April 16, 2017
One
of my favorite hymns is “Were you there.” If you do not know the hymn, it is about the
crucifixion. It repeats the phrase “were
you there” adding various parts, like were you there when they nailed him to
the cross….were you there when they pierced him in the side? Singing it this week, I started to think
about what makes it such a powerful hymn…why it gives me goosebumps every time
I hear it.
I still remember the first time I heard
it. It was my senior year of high
school. My friend’s church was doing a passion play. One of my friends was playing Jesus and he
was one of the last people you would expect to play Jesus, but he did an
amazing job and then there was the song. It was sung from the balcony by one
voice. It sounded almost haunting. I can
remember it that vividly. This year, one
part struck me more poignantly than the others. After we ask, were you there,
we sing, “Sometimes it causes me to tremble, tremble, tremble…” That was when I got goosebumps this
year. I thought of those words again when
I considered the Gospel reading for today.
Each
Gospel has a slightly different interpretation of the resurrection story. Mark’s is very simple. It ends too quickly, as if Mark’s pen just
ran out of ink. Both Luke and John
contain more detail about the tomb itself and Jesus’s interaction with the
women or apostles. There is a little
more drama. There is a lot more
information of Jesus’ actual appearance and interactions with the women and the
disciples. It’s almost like there is an epilogue to the resurrection in Luke
and John.
Matthew’s story appears almost start by
comparison, except for a few unique details.
Since it is relatively stark and brief, these unique details seem
extremely important, especially when contemplating a sermon on Matthew. One of the biggest differences between
Matthew’s story and the others is the earthquakes. The first earthquake happens right after Jesus
dies. It’s not a huge earthquake. Matthew
says, “The earth shook and rocks split.”
Apparently it got the attention of a few people, but not most.
The second earthquake happened as Mary
Magdalene and the other Mary approached the tomb. They did not go in. They did not knock on the
tomb door. They just approached it and
the earth began to shake. Here the
Gospel writer says, “There was a great earthquake.” This one was more significant than the
last. As the earth quaked, an angel
descended from heaven and his appearance was like lightning. The angel immediately
rolled back the stone.
What
seems odd to me about this whole thing is the timing of the second earthquake. The first earthquake happened right after
Jesus died. That makes sense. That was a
big moment—a life changing moment. The earth
should have shook. The second earthquake happened as the women approached the
tomb. The angel tells them that Jesus is
not there. He has been raised. He is already risen. My question is, why didn’t the earth quake
then? It should have quaked as Jesus
left the tomb...or perhaps the moment when he took that first breath. There should have been quaking, a bright
light, angels singing. Yet it seems as
though the actual resurrection went unnoticed.
The event that rocked the earth was not the resurrection itself, but the
women approaching the tomb.
There
is one thing that has always struck me as odd about each resurrection story in
all of the Gospels. There is never a
description of the actual resurrection, or Jesus’ departure from the tomb. The
logical explanation would be that the authors of the Gospels could not write
about that since no one had witnessed it.
Yet it is surprising that no one used creative license to fill in the
gaps. Jesus could have told the story
later. It seems like a story people would have wanted to hear. Another
explanation is that the Gospel writers felt like some things could not be
explained. The moment was so sacred that
it could not possibly be described by words. That seems plausible to me.
The
hymn, Were you there is asking not if
we were actually there at the crucifixion…but if we can imagine ourselves
there. Can we put ourselves in that moment,
at the foot of the cross? If we can,
would be tremble? Presumably we would
all have different reactions, but I think trembling would be a fairly reasonable
reaction. I is important to consider the moment of Jesus death…that moment when
the earth shook. It’s almost like the
earth, the ground felt the weight of the moment and so it trembled.
Therefore it makes sense that it would
happen again at the resurrection. This time
it was not grief that caused the earth to tremble, it was the moment when
heaven and earth touched. They touched
ever so briefly, but there was a moment that transcended time and space, the
moment when two women opened their hearts and minds to the possibility that
Jesus was alive. In that brief moment,
everything changed for these women and ultimately for humanity as a whole. Their world was shaken. It was rearranged in a way that seemed almost
unrecognizable. The crazy thing is that
they had not even seen Jesus yet. All
they had done was approached the tomb…because in approaching the tomb, they
took a chance so that when the tomb opened up, their hearts and minds did as
well. They saw a world transformed.
The
reason it is important to imagine ourselves at the foot of the cross is because
we need to feel the depth of that grief.
When we do, we will know the hope of the resurrection that much more
powerfully. If we tremble when we
consider the death of Jesus, then we should be shaken in body, mind and spirit
by the hope of the resurrection. I know
that is a not an easy thing…not an easy leap to make. You might think, well if I was there in
Jesus’ time, that would be different. I could have believed if I was there. Yet the only reason that we know about the
resurrection is because a few women were willing to approach the tomb. They had to approach it.
Sometimes we think that if we cannot
wrap our heads and hearts around everything that the Bible and the church say
about God and faith, then we have fallen short---it’s really not worth
bothering at all. That is not true.
Remember, the earth did not quake when Jesus appeared. It quaked when the women approached the tomb. Before we can have a real relationship with
Jesus…maybe even before we have any relationship at all, we have to be willing
to approach God, to come face to face with our hopes and fears. It is only then when we will find the
strength to open our hearts and minds to the reality of the resurrection. It is
only then when we can be shaken.
The logical question is how can one
approach God. It’s not like he’s
standing on the corner. He’s not on
social media. It’s not easy. But in the Episcopal Church, we have a way to
start. Come to the altar. Come to the
heart of the church. You don’t even have
to take communion. You might not be
ready for that. Just come, kneel, leave
your doubts and fears in the pew. You can get back to them later. It might not be an earth shaking moment. I can pretty much guarantee there will not be
an earthquake (although that would be awesome if we could have just a little
one at a pivotal point in the service). You
have already taken a huge step. You are
in church. Take the next. Approach the
tomb. Approach the altar. If you can take that first step, you will
always find the living God.
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