“RESURRECTION!”
We are in the season of Resurrection. Easter was yesterday, and whether or not you believe that Jesus of Nazareth was raised from the dead after he was given the death penalty by Rome, the power of Resurrection still speaks to all of us. The power of the Resurrection is not so much what happens to us when we die. The power of the Resurrection is that we are offered the opportunity to experience new life now, to see life and ourselves and others in a new way.
In this sense, Resurrection is always contemporary, because we are always in captivity. Those of us seeking liberation can use the power of Resurrection as a metaphor for helping us to find new life and new vision. In this time when Trump would be king, it is sometimes hard to feel and to experience the power of Resurrection. There is a hopeless malaise hanging over us, like an early morning fog that robs us of our ability to see clearly. Indeed, that is what Trump wants – for us to give up and give in to his move for imperial power.
In this kind of time, let us recall those first followers of Jesus, who felt the power and vision of Resurrection. They lived under the oppressive power of imperial Rome, and they were so unimportant that no Roman historian recorded their names or their actions or their histories. They could have been crushed at any time by Rome – they had very little agency in regard to political power. When the word first began to spread about the Resurrection, Rome did not tremble or even notice – another little sect with some weird theory.
Yet, even Rome would yield to the power of Resurrection. Several hundred years later, Emperor Constantine adopted Christianity as the religion of the Empire. This was not a good development for Christianity, but it did show the lasting power of Resurrection, once it takes hold. Many Christians were tortured and executed by Rome, but still they kept coming – they still were driven by the power of Resurrection. It’s sort of like the Freedom Riders on the buses into the South in the early 1960’s. Even after all the violence and deals and orders to stop the Freedom Rides, they kept coming – no one could stop them. They were inspired and fired by Resurrection, and they grabbed hold of that vision and kept riding it.
In John’s version of the Resurrection in John 20, Mary Magdalene comes alone to the tomb of Jesus to anoint his dead body for burial. The body is gone, however, and she thinks that the body is stolen. Later in the passage, she sees the risen Jesus standing right in front of her, but she does not recognize him. She sees him and talks with him, but she does not recognize him, because she is captured by the power of death. She is not looking for life because her perceptual apparatus belongs to death. She finally recognizes the risen Jesus when he calls her name: “Mary.” Then her eyes are opened, and her heart leaps. She runs to tell the other disciples: “I have seen the Lord!” Rome and men still rule over her body, but now she has a new vision of herself and of life. She is fired up – she has seen the Lord! Indeed, Mary Magdalene is the primary witness to the Resurrection – she is the only witness mentioned in all four Gospel accounts.
Her witness now seeks viability in our time, too. We live in a scary and dangerous time, and for many of us, the great experiment in democracy (flaws and all) now seems in deep peril. We don’t know what the longing-to-be-king Trumpster will do next, but Resurrection gives us promises about our lives and about life itself. We are promised that the final word in each of our lives and in all of our lives is not death, but rather life and love. We are also promised that the Spirit will not fail us, that even in these dismal days, God is moving and shaping possibilities for life and love and justice.
Our calling in this season of Resurrection is to acknowledge that like Mary Magdalene, we are captured by the power of death – in these Trumpian days, that acknowledgment is not a far stretch. Despair has us in its grip, and it is difficult to recognize the work of God that is moving among us. Like Mary, let us listen for our names being called, and let us hear them and respond as Mary did. Let us be witnesses for a different view of life, a different understanding of what it means to be a human being. And, let us join Mary in sharing the stunning news of Resurrection: “We have seen the Lord!”
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