I've always loved Easter! There is something so significant about the day we collectively as the body of Christ stop and celebrate the fact that God is alive. I realize that this is something that we should recognize daily, but there is power in the specific recognition of the redemption for us within the resurrection.
This year I've been experiencing Easter in a new way. Since the year began, my life has been full of tragedy and death. It seems each week there is a new piece of my heart that is breaking for or with the people who fill my life. I have truly felt heavy and weary laden lately. Usually I am a extremely hopeful person...hopeful sometimes to the point of being obnoxious. But this year that same hope has been harder for me to hold onto.
As I work at a church, Easter preparation began for me in February. As I began processing all the lessons, devotions, traditions, and liturgy that had to be prepared and done this Easter season, I was reminded of the Easter story and the joy. I felt that overwhelming joy of Easter, long before the "holiday" actually arrived. And this made me think that maybe I have been missing the point or possibly just failed to articulate it to myself in this way before...
What if Easter isn't so much something we are supposed to celebrate but a way of life?
Jesus, after his resurrection, told his disciples to "go into all the world and make disciples..."
The end of the Easter story, the finale was Jesus commisioning his disciples to find and help make more disciples... Jesus didn't say- elect disciples, appoint disciples...no Jesus said make disciples. Which is an incredibly apt description.
In 1st century Galilee (where Jesus taught and lived) to be a disciple meant that you were "one being taught in the way of a rabbi". It meant that you had gone to school and excelled to the point that a rabbi had specifically chosen you to be his follower, to learn his ways, to walk with him.
You didn't become a disciple of a rabbi overnight. It took time. It took study. It took effort. It mean incorporating the rabbis beliefs into yours and living life in a way that reflected that.
It meant taking that rabbi's teaching upon yourself. Now a rabbis idea of thought or collected group of beliefs and teaching were called his yoke. So as a disciple your job was to take up his yoke and live that way. It was also to teach other people the way of his yoke.
So when Jesus tells the 11 original disciples to "go make disciples..." what he is telling them is- "Go! Teach people my way of life! Give them my yoke to carry (remember him telling up his yoke was easy and light?)... Give them this new way to live!"
Easter is about sharing Jesus' yoke with people. Its about reminding people that death holds no victory.
Its about helping people find that in the Risen Lord-
where there is hurt, there is comfort.
where there is heaviness, there is relief.
where there is sickness, there is healing.
where there is questioning, there is also peace.
where there is death, there is life.
So Easter is something we merely celebrate, Easter is something we do. It is something we are called to bring to people and is an essential part of the yoke of Jesus we are to share with others and incorporate into our own lives.
We are Easter people every day of our lives! He is Risen, indeed.
1 comment:
I've said it a million and one times, I know, but you are truly an amazing and gifted writer! Let me know exactly when and where you are delivering your sermons this weekend. I'm thinking about making the journey. Have a great week!
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