Easter Morning #1

As Easter dawned this year, I felt the same sense of relief I always feel. Good Friday had passed, along with that mysterious Saturday when we aren’t sure exactly where the spirit of Jesus was or what he was doing. Once Sunday dawns, the mourning and uncertainty are blown away like leaves in a gust of wind.

I like to think about that first Easter, putting together the details we read in the 4 Gospels. When the women were walking to Jesus’ tomb, they were consumed with grief over losing their beloved friend and Lord. According to Scripture, they walked to the garden cemetery while it was still dark, wondering how they were going to get into the tomb to lovingly apply spices to Jesus’ body.

Scripture hints that it was only shortly before they arrived that God the Father had dispatched two angels from heaven, telling them, “It’s time! Go to Jerusalem and open my Son’s grave!”

A stone rolled awayMatthew tells us one of those angels rolled the heavy stone away, no doubt a task of great joy to this heavenly being. I can just imagine Jesus sitting up on that stone slab with the angels’ lightning-like clothing illuminating the dark tomb in that pre-dawn hour. Maybe the angels helped him remove his grave clothes. Maybe they even brought along a new outfit for him to wear.

And then it was time. Jesus stood, put one foot in front of the other, and walked away from death and out of that tomb! And it seemed that within minutes he encountered Mary Magdalene. He was still close to the tomb entrance, and he told her not to touch him, since he hadn’t yet been to the Father, which leads us to believe he was newly-risen. (Not too long after that he had no problem letting people touch him.)

Mary weepingThough Mary was so shrouded in grief she didn’t recognize Jesus at first, she quickly came around (“Rabboni!”) and knew who he was, believing that somehow he had come alive again. And there it was: Happy Easter #1! Mary didn’t wait to understand it all. She just believed.

The same is true for us today, nearly 2000 Easters later. There is much we can’t figure out about that first Easter, and we crave answers to our questions. But whether we understand it or not isn’t what matters. The important thing is that we believe it.

It’s a great privilege to live on this side of Christ’s resurrection. And each year, as we go into the sadness of Good Friday, we already know our Happy Easter morning is a guarantee. But may that awareness never dull the glorious truth of what Jesus did for Mary Magdalene on that first Easter… and for all the rest of us who believe.

“Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and you will be saved.” (Acts 16:31)

Labor and Delivery

Most of my writing is done in the smallest room in our house. We lightheartedly call it “the library” because there are book shelves in there, but that’s a stretch.

Once in a while, though, I’ve labeled this room something else: our womb-room.

IMG_2645It’s where Nate’s hospital bed was set up during his short-lived struggle with cancer, and we kept it as quiet and safe as possible. He and I retreated there each evening, closing the small French doors behind us, to talk in low tones about important stuff.

As Nate’s need for sleep increased, he spent less time in his living room recliner and more on his bed in this room, drifting into sleep earlier each evening. As he slept, I still sat next to him, aware that each day was bringing us closer to death’s separation.

I often thought about what Nate’s doctor had told me privately: “Birth and death are both messy.” Both also require some hard labor.

A baby’s birth forces him from a dark, warm, safe environment to the bright lights, cold air, and sharp noises outside the womb. And from a baby’s perspective, life after birth isn’t all that safe, starting with his first scrubbing in the hospital nursery.

Dying has its parallels. Nate’s physical death was an exit from a womb, too, our small womb-room, with its peaceful, dimly-lit atmosphere. Just like a baby’s birth requires arduous labor accompanied by pain, Nate’s transition was laborious, too, a regimen of pain caused by disease.

These days the hospital bed is long gone, and as I sit and write in our little womb-room, I often think through the details of what went on here in the fall of 2009. I recall everything Nate went through, thankful to know that what we witnessed wasn’t as much a transition from life to death as a transition from life-with-limits to life-unlimited.

As physical birth brings great joy to a mother and father (and a smile to a baby’s face eventually), being born to eternal life is far more spectacular than that!

It means delivery from suffering of all kinds and a reunion with those we love who have preceded us there. It means the disappearance of any deficiencies and the start-up of abilities we can’t even imagine. And it means the end of all negative emotions, the uptick of all positive ones.

Best of all, though, it means talking and walking with Jesus Christ himself, along with the satisfaction of finally seeing what he looks like. It means watching his facial expressions, listening to his tone of voice, understanding his words, and feeling his touch.

I can’t imagine any labor and delivery with a better end-result than all that.

“If you remain faithful even when facing death, I will give you the crown of life.” (Revelation 2:10)

Fooled Ya!

Every April 1st my mind floats back to childhood and April Fool’s Day with our fun-loving mom. Actually, she enjoyed playing tricks on people year ’round.

Mom owned an entire box of tricks, including a beautiful crystal juice glass with tiny cuts in its pattern. As the person drank, juice would dribble down their front, and she would laugh till she cried.

Ice with flyShe also had a plastic puddle of fake vomit, a true-to-life melted ice cream bar, and a realistic-looking doggie deposit. Her pack of gum snapped any fingers trying to take a piece, and she made such regular use of her plastic ice cube with the fly in it, that it finally turned yellow.

Mom got a kick out of short-sheeting the beds of overnight guests, especially those who weren’t acquainted with her jokester ways. And when people came to dinner, they might get the plate with an inflatable “lift” beneath it, operated by a squeeze-bulb in Mom’s lap.

Pin up girlIf a pastor was coming, she might put her pin-up girl decals under the toilet seat. I remember her chuckling as she set that up for Alan Redpath, pastor of Moody Church, just before he and his family arrived for dinner.

I’m not sure what the Lord thought of Mom’s endless trickery. Although Scripture does record God laughing (Psalm 37:13), dabbling in shallow humor doesn’t seem to fit with his holy character. And I don’t think he ever duped people into believing something that wasn’t true.

I, on the other hand, can’t say the same. How often have I tried to pull a fast one by cutting a corner and then convincing myself that God “didn’t catch that.” But of course there’s nothing God doesn’t “catch.”

I don’t think he cares one way or the other about leaky juice glasses or short-sheeted beds, but he does care about protecting and promoting his truth. I’ve gotten myself into trouble on more than one occasion by not being truthful, and I still fail often by way of embellishment and exaggeration.

It’s not that God wants us to be bland in our speech. Scripture instructs us to “be salty” as we talk about spiritual things with others, and that can’t mean anything other than to make it “taste good.” It might even mean it’s ok to use humor in the process. Mom did her share of winning souls to Christ, and something tells me she made that fun, too.

Mom.As for Pastor Redpath, I’m not sure what he thought about Mom’s pin-up decals. When he came out of the bathroom that day he didn’t say a word. Maybe in the end, that joke was on Mom.

 “A joyful heart is good medi- cine.” (Proverbs 17:22)