Sermon for Green Lake Church of Seventh-day Adventists for Sabbath, March 31, 2018
Texts: Isaiah 25:4-9. Luke 24:18-24.
The way the story
begins it could have happened in Seattle last Sunday. A couple of
guys were on a seven mile hike. But it didn’t happen in Seattle and
it didn’t happen in 2018. It was Sunday afternoon the weekend Jesus
of Nazareth died 2000 years ago. And the setting was the forested
hills of western Washington but the desert road from Jerusalem to a
little village named Emmaus.
The two men had been
devotees of Jesus, disciples. They were dragging themselves back home
after the worst Sabbath in the history of the universe—or at least
the worst Sabbath they had experienced or could imagine. On a sunny
afternoon in July the hike up to Panhandle Gap in Mt. Rainier
National Park is not long. The beauty of the place and the loveliness
of the air make every step a delight.
But when your world
has been shattered, seven miles is a long way. It’s a long time.
For Cleopas and his friend, the two guys in this story, this was the
horriblest, terriblest, miserablest weekend in the history of the
universe.
And it wasn’t just
Cleopas and his friend. Dozens, scores, hundreds of people had spent
the last three years in the company of Jesus. They had listened to
his teaching and been stirred to the very core of their being. They
had watched his interactions with every kind of person and been
charmed. They had observed healings. Some of them had even
participated in healing, working miracles through the power that
flowed through Jesus. They had been there when people completely
pervaded with demonic presence had been set free and restored to
happiness and freedom. Their own feet had danced as they witnessed
crippled people recover the use of their legs and begin leaping about
in ecstatic joy.
Jesus lived at the
center of a pulsing movement of goodness and healing. For a thousand
years prophets had spoken of a golden age to come, of a time when
oppression would cease and justice would rise. The prophets foresaw a
wave of mercy sweeping the earth.
For Jesus’
companions and followers, it was easy to believe the prophets. In the
ministry of Jesus you could see the prophetic vision taking form.
Then came the horror
of Friday and the crucifixion and the extinction of hope.
It was the
horriblest, terriblest, miserablest Sabbath in the history of the
universe.
On Friday when Jesus
was crucified, it seemed that hope itself had been butchered. On
Sabbath, the disciples gathered here and there to cling to each
other, to grieve together, to despair together, to be miserable
together, because it was better being miserable and hopeless together
than alone.
Sunday morning, the
men were still lost in misery. There was nothing to do but be
miserable. But the women had work to do. They had duties. The duties
of proper grieving. They took spices and returned to the tomb early
Sunday morning to complete the work of preparing Jesus’ body for
the long dark descent into the netherworld.
At the graveyard—a
place where tombs had been cut into the rock—they found the grave
standing open and empty—the great round rock door rolled aside.
Double checking they verified the tomb was empty. Then a vision of
angels informed them that, of course, the tomb was empty because, as
they should remember, Jesus had predicted he would die and rise
again.
The women raced back
to town and to the gathered men to report their finding.
The men, naturally,
thought the women were crazy, so Peter and John raced off to the tomb
to check for themselves and eventually came back to report that they,
too, found the tomb empty. The women were right.
Now, it was late in
the afternoon, and the two disciples, Cleopas and his friend, were
hiking the seven miles back to their house in Emmaus.
It was a miserable
hike. Long. Way too long. They were dragging their feet, walking at
half their usual speed.
A stranger came up
behind them then slowed his steps and joined them in their miserable
march. “What are you guys talking about?” he asked.
Cleopas and his
friend told him. They were talking about Jesus of Nazareth, of
course. He was the best man who had ever lived, the most powerful
healer ever to appear in Israel. They had hoped that he was the
Messiah. That he would inaugurate the day of the Lord spoken of so
glowingly by all the prophets. But alas, the religious leaders had
persuaded the governor to order his crucifixion on Friday. They
buried the best man who ever lived late Friday afternoon.
That was all
terrible and horrible. Then curiously, this morning some women had
found the tomb empty and they were trying to figure out what to make
of that.
The stranger chided
them for being so glum. Didn’t they realize this was all in
agreement with the divine plan? The messiah was indeed supposed to do
and teach the very things that Jesus did and said. But there was
more. The Messiah was also supposed to die at the hands of evil men.
And then he would be resurrected. He would triumph over death. He
would rise again!! This was all foretold by the ancient prophets.
Cleopas and his
buddy listened with growing amazement as this stranger expounded on
the ancient prophecies. Arriving back at their village, they invited
the stranger to stay with them for the night. He accepted their
invitation.
When they sat down
for supper, they invited the stranger to say the blessing for the
food. As he lifted his hands and began pronouncing the blessing, they
suddenly realized who this was. It was Jesus. And in that same
instant the stranger disappeared.
Cleopas and his
friend stared at each other wild-eyed. Jesus! That was Jesus! Wow! He
is risen. He is risen, indeed.
They jumped up from
the table and raced back toward Jerusalem to share the news. He is
risen. We have seen him. He is not dead. He is risen.
This time the road
was long for an entirely different reason. They could scarcely
contain themselves in their excitement. They could not wait to
announce to the rest of the disciples their news. He is risen. We
have seen him. He is not dead. He is risen.
Hallelujah.
The story of Cleopas
and his friend is our story. Christ is risen. He is risen, indeed.
The tomb could not
hold him. He is risen.
Neither conservative
priests nor evil governors could thwart the ministry of Jesus.
He is risen.
When we go back into
the story, we find other details that add to the drama. The priests
had worried about a resurrection or at least a pretended resurrection
so they had the governor post a guard team at the tomb to make sure
no one stole the body.
Their terror, their
failure, added to the luster of the story.
The soldiers fell as
dead men before the dazzling light of the heavenly messenger sent to
summon Jesus from the grave. He is risen.
This is our story.
He is risen.
This is our faith.
When the devil did
his damndest and killed the Lord of Glory. God’s answer was
resurrection.
When our hears are
crushed by tragedy and injustice and it appears that goodness has
finally been killed off for good, we push back against the apparent
triumph of evil, shouting He is risen. The tomb is empty. Christ is
risen.
God wins.
We win.
Love wins.
He is risen.
Hallelujah.
Hallelujah!
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