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seaster06
Just
As He Told You
Text:
Mark 16:7
Date: The Resurrection of Our Lord 4/16/06
This
is Easter, the celebration of the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.
That the Lord is risen from the dead is the cornerstone of the Christian faith.
The resurrection of Christ is the central and most important doctrine, for without
it there would be nothing to believe, nothing to hope for, nothing of any real
help to our daily lives surrounded by sin, separation and death. But because
Christ is risen there is faith, there is hope and there is love to be found,
to be had, to be preached and to be learned and believed both for our eternal
destiny beyond death as well as for this puzzle we call life. Easter! Though
the world around us languishes in the darkness and shroud of hopelessness, hatred
and death, for us this is the day the Lord has made. For us Easter is a matter
of life and death. And today we proclaim for all the world to hear, Life wins
out.
It
was the appointed task of the Holy Evangelists Matthew, Mark, Luke and John
to document the events of our Lord's suffering, death, burial and resurrection
as they happened. Each of their accounts relates the facts of the case. Some
people, through the ages, even to our own day, driven by rank unbelief, attempt
to twist the facts claiming there are contradictions between the accounts at
the least, or that the account of the resurrection is a total lie at worst.
The latest is a book by a Mr. Bart Ehrman called “Misquoting Jesus: The Story
Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why,” the subject of an article in The Oakland
Press last Sunday by Nicole M. Robertson. Now Mr. Ehrman is right when he says,
“It's very hard to base belief on the Bible if you don't have the words of the
Bible.” But he claims that we don't have those words, that, as he says, no two
of the thousands of manuscripts of the Bible are alike and attempts to cite
contradictions “any layman can read for himself.” This is nothing new. What's
worse, however, is that some may just believe him!
As
the Gospels tell the story, isn't it interesting that those who should have
remembered and believed Jesus' predictions of his suffering, death and resurrection
didn't at first, but his enemies did remember! Thanks be to God, however, that
his enemies, the chief priests and the Pharisees, remembered and convinced Pontius
Pilate to make Jesus' tomb secure by sealing the stone and setting a guard.
They said, “Sir, we remember how that impostor said, while he was
still alive, ‘After three days I will rise.' Therefore order the tomb to be
made secure until the third day, lest his disciples go and steal him away and
tell the people, ‘He has risen from the dead,' and the last fraud will be worse
than the first” [Matthew 27:62-66 (ESV)]. Not to worry. The thought to fake
the resurrection never even entered the disciples' minds. But God moves in mysterious
ways, and thanks to their suspicion we have not only the belief and witness
of the disciples to the resurrection of Jesus but even the validation of it
by the Roman government's own certification that no one stole his body! In the
face of these facts, however, other unbelievers theorize that maybe Jesus never
really died, as in the other recent books “The Da Vinci Code” and “The Jesus
Papers.” You'd think that all this ink and effort at disproving the Bible and
the resurrection would have been settled long ago, if it were a matter only
of historical fact-finding and evidence. The “problem” (and blessing!) is that
the historical facts and evidence always only become stronger the more they
are attacked. The resurrection of Jesus from the dead, while only a God-given
faith can receive the benefits of it, is the most well documented fact of the
history of the world.
Jesus'
enemies remembered. His disciples didn't. Just this fact supports the reliability
of the sacred record as no mere piece of propaganda. After the Sabbath had passed
the women went shopping for the needed burial spices so that they might go and
finish the job of giving Jesus a proper burial. Why? They did not remember Jesus'
words about his resurrection. The reality of his cruel death and the fact that
they saw where he was buried (Mark 15:47) contradicted in their minds any such
fantastic hope.
“And
very early on the first day of the week,” that is, Sunday morning, “when the
sun had risen, they went to the tomb.” Why? Because they did not remember. “And
they were saying to one another, ‘Who will roll away the stone for us from the
entrance of the tomb?'” Why? Because they were sure his body was still there—they
did not remember. That's why when they found that the stone had been rolled
back they were alarmed.
They
saw “a young man sitting on the right side dressed in a white robe.” That this
was an angel is apparent because he knew who the women were looking for. He
said, “You seek Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified.” Then he announces the
fact: “He has risen; he is not here. See the place where they laid him.” They
looked at the vacant stone slab. They saw that Jesus was not there. Was that
enough evidence, then, for them to believe the first thing the angel said, “He
has risen”? Then the order: “But go, tell his disciples and Peter that he is
going before you to Galilee. There you will see him, just as he told you.” They
obeyed the first part “go.” “They went out and fled from the tomb.” But, Mark
tells us, “they said nothing to anyone, for they were afraid.” They didn't remember
Jesus' words. They couldn't believe it. And neither would anyone else if they
didn't say anything to anyone.
Now
our friend Mr. Ehrman might raise his hand here and say this is a contradiction.
For St. Matthew says the women “ran to tell his disciples” [Matthew 28:8 (ESV)],
and St. Luke says they “remembered his words, and…told all these things to the
eleven and to all the rest” [Luke 24:8-9 (ESV)]. Mark even seems to contradict
himself as in the very next verse he says Jesus appeared to Mary Magdalene and
“she went and told those who had been with him” [Mark 16:9-19 (ESV)]. But, of
course, this belongs to the suspect “long ending” of his Gospel which is not
to be found in some of the earliest manuscripts. The simple and obvious answer
to this criticism of an apparent contradiction, however, is that the women at
first said nothing to anyone else but the eleven!
Now,
enough for our defense against the unbelieving, ignorant and impious. What is
most important for us are two things—first, that our attention be directed not
to the women or the angel or the disciples but to the one Person who is not
in the tomb, and, secondly, to faith that remembers, relies on, trusts
and believes the Word of God.
That
Christ rose again from the dead should not be so surprising given Who he is.
When he raised Lazarus from his grave it was truly an awesome, even fearsome
miracle. For Lazarus was a human being as we are. Though the final curtain of
death is drawn at different times and for apparently different so-called causes
of death, eventually, drawn they are over every human being since the Fall of
Adam. “Because of one man's trespass, death reigned through that one man” [Romans
5:17 (ESV)], for all have sinned (Romans 3:23). You sin, you die. The wages
of sin is the root cause of death (Romans 6:23).
But
here is One, Jesus, who had no sin, indeed, who could not sin. For this One
is true God and man in one person, without sin, holy, full of grace and truth
according to both his divine and human natures. Death and the devil made a huge
mistake in striking this One, for this One could not die. Rather, as St. Paul
says it, “He disarmed the rulers and authorities [that is death and the devil]
and put them to open shame, by triumphing over them” [Colossians 2:15 (ESV)].
Christ allowed himself to be beaten and pierced, nailed to the cross and killed.
Yet, though death and devil struck down his humanity, the Person lives Who at
the same time is God and man. Because the one Person Who is both God and man
is eternal and cannot die, so his human nature cannot remain in death. The only
way of truly understanding the resurrection of Christ is by tenaciously clinging
to a proper understanding of his Person as the Divine Man, the God-Man, conceived
by the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary. Because death and the devil
could not hold him, he burst the bonds of the grave, defeated the power of death
and now ends the slavery of sin for all who trust in him.
How
we can know this, how we can receive deathless, eternal life and how we can
now live in the forgiveness of sin is only by faith in the Word and promises
of God. As our heretical friend said, “It's very hard to base belief on the
Bible if you don't have the words of the Bible.” If you come to the Bible from
unbelief and with the intent of disproving it, you get what you ask for. If,
however, you allow the Bible to speak for itself, the Holy Spirit works faith
through the scriptures, faith that sees, remembers and believes. Believes what?
Well, as Jesus said, “that everything written about me in the Law of Moses and
the Prophets and the Psalms must be fulfilled” [Luke 24:44 (ESV)]. St. Matthew
was at pains in his Gospel to show how the Old Testament scriptures were perfectly
fulfilled in Jesus Christ. St. John writes the purpose of his Gospel in the
words, “Now Jesus did many other signs in the presence of the disciples, which
are not written in this book; but these are written so that you may believe
that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have
life in his name” [John 20:30-31 (ESV)]. The angel summoned the women to remember
Jesus' words and believe. So St. Paul says to us, “But as for you, continue
in what you have learned and have firmly believed, knowing from whom you learned
it and how from childhood you have been acquainted with the sacred writings,
which are able to make you wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus.
All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof,
for correction, and for training in righteousness” [2 Tim. 3:14-16 (ESV)]. Besides
the scripture and preaching is the visible, sacramental Word of God in Holy
Baptism, the Lord's Supper and Holy Absolution. Through all these means of God's
grace, the Holy Spirit creates faith when and where it pleases God in those
who hear the Gospel. That God-given faith brings all the promises of the Gospel
and personalizes them so that the words of the angel are also for you, that
you will always remember our Lord's words and find them true, “just as he told
you.”
Because
of Easter I can declare to the penitent sinner, your sins are forgiven just as
he told you. Because of the open tomb you are justified just as he told you. Because
the Lord lives you will live also just as he told you. Because Christ went to
prepare a place for you he will come and receive you to himself so that where
he is you may be also just as he told you. Because of Easter all the promises
of God are yours, “all are yours, and you are Christ's, and Christ is God's” [1
Cor. 3:21-23 (ESV)]. Oh, let us proclaim with joy the bodily resurrection of the
Lord Jesus Christ. And let us remember and believe his promise, “I am with you
always to the end of the age.”
____________________
Rev. Allen D. Lunneberg
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