Easter 2
Easter 2
by Norm Seli

John 20: 19-31

It was shortly after the resurrection. They were together in a nice big room, but they were all huddled together in one corner. They listened to the stories told them with wide eyes and dry mouths. They had recently eaten, but they felt hunger in their stomachs. Maybe not hunger, but something in the pit of their stomachs. Churning. Uneasy. They hardly noticed the sweet smell of spring on the breeze as it wafted in the window. They heard a noise. They stopped. Listened. Nothing. They laughed. Nervously. They were waiting - we've all waited. They were waiting and worrying. Like waiting for news of a loved one, the results of a biopsy, the auditor's report, the bar exams. What if.......

They had just heard a story of the risen Christ. They were excited. They were thrilled. But they were also afraid. Why? Were they afraid of the authorities - those who had crucified their teacher and leader. Probably. Were they afraid of what the future would hold for them, without Jesus to lead them? Possibly. I think there might have been another fear. Deep in their hearts, perhaps even unspoken, they thought, "What if it's true?" What if Jesus is alive?

What if the news was the worst - failed, malignant, dead - not risen. They would be devastated. Ruined. How would they go on? They had invested a lot of time, money, reputation in Jesus - what if it was all for naught. They were afraid.

But what if it's true? What then - they would be devastated. Maybe even more so...

If Jesus was really alive it would certainly change things - wouldn't it?

Things would never really be the same, would they? If it's true then there is no such thing as the end. Jesus was dead, but then he was alive again - if death isn't the end, then surely there is no such thing as the end. He was alive, then dead - the end. Then not dead - not the end. It would mean that single events are not definitive - people cannot be defined by single events - Jesus was dead - but it didn't define him, because if it's true that he's alive, then he isn't dead.

Now that may seem silly at first - kind of a "so what?" conclusion. Single events don't define people. But I'm telling you it's a whole new way to look at the world.

If Jesus is alive, then I'm not defined by my place of birth - by my skin colour - by my sex - by my abilities - by my challenges - by my past - or future - by my crimes or mistakes. Nothing can put an end to me or you. It makes labelling tough. Putting people into comfortable compartments doesn't work anymore.

If it's true... If Jesus is alive and walks through that door... then that little boy needs to know that he is not defined by that event. He is not humiliated. He is not destroyed. He is not Ignorant. He is not a shrimp. He is not a Loser. Because no single event can define him. He has a new life - more than a humiliating afternoon - more than being abused -

Jesus was destroyed and then alive again.

This little boy was destroyed.... and will be alive again.

That's good new that we can all believe in. We can gather around the young man and hold him and cry with him and share with him and help to make him whole. We want to. We want to be part of that new life.

That's easy for the disciples to understand.....here's the hard part. The teacher cannot be defined by the single event either. There is new life for him, too. That's not so easy. It's comforting to villify the teacher, to hold onto anger - but if Jesus is alive then the teacher is a new creation as well. If it's true that Jesus is alive then we have to find room for the abuser as well as the abused. The wrong as well as the right. The ugly as well as the beautiful. It's a new way to see the world. And it sounds wonderful. But it's hard.

I've talked before about Jesus healing the blind. A wonderful thing to be sure. But I read an account of a man who was blind since birth and by the wonders of modern surgery was given his sight at the age of thirty. One would expect that he be elated upon first seeing light, seeing red, blue, flowers, faces. His reaction? He vomitted. He fell to the ground and could not get up. Eventually he found his balance and could walk - but he couldn't find his way home - his reference points were gone - they had been over-run by this new way of seeing the world. If it's true - if Jesus is alive - it's a new way of seeing the world and many of our references points must be over run, made obsolete by this new sense of living in God's world.

There is new life for this woman. For the man, too. But we're not as anxious to grant it. They worry us - we are afraid of them. We don't want them. They embarrass us.

But if it's true that's Jesus is alive and that this is God's world - then they are both a new creation - they are not defined by the events of their lives - they are wonders.

This doesn't mean that we do not take responsibility for our actions and our lives - this doesn't mean that we take the Pimp home and feed him dinner introduce him to the family - this is my mother, my children, my wife, welcome. But we have to find someway to include him. And her. In God's world there are no disposable people - That's good news - we're not disposable, but neither is anyone else - so we had better find room. Room in our societies. Room in the work-place. Room in our schools. Room in our families. Room in our hearts.

If it's true that Jesus is alive then none of us are defined by the any single event or aspect of our lives - abilities, challenges, choices, abuses, looks, accomplishments, we can all teach theology, we can all love, we can all learn, we can all grow. What a wonderful message that Jesus brings - and what a challenge.

No wonder the Bible says that when Jesus stood among the disciples they "disbelieved for joy!" It was truly a miracle - a wonderful miracle - but it changed things - forever.

There will be a time when the young boy stands up in his class without fear and trepidation and the teacher begins to read the messages on the pages handed him by the class and the words are, "Funny" "friendly" "smart" "clever" "loved" "my friend".

That day probably may not be today and it may not be tomorrow - but it will come, because Jesus is alive and we live in God's world.

What I've said so far is easy to say and hard to do. We look around the our world, we see the criminals on the front page of the papers, we talk about those people who embarrass us - and we think, well forget I just can't do it. I know the feeling.

The little boy in the high school story was my son - and I'm not over hurting yet - I haven't forgiven the teacher yet - but I'm getting there and I know that I will get there.

Racism, hatred, abuse, forgiving the un-forgivable, even forgiving a mis-guided teacher - these battles will be won - not by me alone but with the help of a God who loves me so much that he walked through that door and said to the disciples, "Peace be with you ".

Peace be with us all - for there are no disposable people - only God's people. You and me and the other. Thanks be to God.

(Comments to Norm at norman.seli@sympatico.ca.)
Enniskillen & Tyrone United Churches
Ontario, Canada