20th April 2025 - Easter Day

Luke 24:1-12

 I am always a bit relieved when our gospel reading for Easter is from St. Luke. He is the only one of the gospel writers to say, in verse 11, that the women’s news of Jesus’ being raised sounded to the apostles like “an idle tale.” Sightly offensive perhaps but an interesting thought. An idle tale.

I’ve done enough funerals and had enough friends and loved ones die that I get why it sounds like “an idle tale.” This story just doesn’t make sense. It doesn’t fit my experience with death and I expect it doesn’t fit with yours either. Something about it didn’t match the apostles’ experience either. 

Sometimes it does seem like “an idle tale,” sort of like looking at pictures of and hearing about somebody else’s summer holiday. You know what that’s like? Good for them, what about me? Good for Jesus, what about us? What good is it to us if Jesus has been raised and we are not? 

I wonder, though, if we often misunderstand this story as being unique and exclusive just to Jesus. What if it was never intended to be primarily about Jesus? Maybe this story is as much or more about what is happening to us as it is what happened to Jesus. 

I don’t know what happened that first Easter Day. I don’t know how whatever did happen happened. But I have come to believe that this story is less about explaining, understanding, making sense of, or even believing what happened that day, and more about experiencing what that day means for you and me today. So I’d like share three thoughts with you on what I think this story means for us.

  • First, it means a promise. It promises a future. And “the force of the future is to prevent the present from closing in on us, from closing us up.”  The promise means we can never say about our life, “This is it,” “This is all there is,” or “This is how it will always be.” Our resurrection is not a future event, something yet to happen. It is a present and everyday reality that promises us a future and the chance that this moment will be transformed and changed.  
  • Second, it means we have hope. It means we have hope for our lives and the lives of those we love. We have hope for something absolutely new, a new birth,  a new life. We have hope that our lives matter. It means we have hope in the midst of our doubts and uncertainties, despite the riskiness of life, and when nothing makes sense and the odds are against us. This hope means that we live with a great ‘perhaps’ and openness to the future. We hope against hope for the unexpected possibility of the impossible. After all Jesus did not die and rise for perfect people who had it all figured out. Jesus died and rose for the people who would betray Him, ignore His word, forget His promises, and doubt His messengers. Jesus died for the people who put Him to death. Jesus rose for the people whose minds rejected the idea of a resurrection.
  • Third, it means a call. The resurrection is a calling on our lives. And this call awaits our response. We are being called to believe in life because life is precious beyond belief. We are being called to appreciate the opportunities of every moment given us and to neither waste nor take for granted a single one. We are being called to live more fully alive and take the risk that there is always more life awaiting us even when it is unimaginable, unforeseeable, and seemingly impossible. The resurrection is wooing and calling us into life, more life, a new life. It is God’s Yes to us and it asks us to answer, to act, to respond and take the beautiful risk of saying, “Yes.” Yes to life. Yes to more life. Yes to a new life.

A promise, a hope, and a call. That’s what our resurrected life looks like. So let us ponder this:

  • What is the promise giving you today? In what ways is it opening up your life?
  • What is your hope today, that deep hope against hope? What are you hoping for that seems too good to be true and against all odds?
  • What is life calling for and asking from you today? What do you need to do or change in order to say yes?

I can’t answer those questions for you or tell you how you should answer. This is your resurrection. This is your Easter. This is your feast day. And that is true for every one of us here. Regardless of who you are, what you’ve done or not done, what has or has not happened in your life, what you believe or don’t believe, the promise remains, hope abides, and the call persists.

So, back to where we started. Is today’s story true or is it just “an idle tale?” I think that’s up to us. It is as true as we will let it be. Every time we claim the promise, hope against and hope, and say yes to life, this story is no longer just “an idle tale.” It becomes the truth of our lives, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, not because we can prove, understand, or explain it but because we are living it right here, right now.

I want to live this story. I want to do the truth of this story every day. I want to be the truth of this story.  This is our day for a new life, for more life. And there is nothing holding us back. The tomb is empty and “he is not here, but has risen.” So let’s leave this place holding this truth in our hearts and let us   claim the promise, hope against and hope, and say yes to life, let us seize the day. 

Alleluia! Christ is risen.

Revd Kia Pakenham / 20th April 2025

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