
He Came Back….To Us!
And very early on the first day of the week, when the sun had
risen, they went to the tomb…. As they entered the tomb,
they saw a young man, dressed in a white robe,…he said
to them, ‘Do not be alarmed; you are looking for Jesus
of Nazareth, who was crucified. He has been raised;… he
is going ahead of you to Galilee; there you will see him, just
as he told you." Mark 16:2-7
Mark says that on that first Easter, women went to the tomb
to pay their last respects to poor, dead Jesus. To their alarm,
the body of Jesus was not there. A "young man, dressed in
a white robe" told them, "You are looking for Jesus
of Nazareth, who was crucified? Well, he isn't here. He is raised.
He is going ahead of you to Galilee."
Here's my Easter question for you: Why Galilee?
Galilee? Galilee is a forlorn, out of the way sort of place.
It's where Jesus came from (which in itself was a shock -- "Can
anything good come out of Galilee?"). Jesus is Galilee's
only claim to fame. Jesus spent most of his ministry out in Galilee,
the bucolic out back of Judea. He expended most of his teaching
trying to prepare his forlorn disciples for their trip up to
Jerusalem where the real action was. All of Jesus' disciples
seem to have hailed from out in Galilee. Jesus' ultimate goal
seems not to focus on Galilee but rather on the Capital City,
Jerusalem. In Jerusalem he was crucified and in Jerusalem he
rose. Pious believers in Jesus' day expected a restoration of
Jerusalem in which Messiah would again make the Holy City the
power-center that it deserved to be, the capital city of the
world. Which makes all the more odd that the moment he rose from
the dead, says tod ay's gospel, Jesus left the big city and headed
back to Galilee. Why?
One might have thought that the first day of his resurrected
life, the risen Christ might have made straight for the palace,
the seat of Roman power, appear there and say,
"Pilate, you made a big mistake. Now, it's payback time!"
One might have thought that Jesus would do something effective.
If you want to have maximum results, don't waste your time talking
to the first person whom you meet on the street, figure out a
way to get to the movers and the shakers, the influential and
the newsmakers, those who have some power and prestige. If you
really want to promote change, go to the top.
I recall an official of the National Council of Churches who,
when asked why the Council had fallen on hard times and appeared
to have so little influence, replied, "The Bush Administration
has refused to welcome us to the White House." How on earth
can we get anything done if the most powerful person on earth
won't receive us at the White House?
But Jesus? He didn't go up to the palace, the White House, the
Kremlin, or Downing Street. (Jesus never got on well with politicians.)
Jesus went outback, back to Galilee.
Why Galilee? Nobody special lived in Galilee, nobody except
the followers of Jesus. Us.
The resurrected Christ comes back to, appears before the very
same rag tag group of failures who so disappointed him, misunderstood
him, forsook him and fled into the darkness. He returns to his
betrayers. He returns to us.
It would have been news enough that Christ had died, but the
good news was that he died for us. As Paul said elsewhere, one
of us might be willing to die for a really good person but Christ
shows that he is not one of us by his willingness to die for
sinners like us. His response to our sinful antics was not to
punish or judge us. Rather, he came back to us, flooding our
flat world not with the wrath that we deserved but with his vivid
presence that we did not deserve.
It would have been news enough that Christ rose from the dead,
but the good news was that he rose for us.
That first Easter, nobody actually saw Jesus rise from the dead.
They saw him afterwards. They didn't appear to him; he appeared
to them. Us. In the Bible, the "proof" of the resurrection
is not the absence of Jesus' body from the tomb; it's the presence
of Jesus to his followers. The gospel message of the resurrection
is not first, "Though we die, we shall one day return to
life," it is, "Though we were dead, Jesus returned
to us."
If it was difficult to believe that Jesus was raised from the
dead, it must have been almost impossible to believe that he
was raised and returned to us. The result of Easter, the product
of the Resurrection of Christ is the church -- a community of
people with nothing more to convene us than that the risen Christ
came back to us. That's our only claim, our only hope. He came
back to Galilee. He came back to us.
In life, in death, in any life beyond death, this is our great
hope and our great commission. Hallelujah! Go! Tell! The risen
Christ came back to Birmingham, uh I mean Galilee.
William Willimon |