First Reading: Acts 10:34-43
First Reading (Alt.): Isaiah 65:17-25
Psalm: Psalm 118:1-2, 14-24
Second Reading: 1 Corinthians 15:19-26
Second Reading (Alt.): Acts 10:34-43
Gospel: Luke 24:1-12
Gospel (Alt.): John 20:1-18
I've talked to many people who seem a bit amazed at how fast this season of Lent has zoomed by us. I've talked to several people who don't feel ready for Easter at all. Are we ever ready for Easter?
Some years feel more difficult than others. Here we are, at the beginning of the third year of a global pandemic. Some of us have losses that we're still grieving. Some of us may feel we have been spared. Some of us may be wondering what's coming next.
If we're lucky enough to have been spared from personal disaster, medical or otherwise, we've likely looked on in horror as other parts of our world have suffered horribly. Maybe we've been focused on war in Ukraine. Maybe we're afraid of hurricane season that begins soon. If we're thinking people at all, we have to realize how precarious is our existence on the surface of our planet, that surface which looks stable, but we know that forces are rumbling underneath.
Maybe you say to yourself that you're still in that Ash Wednesday space. Maybe you ask, "How can we celebrate Easter with the taste of ashes still in our mouths?"
Hear that Easter message again. Know that God is working to redeem creation in ways that we can't always see and don't often understand. But we get glimpses of it.
The earth commits to resurrection this time of year. Green sprouts shoot out from hard earth everywhere. Each spring, we are reminded of the cyclical nature of the world, which can bring us hope in the times in which we suffer. This, too, shall pass.
But maybe we see those examples of resurrection as random and capricious. If we've heard the Easter story (and the Holy Week stories) again and again, we tend to forget the miraculous nature of them. Maybe we're tempted to downplay them even. Maybe we're beaten down and tired: tired of praying that the insurance company gets its act together before the next hurricane season starts, tired of praying for health and people getting sicker, tired of praying for peace in the world which never seems to come, too beaten down and tired to believe in miracles anymore.
Resist that pull towards despair, which some have called the deadliest sin, even worse than pride. We have seen miracles with our own eyes: Nelson Mandela walks out of jail to claim his place as president, for example. We're often too shy or scared to run out of our gardens to tell everyone else what we've seen, what we know.
We may worry that the world is sliding backward, but we've always been worried about that possibility. We must remember we are a Resurrection People. Commit yourself to new life. Rinse the ashes out of your mouth with the Eucharist bread and wine. Celebrate the miracles.
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