Sermon Tone Analysis

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lass=MsoNormal>Heavenly Father, we thank you that you loved the world so much that you gave your one and only Son so that we that believe shall have eternal life – Amen 
 
"Early on the first day of the week, while it was still dark. .
."
This is an entirely fitting dramatic beginning for our gospel reading today – the stage is being set…
            It is the stage on which we will hear the greatest news of all time
                        We have come to the most dramatic conclusion of our Lenten journey
                                    We have arrived at ‘the moment in which all time *leans* into’
 
We are, of course, celebrating today - Easter
            We are celebrating the resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ
We all know the story; we all know the good news of its conclusion
            Jesus, after a brutal execution by crucifixion – rises on the third day
                        Thus securing a victory over death… and all that is death
                                    It is the triumph that all the earth groans to hear
 
 
Yet…If death is defeated once and for all – why don’t we always feel the elation of that victory?
"Early on the first day of the week, while it was still dark. .
."
This is always how our discovery of the risen Christ begins -- darkness.
While it was still dark, Mary Magdalene went to a tomb, because earlier in the week Jesus had been killed.
With Him, her hope died.
On the surface it might appear to be a twilight preceding darkest night.
In fact, it is a twilight preceding a new sunrise, and the dawn is imminent
Twilight; a term that refers to an intermediate state, between night and day – between darkness and light
And for Mary Magdelene, the light of Jesus appears to have gone out, this twilight seems to be before a darkness where no light is possible
 
"Early on the first day of the week, while it was still dark. .
."
Earlier this week, an old couple received a phone call from their son who lives far away.
The son said he was sorry, but he wouldn’t be able to come for a visit over the Easter holidays after all.
"The grandkids say hello."
They assured him that they understood, but when they hung up the phone they didn’t dare look at each other.
Earlier this week, a woman was called into her supervisor’s office to hear that times are hard for the company and they had to let her go.
"So sorry."
She cleaned out her desk, packed away her hopes for getting ahead, and wondered what she would tell her kids.
Earlier this week, someone received terrible news from a physician.
Earlier this week someone else heard the words, "I have never loved you."
Earlier this week, someone’s hope was crucified.
And the darkness is overwhelming.[1]
We may all know the story of Easter; we may all know the good news of its conclusion
            But do we really grasp the implications of it
 
No one is ever ready to encounter Easter until he or she has spent time in the dark place where hope cannot be seen.
Where Easter is the last thing anyone is expecting
 
 
Each of the four gospel accounts of the Resurrection, Matthew, Mark, Luke and John – all are quite short, John being the longest at only 18 verses
To tell the news of the risen Lord is a short message
                        …It *is* the implications that are limitless
 
The resurrection is the fulcrum of faith.
The resurrection is the axis, the center, the core,
The pivot point of faith for a Christian
If there is no resurrection of Jesus, then Christianity is just another ancient religion with its own particular form of spirituality and morality
 
For a Christian, as important as the teaching of Jesus of Nazareth are
Without the signs and wonders, how fragile might our belief *be* in those ideas and concepts…
Thomas is not the only disciple that needs help, that needs something more
And so our Lord provides for us ‘The Resurrection’ - the greatest of all His signs and wonders, the miracle of salvation…
And it is with the trust in the certainly of the resurrection, all Jesus’ teaching about the ‘Kingdom of God’ take on an understanding beyond anything that the world has every seen before, or will ever see again…
 
And God in an incredible display of confidence, confidence beyond any cultural rationale
            Reveals the resurrection *first* to Mary Magdalene
Mary, a woman, was the first person to see the Risen Christ.
In a world in which women were considered property and had no legal rights;
In a world in which women were considered possessions, chattel, and material goods,
Throughout the earthly life of Jesus the role of women was transformed by his attitude and teachings
The stories of the woman at the well, and Mary and Martha, to name only a few, reveal Jesus’ positive attitudes and actions to women.
The /first/ person to see the Risen Christ was a /woman/.
In this significant and historically accurate gesture, the New Testament elevates and transforms the status of women
            And this but just another layer in how God reveals and declares a reordering of the world
 
 
Jesus unveils the mystery of the empty tomb – Jesus shakes off the cloak of death… to a women mourning at the site of His tomb
            At first she sees only with her eyes and the fear that is in her heart
Here is a woman alone in the twilight, in a cemetery, with an unknown man
Where grave robbers were a reality and she stirs up her courage to reveal her greatest fear in the moment, that they have taken away Jesus’ body
And then it happens…
Mary's moment of recognition comes with the mention of her name.
*/ /*
*/“Mary”/* says our Lord – and with that Jesus declares a truth that He had prophetically claimed earlier and recorded in John 10:3-4: /"He calls his own sheep by name... and the sheep follow him because they know his voice."/
Using someone's name, especially a first name, assumes familiarity, intimacy, and closeness.
Jesus' followers have a relationship with their Lord that goes well beyond a formal or institutional connection.
Our Lord chooses to be revealed and recognized by calling Mary by name…
This begs the question - Does the Lord sometimes communicate in ways or forms that we do not expect… and thereby fail to notice?[2]
In our account today we have a lot of back and forth to the tomb
Mary, first gripped by the fear, fear upon seeing that the stone had been rolled away – runs to Peter and John, and we can imagine breathlessly says /“They have taken the Lord out of the tomb, and we do not know where they have laid him.”
(John 20:2b)/
                        The two disciples run to the tomb
                                    And later leave Mary behind
And upon encountering the Lord… when He has called her by name… she does not run back, but returns walking proudly in her faith and mission that Christ has entrusted to her
She can't show them what she has seen.
She can only tell them what she has seen and heard and believes.
So it is with us today.
Our belief in the resurrection is not from our own personally first hand visual account
And notice how in all the accounts of the resurrection, no one actually sees personally the resurrection, they see instead the risen Lord – their faith, as ours, comes from when God returns into their lives
What we see, may not necessarily lead to a correct belief about Jesus.
And so we have Mary, who shows us that merely seeing Jesus isn’t the answer – it is when she recognizes our Lord’s return into her life
 
And yet in the midst of all this, we are given a wonderful detail for the eyes to behold
The disposition of the wrappings (in verse 5) may serve an apologetic purpose.
The fact that the linens and the facecloth were neatly laid out, provides for the most obvious of future skeptical claims and argues against the theft of the body.
Thieves would have left the body wrapped or, if they removed any linens, would not have done so in a tidy fashion.
We believe because of the power of the Holy Spirit has worked ‘the miracle of belief’ in our lives.
The evidence for eternal life rests on faith, and not on proof or verification or wisdom or intellectual arguments.
Any way you look at it from a scientific explanation - that is a mighty fragile beginning for a religion that has lasted almost 2000 years now
 
…But, when you consider it to be a *transcended* *truth – a divine truth*
The miracle of belief may even come wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in an animal trough
 
 
The Apostle Paul tells us in the 15th chapter of 1st letter to the church at Corinth:
/51// Listen, I tell you a mystery: We will not all sleep, but we will all be changed— 52 in a flash, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet.
For the trumpet will sound, the dead will be raised imperishable, and we will be changed.
… “Death has been swallowed up in victory.”
55 “Where, O death, is your victory?
Where, O death, is your sting?” 56 The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law.
57 But thanks be to God!
He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
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