter, this Sundays passages will provide you excellent
resources for this great Christian celebration--celebratory or reflective!
Acts 10:34-43
In this first lesson, Peter is brought to an unusual and awkward place in his
discipleship when he finds himself brought face to face with goiims, gentiles. This was
not part of the "big plan" as far as Peter was concerned. That is, until the
Spirit began to mess with his racism and theology. So the story has Peter proclaiming the
resurrected Christ once again to a very different audience and one that he will later be
called on the carpet for associating with. The kerygma is fabulous; clear, inclusive, and
gracious. You may want to try this passage out for your Easter sermon - its less
known, powerful, and leads the listener to the message of salvation.
Psalm 118:1-2; 14-24
This psalm will typically combine with choirs, antiphonal calls and response,
processions, and great hymns like, All Glory, Laud, and Honor. On this day, Psalm 118 is
majestic, festive even as it foreshadows the gospel.
1 Corinthians 15:19-26
Paul is in the middle of a long and somewhat polemical teaching about resurrection. (To
follow Pauls full discourse, please review the DPS lectionary notes for the first
three weeks of February 2001). Specifically, Paul holds the resurrected Christ before the
Corinthians as an example of a first fruit of resurrection. Jesus was the early crop, the
first to reach full maturity. But that means that the rest is going to come to maturity
too. Referring to the Genesis 1-3 narrative, Paul argues that if Adam cut humanitys
connection to God through disobedience, then it figures that well need another
"Adam" to reconnect humanity back to God. In Christ Jesus, the broken line has
been repaired and as Christ was raised from death, so we will also follow Christ into new
life.
John 20:1-18
How do people arrive at Easter faith? Through what door/s do we enter the Church? John
seems to understand that more than one exists. For example, in this Sundays lesson
we are offered two possible responses to the resurrection of Jesus: unflinching belief in
an empty tomb (vs. 1-10) and a more mystical way-
hearing our name called (vs.11-18). In the first story, Peter and the other guy
footrace to the tomb and finding it empty, at least one walks away with Easter faith:
"he saw and believed" (v. 8). The other story has Mary Magdalene weeping before
the empty tomb-even the appearance of angels doesnt set her faith to singing. That
is, until she hears her name called out in the familiar sounds that she identifies as her
Lord (v.16). See and believe or hear and believe? Two doors to Easter faith.
Luke 24:1-12
We have Lukes retelling of the story that appears also in Mark and Matthew, that
of the women coming to the tomb. There are notable differences, which you may want to
check with a synopsis of the Gospels. But we have to be amazed at the womens
audacity, their concern, and compassion to come to the tomb to give their fallen hero a
proper burial. Then they have their encounter with two dazzling angeloi and right then and
there they turn evangelistic and head to the eleven and others proclaiming and bearing
witness to what they have just heard and seen and touched. Though the text is clear to
implicate the eleven with unbelief at their words, one responds to their words-Peter-who
races to the tomb to corroborate their story. A great story from which to proclaim Easter
faith and evangelism.