Easter Sunday (C)

Tales from the Crypt

by Peter K. Perry

John 20:1-18

(This meditation is prefaced by a children's moment in which the children receive empty plastic eggs and hear the story of Jeremy. The story is told near the end of the sermon.)

"Greetings, Fright Fans!" Some of you will recognize those words as the greeting of the Crypt Keeper, the animated host a television horror series called Tales From the Crypt, and based on the legendary 1950's comic book series. The Crypt Keeper's welcome at the top of each episode is "Greetings, Fright Fans!"

The original Tales From The Crypt ran for 30 issues, each containing four morbid stories of murder and mayhem. They were graveyard stories of death and the occult, of the undead terrorizing an unsuspecting world. The comic books created a public outcry. They were condemned as disgusting, corrupt and perverse, and eventually the comic books were pulled from the shelves.

How times have changed! Debuting on HBO in the fall of 1989 with six episodes, the show became an overnight success and the Crypt Keeper became an American symbol of horror. He's even appeared as a guest on Jay Leno's Tonight Show! Numerous stars, including Brad Pitt, Demi Moore, Whoopi Goldberg, and Kirk Douglas, have appeared in the show. And episodes have been directed by the likes of Tom Hanks, Michael J. Fox, and Arnold Schwarzenegger. Recently the show, in an edited form has been shown on the FOX network, which is where I've watched a few of the episodes, since we are too cheap to pay for premium channels! My kids know more about it than I do, actually, since in 1994, ABC made a somewhat less frightful animated version for Saturday mornings!

The stories all revolve around the mysteries of death and the afterlife, and the program is one of the most popular shows in syndication, seen in over fifty nations. I think that the popularity of Tales from the Crypt is just one sign that we live in a society that despairs over death.

It is a Good Friday World. Turn on the news and listen to the stories: children killing their classmates, parents abusing their children, terrorists bombing their neighbors. It is a Good Friday World. Bad news comes in buckets: a friend has cancer, another is divorcing, yet another grieves over a sibling's death. It is a Good Friday World. Hopelessness is the theme of the day: she works in a dead-end job that she hates, he has nothing left to spend after paying the monthly bills, the high school kids worry that they won't be able live the kind of life their parents lived. It is a Good Friday World. And it is filled with tales from the crypt.

We all have our own tales from the crypt to tell, don't we? Stories of parents who didn't love us, of children who have disappointed us, of jobs and careers that leave us wanting more, of illnesses that debilitate us, of loves lost and lives forgotten. We don't have to look far to see Good Friday in our lives. It is in every one of us, and the pinnacle of Good Friday, the peak of our quiet desperation, the climax of our tales from the crypt is death.

But this is Easter and I'm not here today to tell you tales from the crypt as the world tells them to you. For I am a Christian, and you are here today to hear about another tale from another crypt, but this tale has a different ending. There are no monstrous beings in this story to haunt our sleep, there are no losers in this story who forever despair with regret-filled lives, and there is above all else no hint of hopelessness in this tale from this crypt.

For this is the tale of a woman named Mary, who went to the crypt of her friend and teacher named Jesus. [retell the gospel story ] Through her tears, she heard the man say, "Mary!" And with the saying of her name, Good Friday ended and Easter began. When he called out her name, she knew that this was no gardener. When he said "Mary," she knew that it was Jesus. She turned her tear-filled eyes upward, and looked into his eyes, which surely were filled with joy, and she said in Hebrew,"Teacher!"

He told her that he was ascending to God in heaven, and he reminded her God was his Father AND her Father, his God AND her God.. And he told her to go and tell the others what she knew. And so Mary Magdalene went and announced to the disciples, "I have seen the Lord!"

This is a tale from a crypt, but with an ending like no other tale ever told. Death does not win in this tale, from this crypt. Good Friday gives way to Easter.

Like the rest of the world, I have seen the movie Titanic. To tell you the truth, I didn't really want to go see it. You see, I was convinced that I knew the ending. We all know the ending. Titanic hits an iceberg and sinks, and over 1500 people die in the cold waters of the Atlantic Ocean. It is a Good Friday story, a tale from a watery crypt.

Then I read a review which quoted James Cameron , the writer and director as saying, "Titanic is not just a cautionary tale - a myth, a parable, a metaphor for the ills of mankind. It is also a story of faith, courage, sacrifice and, above all else, love."

So I went to see the movie. How many of you have seen it? Now, true confession time, how many of you have seen it more than once? The Titanic phenomena, people in droves seeing the movie multiple times, would not have happened if the movie had really been a Good Friday story. The reason people go again and again to see Titanic is that, in fact, it is an Easter story. Oh, there is no changing the ending. The ship still sinks, and the people still die. But in the grand story from history, the writer has the told the story of a woman named Rose who is engaged to man she doesn't love, whose exuberant heart is bound up by the chains of expectations and the pretentious cords of prejudice.

And friends that is the story of Easter. Jesus comes and saves us. He touches us with us love and offers us life in abundance, a good life that turns us away from Good Friday and toward Easter. We, in response, put our faith in him, and we promise to live and not to die. We promise to never let go, knowing that God never lets go of us. And in the end we know that we will be together.

There are Good Fridays. There always will be. Easter doesn't mean that we will not be hurt, that life will be easy, that bad things won't happen. Rose must lead her life, and so must we. But because we have Easter, because we have a savior, we can live our lives not in quiet desperation and anguish, but with the confidence that we will be with God in paradise, that love will never end, even if we die.

Jeremy, and all the people we love, and yes, even ourselves, must one day die. We will have lived through hardships and troubles. We will have known Good Friday. We will have heard many tales from the crypts of our lives. But the single greatest tale we can tell is the tale Mary told. Jesus told her to go and tell the disciples what had she had seen So she went and she told them, "I have seen the Lord." Mary came from the crypt and proclaimed the Easter message: "I have seen the Lord."

Her challenge, and indeed our challenge, is to take the knowledge of Easter, to take the promise of Easter, to take our faith in Easter, and make Easter real today. This is our task now to make Easter real in our own lives, and in the lives of the people around us, to live Easter lives in a Good Friday world!

Sisters and brothers, as Christians we are witnesses to the resurrection! Our lives must tell the story of the good news that came on Easter morning. Jesus has left that work in our hands, but he has not left us alone. He has given many things. He has given us each other. He has given us the story, the gospel, and all of its wonderful promises. And he has given us his Holy Spirit to fill us and guide us and comfort us and remind us.

Let us take up the challenge and become Easter people! Let us stand in the face of the world's Good Fridays and proclaim that the cross is not victorious, that the tomb never wins. Let us rejoice in the simple yet life-changing Easter proclamation: He is risen! He is risen indeed! Amen.

1. Reprinted with permission from What Was In Jeremy's Egg?, copyright 1988 by Ida Mae Kempel. Also included in Chicken Soup for the Christian Soul, pp. 239-242, copyright 1997 by Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, Patty Aubery and Nancy Mitchell, Health Communications, Inc., Deerfield Beach, FL. Both of these resources are available at a discount through the Homiletic Resource Center.)

(Comments to pkperry@PRIMENET.COM)