Sunday, April 08, 2012

Hope Springs from our Losing Battles

This sermon was heard at the First Presbyterian Church in Marshall, Texas on Sunday April 8, 2012, Easter Sunday.

Podcast of "Hope Springs from our Losing Battles" (MP3)


Isaiah 25:6-9
Psalm 118:1-2, 14-24
1 Corinthians 15: 1-11
Mark 16:1-8

May the words of my mouth and the meditations of our hearts be acceptable to you, O Lord, our rock and our redeemer.  Amen.

Our reading this morning is distinct among the gospel accounts of the resurrection. In Mark’s version we hear a most unlikely resurrection story. It’s a resurrection without Jesus. We’re left with an empty tomb, everything is left up in the air. Later editions of Mark’s gospel add stories of Jesus with Mary Magdalene and the apostles. There is another piece that adds a version of the ascension.  But these verses, the verses following the eighth, were added at least 250 years later. This oldest, most reliable version of Mark’s gospel leaves us with an empty tomb, but that is not how it begins.

It begins with Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James, and Salome with spices, spices they would use for their Lord’s burial. Now, why bring the spices? The spices were to prepare the body and should have been used before Jesus was placed in the tomb. But I ask then, why the spices at all? The purpose of the spices was to preserve the body. The preservation of the body and the aromatic quality of the spices would help keep down the wretched smell of decay. After the three days from Friday to Sunday, a corpse that was not handled properly would begin to stink. We learn this from the death of Lazarus and he was placed in the tomb properly. Even from the sealed tomb, there would be an odor.

Friends, these three women knew they were about to fight a losing battle with the spices. From their combined experience they would have known that when they reached the tomb what they were prepared to do would have been at least ineffective and at worst a waste of time. Still they went, not out of obligation, but out of love.

They also knew that once they reached the tomb, opening it would have been nearly impossible. The stone was probably round like a millstone. To seal the tomb it would have rolled and dropped into a groove carved out for it. It would have been fairly easy to roll in, but very difficult to roll out. They knew, they even said to one another that this was going to be a losing battle. From their combined experience they would have known that when they reached the tomb what they could do would have been at least ineffective and at worst a waste of time. Still they went, not out of obligation, but out of love.

Earlier this week I read a little nugget of wisdom about human endeavor in scripture. This piece of wisdom was that scripture is filled with human failure. It’s kind of demoralizing to say, but it’s true. It doesn’t require a close study to see that people mess things up. Sometimes messes are caused by disobedience. Other times it’s circumstances playing themselves out. This is an example of the latter; there was really nothing these women could do at the tomb. They were on a fool’s errand. But I say again; they went, not out of obligation, but out of love.

When they arrived, they found what they were not expecting. They found the tomb open. They did not find a stench. They found a young man in a white robe and they were alarmed. Friends, we know how this ends so we can smile in the firm and certain knowledge of what has happened; but at this moment these women did not. Being “alarmed” would have been the only responsible reaction to what they found at the tomb.

So the young man cries out “Do not be alarmed!” (Yeah, right, sure…) Then he tells them while they were still alarmed and on their way to being afraid, “You are looking for Jesus the Nazarene, who was crucified. He has risen!”

The Reverend Doctor Michael Jinkins wrote: “Over seventy years ago, a young minister named Karl Barth addressed a group of ministers and told them why people came to church.  His words became a clarion call to his generation and they still echo today.  He said that on any given Sunday morning, when the bells ring calling the people to worship, there is in the air an expectancy that something great, something crucial, something momentous is going to happen.  People, he said, come to church wanting to know the answer to one question above all else: ‘Is it true?’”[i] This ending of Mark’s gospel causes the reader to ask that very question.

Mark’s gospel has none of the meticulous precision of Luke’s. Matthew’s many references to the Jewish Law are missing too. Mark makes us ask questions—and this ending makes us ask the questions, “Is it true? Did Jesus rise from the dead?” Today we testify, “Yes, he is risen.”

This is a bold statement of faith. It doesn’t come to us by scientific method, but that’s not what a faith statement does. Faith is the “firm and certain knowledge of God’s benevolence toward us, founded upon the truth of the freely given promise in Christ, both revealed to our minds and sealed upon our hearts through the Holy Spirit.”[ii]

Our faith is founded on the truth of the freely given promise in Jesus Christ, the Messiah given to us in the word written and proclaimed, the promise that he is with us through the ages. Through the power of the Holy Spirit, God’s own spirit, we are able to interpret the word finding God’s loving kindness toward us as Jesus continually intersects our lives.

Our faith cannot be founded on what we do because to find faith in our failures is futile, and this is the Good News. If our works are in vain then our hope can only come through the grace and peace of our Lord Jesus. This morning we read of three women who approach the Lord with hope, hope that their impending failure will have any effect at all. They go to fight a losing battle, but by showing up, they see that by Christ the battle is won.

Hope springs from their losing battles, hope springs from our losing battles because our failures give God room to work miracles.

Through faith and hope we find the Lord at work in our lives. Through faith and hope we become free to live in the truth of Jesus Christ. Through faith and hope, we can become sure of the meaning of our own existence, our own humanity.  Through faith and hope can we say “He is risen.”

We testify our faith in Jesus as our risen Lord using the words of the Apostle’s Creed. But the creed is not about our faith, it is about the one in whom we have faith. The words describe the triune God as the church understands each of the three persons. The creed reminds us Jesus was crucified, dead, and buried; and on the third day he rose again from the dead.[iii] The words of the ancient church for over 1,800 years, the creed has helped us state what we believe about the triune God.

We bear witness to our confidence in the faith through the sacraments, the outward signs instituted by God to convey inward grace.[iv] One of the marks of the true church is the right administration of the sacraments.[v]

In the waters of our baptism we are born, cleansed, and live. The waters provide refreshment for our bodies and our lives. Baptism initiates us, brings us into the body of Christ. Jesus rose from the waters of the Jordan and when we come from the water we are new in Christ. From the tomb of the waters and from the tomb of the grave, He is risen.

As we journeyed together along the road to Golgotha this week we are fortified with the meal of grain and vine, the bread and the juice. “Through this bread, there comes about what we see in the gospel: a fellowship of pilgrims, a fellowship gathered around the apostles, a fellowship of a meal that includes everyone, a fellowship of one single pilgrim path to God.”[vi] This is the meal we share until Christ comes again in glory.

People of faith and people seeking faith want to know, “Is it true?” Mark leaves the question up in the air. Being told “he is risen,” in the last verse of the gospel, the women who came to prepare Jesus’ body left the tomb terrified and amazed. Barth frames our quest this way: “They reach, not knowing what they do, towards the unprecedented possibility of praying, of reading the bible, of speaking, of hearing and singing of God.”[vii] For us, God is revealed in the person of Jesus Christ. Through the power of the Holy Spirit, we are able to answer Barth’s question with hope and confidence.

Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James and Salome left the tomb afraid to speak to anyone. They were told to spread the news of the empty tomb, Jesus is returning to Galilee. We are called to spread the good news too. Through the hope of God’s loving kindness we can live a life of faith daily. We proclaim, we confess our faith using the words of the creed. Through the sacraments, we participate in the outward signs instituted by God to convey inward grace.

Through the water, the bread, and the wine we share in the elements Jesus used to identify himself with the community. We become the body of Christ as the church, through these elements of thanksgiving. Through the word, faith, hope, and the sacraments we answer the question. This is how we show the world what we believe. We do this not out of obligation, but out of love. This is how we say, “Yes, it is true. He is risen. He is risen, indeed.”

[i] Jinkins, Rev. Dr. Michael. Transformational Ministry, Church Leadership and the Way of the CrossEdinburgh: Saint Andrew Press, 2002, page 33.
[ii] Calvin, John. Institutes of the Christian Religion, McNeill, John T. Ed., Volume III, Chapter 2, Section vii.
[iii] PC(USA) Book of Confessions, 2.2
[iv] Augustine
[v] PC(USA), 3.18, 5.134
[vi] Rahner, Karl, in Eucharist, A Source Book, Liturgy Training Publications, 1999, Chicago, page 19
[vii] Ibid. Jinkins

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