When you think about it, the whole reason we’re here this morning is because of three little words. Three little words that were spoken some 2000 years ago.
In fact, the whole reason the church exists, and the bible was written, and the whole reason Christians have been getting together every Sunday morning for the last 2000 years is because of these three little words.
Three little words spoken
by a handful of obscure men & women some 2000 years ago which have acted
like a pebble cast into a pond.
From the first time
these words were spoken they have rippled further and further out echoing
across the centuries and around the world, until once again they fill our ears this
morning.
And of course, those
three little words are, “Christ is risen!”
The grave couldn’t
hold him. Christ is risen from the dead!
And on that first
Easter morning 2000 years ago, as soon as the women had heard the angel speak these
words and seen the empty tomb, they raced back to tell the other disciples.
And the
rippling-effect began. “Christ is
risen!” they told them.
And at first, the
disciples didn’t believe them. They
thought the women were telling idle tales.
But then Peter decides
to go check it out And once he’d run to the tomb and seen that it was true. Then he started to echo those words, “Christ is risen!”
And over the course
of the next few days, more disciples met the risen Christ; at the seaside, inside
the locked room and on the road to Emmaus.
And each time they
saw him, they repeated these 3 little words to their friends, “Christ is risen!”
And then their
friends told their friends, and their friends told their friends, and on and on
it went down through the centuries until finally their friends told your
friends and your friends told you.
And now here we are
today echoing these same three words the angel said to Mary some 2000 years ago,
Christ is risen!
And once we get past
the sheer surprise of the whole thing the whole idea that someone who was dead isn’t
dead anymore, the question is, What does it have to do with you and me?
Well, I think the
best way to answer that question is to ask a different question first. What did it mean to the first disciples?
What did those 3
words mean to Peter and James and John and all the rest?
Well, think about where
the disciples were when Jesus died. They
were as far away as they could possible get!
They’d all abandoned him. Judas
had betrayed him. Peter denied him. And
everyone else had fled. They’d left
Jesus to die alone.
And so of course it
would be good news to them; to hear that he is risen!
They wouldn’t have
to live with the bitter taste of shame in their mouths. They could beg his forgiveness and be
reconciled with him.
And then who were
the first people the disciples told about the resurrection? Of course, all the people who were in
Jerusalem. The same people who’d
demanded his blood who’d shouted, “Crucify him!”
And so it would’ve
been good news for them, too to hear the Christ is risen! Because they could be reconciled with him,
too.
And so what we begin
to see is that the first people who heard these words were the very people who’d
had a hand in Jesus’ death in the first place.
And so the words had a personal connection for them.
They were words of
hope. But more importantly, they were words of forgiveness and reconciliation.
Because again only a
risen Christ could offer these folks the one thing they could never have found
on their own; his forgiveness.
In fact, his very
first word to the disciples after the resurrection was, “Peace. My peace I give to you,” he said
And again, like that
stone splashing into the sea those words of peace and forgiveness also began to
spread.
And folks began to
realize that the forgiveness offered wasn’t just for the sins of those who’d
been in Jerusalem when Jesus was killed.
No, the peace and forgiveness he was offering were for the sins of the
whole world.
“Everyone,” Peter
tells us in our first lesson this morning, “Everyone who believes in him receives
forgiveness of sins through his name.” That’s
the good news contained in these 3 little words.
And there’s even
more good news. Not only do these three
words mean the forgiveness of our sins, they also guarantee our resurrection,
too.
Christ’s
resurrection is our resurrection. Because
as Paul says in our second less this morning, “All will be made alive in Christ.”
And in fact, those
of us who have been baptized are called to live in newness of life now. We’re called to live a new life in which all our
words and deeds declare these same three words: Christ is risen! Sin is
forgiven. Death is destroyed.
And so now, 2000
years after that first Easter we gather here to celebrate the forgiveness of
our sins and the promise of our eternal life.
And to be reminded of the fact that it’s now our turn to share these 3
little words with others.