Easter is a counterintuitive event, or that which is ‘seemingly contrary to common sense or counter to what intuition would lead one to expect’, no matter where you are in the spectrum of the church; whether you believe that the stories in the gospel narratives are eye-witness accounts of what actually happened, or you come down on the side that they were myths “…stories about the way things never were, but always are.” [Marcus Borg], or if you land somewhere in between.
Eastertide is when we celebrate spiritual strength over political might, personal choice over legal enforcement, grace over punishment, hope over fear, and love over control.
It tells of a peasant from Galilee going up against the Imperial Roman Empire, of an stone mysteriously rolled away from the entrance to a tomb and a body missing, of people in disarray and confusion. There is no victory of the mighty over the weak no mighty battle being fought and won. Just disgrace and failure in the eyes of that world.
Yet here we are 2000+ years later still celebrating the death of this one man among the many who died by cruxifixction on the hillsides outside of Jerusalem. All of these deaths were meant to be a warning to the common folk of the penalty for going against the might of the Roman Empire.
Would Jesus, or indeed any of his disciples, recognize our celebrations today around his death? Those having the power, those in control of how things must be done, are found in the pews of our churches on Easter Sunday. Outside of those doors his name is scarcely heard, even on this day of all days. There is no real excitement in the streets, no one feeling so overcome by loss that their very life is changed.
Where can we find the message of the Easter that is told in the Gospels in welfare that doesn’t meet the needs of the vulnerable in society, in lack of affordable housing, in bombing those with who we disagree, in fear of the other, or in lack of welcome to the immigrant in our midst?
Easter speaks of death and new beginnings, of hope, of grace, not of control, power and self-interest. It challenges us to move beyond ourselves, to live a new life, to look after the vulnerable and to protect the weak. But above all its message to us should be not to allow ourselves be cowed by authorities into living a life that is not authentic to what we believe.
Did Easter do that for you as well this year?
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