Preached at All Saints Collingwood, Anglican Diocese of Toronto, on April 5th, Easter Sunday. Readings: Jeremiah 31:1-6, Acts 10:34-43, John 20:1-8
Jesus said to her, "Woman, why are you weeping? Whom are you looking for?
I often try to begin a homily by trying to connect scripture with something happening in the world, but today I’m going to go outside the world. Sometime tomorrow, on Easter Monday, the four human beings aboard the Artemis spacecraft will travel around the moon. They will transit the moon’s dark side, the hemisphere that is forever turned away from the sun. During this time the astronauts will be cut off from radio contact with earth, and as they travel around the moon, they may beat the record of Apollo 13 as travelleing the furthest away from Earth as anyone has ever been.
Now I confess that like most preachers, I love a good metaphor, and as a child who was allowed to stay up and watch the moon landing, I’m a sucker for a space metaphor. Last night at our Vigil service, Father Gordon spoke of the risen Jesus coming into the light. The return of Artemis from the dark side of the moon, coming back into the sun’s light and regaining contact with home, can be one way of helping us understand the miracle of Easter Sunday.
After all, both the Easter story and the Artemis journey involve a large rock, on the far side of which is darkness and the unknown, and when it is rolled aside, or orbited, there is the return to light and reconnection. It’s a tempting metaphor, but when we consider it, the differences are greater than the similarities, and those differences may help us understand Easter the better.
I’m not an engineer, but I’ve known enough of them to know that they are never happy until the unexpected and the possibility of failure are reduced as much as is humanly possible. Mistakes are analyzed and improvements are made; think of the Challenger and the catastrophic failure of the O-rings. The Artemis may well be the most over-engineered machine in human history. It’s trajectory and the time of it’s return from the dark side of the sun will have been calculated to the second. Countless hours will have been spent designing and planning to reduce risk and uncertainty.
The Resurrection of Jesus, however, is the triumph of the unexpected and the impossible over what humans then and now know to be real. Jews believed that Elijah and Moses were taken up into heaven, but no one had been raised from the dead, unless you count Lazarus whom Jesus had raised.
The chief priests worried that the body might be stolen and rumours of Jesus’ return might be spread, but they did not expect resurrection. The disciples, scattered and demoralized, had not expected it. As Fleming Rutledge puts it, they had seen their beloved master mocked, beaten, and “pinned up to die like an insect, an object of utmost contempt and public disgust”. When Mary goes to the tomb in John’s gospel, she takes no expectations with her. There is only her grief and her immense sorrow.
Ask anyone who has grieved, and they will tell you that death is terribly real. If you’ve been with a loved one at the time of death, you will recall the moment that they were truly gone, and only the cooling shell was left. I recall the moment I poured the ashes of my wife Kay into her favourite lake. There was a brief swirl of dust on the surface of the water, and then nothing to say she was ever there. Death is real. Grief is real. Absence is real.
If Easter is to be understood as the return of Jesus to life, then it will be rejected by anyone who values reason, evidence, and proof. I’ve known many churchgoers, and some preachers, shy away from the actual resurrection because it seems so unbelievable. It’s far easier to say that the disciples experienced some renewal of hope, some spiritual sense of communion with Jesus, than it is to say that the Jesus rose from the dead, stood before them, spoke to them, and comforted them. I love John’s gospel for it’s account of the resurrection. The focus is firmly on one person, Mary, and the terrible reality of her grief. Several times she is described as “weeping”. Jesus sees the weeping Mary and knows her, whereas she mistakes him for the gardener. Perhaps her eyes were dim with tears, and certainly, to see her friend alive is the last thing she is expecting. After all, no one in the gospels really understands what we understand, that Jesus has defeated death.
We don’t know how Jesus speaks her name, “Mary” , though I like to imagine it is with affection, as one speaks to a friend. And while his refusal to let her hold onto him is mysterious, there is a definite connection between the two. I heard it said that Jesus may well long to hold her, but knows he can’t. It’s a comforting thought. But more comforting, I think, is the promise that Jesus’ return from the dead has created a new kinship and new connection to God: “I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.” So as is always the case with John’s gospel, there is deep theology, but there is also very personal and human relationship between the divine and the human.
John’s gospel of course begins witb a similar cosmic mysticism. “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God. He was with God from the beginning, through him all things were made”. This “mighty word” as the hymn puts it can defeat sin and death, but still find the time to appear to and comfort his friend Mary. Jesus has the time to do this, because all time is his, and as a shepherd, he will always seek out his own.
So if it comforts you, give yourself permission to think of yourself as Mary, with all of your burdens, whatever pains or sorrow yor loneliness you may carry. You are just one human amidst the billions who live on that blue orb, and yet you are known to Jesus. He is with you, as he is with you. He calls you brother, sister, friend. He is light, and he is love. Death cannot hold him back, and death cannot keep you from him. This Easter Sunday, as he does every day, wherever we may be on the blue orb of the Earth that he created, Jesus comes to each of us, as Saviour, brother, and friend, and he will always be with us, in the land of the living.

