Fourth Sunday of Easter, C, May 11, 2025
It sure doesn’t feel like mid-May,
does it?
This cool, drizzly gray
has us pulling out the wool and Gore-Tex
we had just tucked away
in favor of cotton and linen.
I’m grateful for the rain,
and the temperate weather,
knowing that the sticky, smothering heat
is just around the corner.
But it is somewhat unnerving,
if not innervating,
this unseasonable weather.
And then there was an earthquake!
Did y’all feel the earthquake?
The epicenter was just 15 or so miles
from my wife’s parent’s home in Tennessee,
and I felt it some 170 miles away
in Metro Atlanta.
Or maybe,
nothing so trivial as the weather,
minor earthquakes,
or an American Pope
garnered your attention this week.
Maybe it was something much more personal
that clouded your skies
and shook your solid ground.
Maybe it was something much closer to home
that made this Easter season
feel like a dissonate chord,
like wishful thinking
or some naïve fable
whose moral is from some bygone era
and not for the stark cold reality
of our real lives.
At first blush,
these readings
about a woman raised from the dead,
blissful saints singing praises in heaven,
and casting Jesus as a hired shepherd,
don’t seem to speak to our everyday.
Have you ever seen someone raised from the dead?
I haven’t.
Don’t these depictions of heaven
leave you thinking
that heaven seems like some outlandish dominion
from the climax of baroque opera,
with all this singing and adulation
around the exalted throne
of a triumphant underdog of a hero?
It makes me want to echo these Judeans
who approach Jesus in the temple,
“Tell us plainly, Jesus;”
what is all this resurrection business about anyway?
Juxtaposed with real life,
in which we all have to deal
with real death, loss, and grief,
what are we supposed to take
from these stories about resurrection
and heavenly worship
when our dead aren’t raised
and heaven seems like a distant fantasy?
Surely we aren’t just supposed to believe
with all our might
and hope that someday it will all come true,
right?
Some context might help.
This story of Peter
from the book of Acts,
is written about a time
in the history of the Church
when the first followers of Jesus
are themselves trying to make sense
of the resurrection and ascension,
and Jesus’ promise to return
to judge the living and the dead.
If you’ve been in Bible study with me
you’ve heard me say,
that this first generation of believers
thought Jesus was coming back next Thursday
and they were genuinely surprised
with every passing Thursday
that he had not returned.
And then,
people like Tabitha,
pillars of their community,
began to die.
This left burning questions
for those awaiting the second coming.
What would happen to those who died
before Jesus came back?
And so the community sent for an apostle.
They were all surprised
when Peter raised her from the dead.
The book of Revelation
is written in code
so that it was possible to critique the Roman empire
and maintain a little plausible deniability.
Over the centuries,
we lost the decoder,
and so we are left guessing to a large degree.
But,
we know from early Christian art,
that palm branches
are a symbol of martyrdom.
So, these throngs singing around the throne,
are those martyred for their faith,
for being followers of Jesus,
the slaughtered Lamb.
They have come through the ordeal
of keeping the faith
and losing their lives,
likely symbolized
as being washed in the blood of the Lamb.
As your preacher,
I too wish Jesus would just tell us plainly.
It would make my job a lot easier.
But then,
if I could give you a measure of certainty,
what need would there be for faith?
I think that
to see the good news in these texts,
you maybe have to be one of those
who have gone through an ordeal.
I think that maybe those sheep given to Jesus
are given by suffering,
by heartache and pain.
Maybe you have to go through something
to appreciate what it takes
to get to,
to be brought to,
the other side.
The word martyr is almost
a transliteration of the word for witness
in Greek.
It was only because those who were witnesses
were killed for sharing what they had witnessed
that the word martyr
came to mean those killed for their faith.
It was those who had witnessed
Jesus’ life and ministry,
his death and resurrection,
his ascension and the ministry of the Holy Spirit
and told of what they had seen,
whose lives were changed by what they had seen—
it was these who came to be known as martyrs,
these who came through the ordeal
with blood on their clothes,
who knew how and why
to praise the slaughtered Lamb
as their shepherd God.
These texts were written to communities
who experienced loss and grief,
change and anxiety.
Only a people of sorrows
and acquainted with grief
can see the resurrection for what it is—
It is the faithfulness of this slaughtered Lamb
and shepherd God
to death
and beyond it.
Death, loss, and grief
are the vantage point
for resurrection.
Jesus’ voice doesn’t come shouting across the hills.
God is never that far away.
Rather,
Jesus’ voice comes whispering in the ear
of a head laid on his shoulder.
Jesus’ voice comes
speaking words of consolation
as he wipes the tears from our eyes.
Are you a person of sorrows,
acquainted with grief?
If you are not,
choose it.
Choose the sorrow and grief
of someone else,
drawing close enough
to whisper in their ear
and wipe away their tears.
Give your life
and see if you don’t become
a witness to resurrection.
If you are a person of sorrows
and acquainted with grief,
then you too must choose it.
Don’t avoid it,
Don’t ignore it;
embrace it,
endure it as a share of the blood of the Lamb.
I stand here as a person of sorrows,
as one acquainted with grief.
I am a witness that resurrection
is always at the end of our grief,
if we can trust that God is faithful to death
and beyond it.
Resurrection is not a test of our faith,
but an invitation to experience the faithfulness
of God,
of the Lamb that was slain.
Life, and death, and resurrection
is the pattern of all things.
The path from death to resurrection
is grief.
If we wish to be witnesses to resurrection
we must become acquainted with grief.
It is only then
that we will hear the voice of Jesus
calling our name into the tomb,
calling us out,
calling us to get up,
and making us witnesses
who will give our lives
to God and to the Lamb
who is worthy to receive
blessing and glory and wisdom
and thanksgiving and honor and power and might
forever and ever.
Amen.






