BELOVED PEOPLE OF GOD,
Happy Easter. Blessed Pascha*. We enter the season of great thanksgiving. Jesus Christ is risen! Alleluia! Seven weeks of feasting on the reality of Jesus’ resurrection. This is no 7 weeks mini-series of the gruesome walking dead or Frankenstein kind of life. No, Jesus shows us this life after death as he carries the marks of his death with him meeting his disciples in the garden, through their locked doors or on the roadway. Jesus speaks words of peace, gifts his disciples with the promised Holy Spirit, teaches them and eats with them.
The resurrection of Jesus changes our lives and our deaths. We are a people filled with promise and hope especially when we enter times of loneliness, suffering, and injustice. In confirmation class with our 7th and 8th graders we talk about this as the paradoxical effect. We encounter the crisis of crucifixion and greet the new life that emerges as Jesus greets his disciples. This paradoxical effect is mirrored in the book of Acts. The Jerusalem leaders become enraged and stone Stephen, which begins the persecution of Jesus’ followers, driving them out and into the lands of Judea and Samaria. The tragedy of Stephen’s death and the persecution that followed made way for the good news of Jesus Christ to spread beyond Jerusalem.
This is the season, this is our time to search and seek for signs of Jesus' resurrection and new life. We take what we have received and tell each other and our witness shines forth. Theologian N.T. Wright says, “Modern Christians use the word ‘witness’ to mean, ‘tell someone else about your faith.’ The way [Scripture] seems to be using it is, ‘tell someone else that Jesus is the world’s true Lord.” (Simply Jesus, London: HarperCollins, 2011, Kindle ed. p. 214)
We get to be witnesses that Jesus is our true Lord. We say it in our very name, Christ the King Lutheran Church. Jesus is our #1, our captain, our shepherd, our leader. He rules and reigns over life and death. He rules and reigns in our lives and in our deaths.
As I shared with our children on Easter Sunday, by taking the things I love and shaping them into the hope of Easter where a cross becomes delicious chocolate and the place of death, the tomb becomes half a donut, half an Oreo and half a gram cracker, celebrating an empty tomb that does not hold Jesus. The things I love get transformed to celebrate Jesus and how he goes absolutely everywhere. The best thing about the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem is the empty tomb! Jesus is risen. Find what you love and Jesus finds you there.
Nothing is more practical than
finding God, that is, than.
Falling in Love
in a quite absolute, final way.
What you are in love with,
what seizes your imagination,
will affect everything.
It will decide
what will get you out of bed in the morning,
what you do with your evenings,
how you spend your weekends,
what you read, whom you know,
what breaks your heart,
and what amazes you with joy and gratitude.
Fall in love, stay in love,
and it will decide everything.
-Fr. Pedro Arrupe
Looking forward to our 50 days of Pascha*, of Easter.
Bold Inquisitive Belief Loving Expansively,
Pastor Connie Spitzack