Easter Sunday Reflection April 12th 2020 Fr. Andrew Hall (Rector of St Catherine and St Peter in the Parish of Burbage cum Aston Flamville.)The gospel for this Easter Sunday tells how Mary of Magdala arrives early in the morning and sees the stone has been rolled away and that the tomb is empty. Her first reaction is one of shock after the tragic and sorrowful events of Good Friday. She has come to grieve and spend some time with her beloved friend and try to make some sense of what has happened. It is only a week since Jesus had ridden into Jerusalem on a colt and the crowds had cheered and waved their palm branches.Now she is greatly surprised to find that the tomb is empty and she runs off to find the disciples.It isn’t always possible to predict how people are going to react. Some people who seem very ordinary and timid most of the time turn out to be superb in a crisis, while the person we all thought would be brave goes to pieces completely. Some people cope philosophically with sadness and loss but are totally thrown by unexpected happiness or good fortune; it’s as though it disturbs their own equilibrium of life.What is for sure is that people are all different!During Holy Week this year we have been reflecting upon the 7 last words of Jesus, our ministry team at St Catherine’s and St. Peters have given us all things to ponder and think about each day. May I take this opportunity to thank them for their words and pray that God would greatly enrich their life as they have enriched ours.Thinking about the 7 last words of Jesus started me thinking about Jesus’ first words after the resurrection. I wonder if you know what they were?Was it, “I have risen from the dead?” or “I have conquered sin and death?”or perhaps, “I have opened the Gates of Glory, welcome my people?”The actual answer is not quite what we would expect.In fact the answer is different in all of the gospel accounts.In Matthew, the women run from the tomb, having been told by angels what has happened and what it means. They then meet Jesus who says to them “Greetings”… do not be afraid: go and tell my brothers and sisters to go to Galilee, there they will see me.Friends, Jesus will always greet us, he longs to be with us and in relationship with us, always.In Mark, Jesus does not say anything (or at least in the more reliable early manuscripts) there is just silence, trembling and bewilderment.In Luke there is no record of Jesus saying anything until he meets the two disciples on the road to Emmaus, and what an encounter that is; that is for another time!In John’s account, the one we have heard today, Mary finds the tomb empty, fetches Peter and John, she then lingers at the tomb. She is the first person to see the risen Jesus (though she mistakes Him for the gardener). Jesus days to her, “Why are you weeping?’ and then, “Who are you looking for?” and then her name, “Mary.”These are astonishing words:• First Jesus speaks to the sadness within her• Second Jesus speaks to her lostness• Then he calls her name, “Mary.”He addresses her personally, acknowledging her feelings, touching her emotions and dealing with her thoughts and calls her by name.Friends, listen to this account, this is how God would deal with us all. sensitively, lovingly and by name. Thus enabling a new relationship with Jesus, a new relationship with God. This is the Easter Day message, a new start, new beginnings, new life!These first words Jesus spoke on Easter Day, aren’t as dramatic or powerful as such, but they do deserve to be thought about, to meditate upon. The words for the Tomb can speak to us as powerfully as the words from the Cross.They give us new insight into the resurrection life, speak to us in our condition and loss and give us hope that our name, Mary, John, Peter, Andrew, are on His lips. Do you hear them? Just like words from the garden in Genesis 3:8-9; Then the man and his wife heard the sound of the Lord God as he was walking in the garden in the cool of the day, they hid from the Lord God among the trees of the garden. But the Lord God called to the man and woman, “Where are you?”Today, my prayer is that you would hear his voice calling you.Today, may you respond to his call, as he speaks into your situation, giving you hope and addressing your needs, and indeed calling you by name.Today, beloved of God, it is Easter Day, a new start, a new beginning and a new life.
Friday of the Passion of the Lord (Good Friday)“it is accomplished.”We have listened to the story of Jesus giving his life for us. John the Evangelist tells us that the reason for this was love; love of the Father and love of his disciples. Love cannot be compelled or forced: it is freely given. In John’s version of the passion, it is Jesus who is in charge of what happens, so that it is in fact Pilate who finds himself on trial not Jesus.In John’s gospel Jesus has no need of help; there is no Simon of Cyrene to assist him with the carrying of the cross. He takes up his own cross and marches to Calvary, which is the scene of his last mission and him revealing God to the world. His last words which we have pondered and meditated upon this past week in our Holy week devotions are not a cry of reproach, accusing God of abandoning him, but indeed they are a shout of triumph: “it is accomplished, - “It is finished.”Earlier he had explained to his disciples that the good shepherd is the one who lays down his life for the sheep: he acted this out when he washed the feet of the disciples, including Judas. John tells us that Jesus did all this out of love: “Now he showed how perfect his love was.” We can understand this when we consider Jesus on the cross.In the final scene of today’s passion reading, we meet once more the character called Nicodemus, he is no longer a shadowy figure who comes to Jesus under the cover of darkness. Now he appears boldly in broad daylight to assist in the solemn burial of Jesus, which involves a royal and extravagant amount of spices and oils. He has thus moved from unbelief and curiosity to faith in Jesus.Jesus summed up the message of the 4th gospel, which reached its climax in the paschal event which we are celebrating today. Jesus told Nicodemus; “ God loved the world so much that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not be lost but may have eternal life.”Thoughts to Ponder:Is it too good to be true? Could someone love us enough to give their life so that we might live? Would someone be prepared to die in our place?We can understand mothers or fathers being ready to sacrifice themselves for their child, but would anyone else feel the same way about another person?As you know I have received the gift of a liver from a lady called Sarah nearly 21 years this next week; her death and her departing wishes meant that I could live, so I have a little understanding in this matter.I often find myself thinking about Sarah and her act of love towards me, and others who receive vitals organs to help them too. Sarah’s family will always bear the loss, but they also bear a hope that her life wasn’t in vain. This is true for so many of us who have received life from another.How much more then are we who have received the life of Christ to be thankful for his death this day. Jesus mission was to reveal God’s love for humanity and invite us into a relationship with God, into a friendship with God. Throughout John’s gospel story we are given examples of people coming to believe in Jesus, growing in the appreciation of who he is and what he means to them.Today we are invited to consider that the cross is more about love than it is about justice. No one can love more than to lay down their life for their friend.How will you respond to Jesus love for you today?
7. The Last WordLuke chapter 23 verse 46 “Jesus Cried out in a loud voice, Father, into your hands I commend my spirit”We now come to the last of the 7 words of Christ let us remind ourselves of what they were: We have joined with Jesus on this rollercoaster of emotions until we come to this point when Jesus on the cross, finally cries to his Father God in total submission, placing his spirit into the hands of his Father God. There have been many films, stage shows and TV series depicting Christs final moments and each being able to convey the director’s vision and meaning either to entertain or challenge us. Whether that is Mel Gibson’s 2004 The Passion of Christ with its harrowing and brutal scenes that left me totally speechless at the end. It took away all the sanitized versions that I had experienced previously and left me with the reality that Christ truly suffered for my sake, truly suffered. Or whether it is the more artistic Martin Scorsese 1988 The Last Temptation of Christ showing Christ vulnerable and naked and with the viewer looking on at a distance.Our Gospel accounts tell us that it was necessary for the Son of God to do this for us, so that we no longer have to punish ourselves for the sins that we do. Our faith in Christ and our love for God means that all the pain and suffering was taken on Christ.Over the years I have held the hands of many who were dying and those who have died and, in the process, they have been weakened by their condition and unable to cry out, so what strength it must have taken to cry out just as Jesus’ spirit is passed over to his Father God. Perhaps this scene was so powerful and effective not simply because an innocent man was prepared to die for his beliefs, but because throughout his life, Jesus gave his spirit into Gods hands so that God was able to use Jesus in the best possible way. Jesus’ final cry on the cross “it is finished….”, expresses the means by which Jesus achieved his perfect sacrifice. Death in any shape or form is an emotional one especially for those who mourn for a friend or loved one and the images of Mary and others at the foot of the cross or nearby only serves to remind us of that fact.For many of us, work has become that which defines our life. This may be voluntary work or paid work, but it means that for many people busyness is the most essential part of life. When that busyness is snatched away as it has been due to the coronavirus outbreak and the subsequent restrictions on our day to day life – redundancy or illness people can feel useless and without worth. But all those who freely give their spirit into Gods hands can be used by God in startling and unexpected ways. For Jesus, the most powerful moment of his life was when he was completely helpless and utterly vulnerable on the cross, but we know that death had no hold on Christ and neither will it have a hold on us. “Into your hands Lord, I commend my spirit.”“But he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities;the punishment that brought us peace was on him, and by his wounds we are healed.-Isiah 53:5. 700 BC.