This one here is called, “Spy for
George Washington”.
It was my favorite one when I was a
kid.
In the book you are a spy who has to
get a very important message to George Washington across enemy lines without
the red coats finding out.
These books are different than other
books because instead of just reading through you get to make choices about
what your character will do.
You get to decide on what adventure
you will go.
And sometimes your choices worked out
well and other times not so well.
Mark’s Gospel kind of ends like a Choose Your Own Adventure story, because
it ends with the women fleeing from the tomb in amazement and fear without telling
anyone what the angel had just told them.
The question that we are left with in
Mark’s Gospel is what we will do with this story.
Will we share it with others?
Will we believe it?
Will we make it our own?
(I should mention that there are
other endings of Mark’s Gospel. But these are believed to be added on latter.)
Like us the women simply don’t know
what to do with this story that the angel at the tomb tells them.
Could it really be true that Jesus is
alive!
The story seems impossible to
believe.
That is point of the whole Gospel of Mark
is to explain the unbelievable, to help people have faith in the one whom we
thought was dead but is really alive.
And this story helps us to see beyond
the grave, beyond this world, into the kingdom of heaven.
It is a story that can change our
lives, make them have direction and purpose.
It is a story that gives us love,
hope, and joy.
It is a story that we have told over
and over throughout the ages.
It is a story that is passed from
grandparents to little grandkids.
It is a story that we remember at the
dark times of life.
I remember standing at an outdoor
chapel at Camp Calumet Lutheran.
I was standing there pouring my
father’s ashes into the form of a cross.
And what I was thinking about was
this story.
I was thinking about the life that he
lived, and the one that God has now given him, and that this tragic parting was
only temporary.
Perhaps you had a similar moment when
the resurrection wasn’t just some theological theory preached to you on Easter
morning.
But it was real, because the story of
Jesus Christ had entered into your own story.
This is exactly how you and I make
sense of the world.
We tell stories.
When we are in conversation with
someone and we want to prove a point most often what we do is tell a story.
If we want someone to understand
something about us, about who we are, or what we believe we tell a story.
This story of Jesus resurrection is a
story that can help us to shape our lives, to make sense of the things that
happen to us.
It can be the story that explains all
the other stories.
I am not saying that what we can do
is choose everything that happens to us in life.
Much of life simply happens to us.
I love the line at the end of the movie
Boyhood were the lead character has a
friend who says, “Life isn’t what you make it. Life is what makes us.”
I agree.
But what we can choose is the story
by which we will see that life.
We can choose to see in life death
and resurrection.
And if we think about it those two
realities surround us all the time.
Our family has been dealing with some
tragedies lately.
I will not go into it all.
But they all feel like the end of
some things.
It feels like things are dying.
And you know what happened last week.
Our family added another member.
My sister-in law had a baby girl.
I can’t tell you how much that brightened
our spirits.
Life goes on, it turns around.
We have all experienced a very cold
and snowy winter.
But we all know and expect that
warmer days are ahead.
We know that the flowers and trees
that have lain dormant are going to bloom again.
Life goes on, it turns around.
This week I was at the state house,
at the time I was wearing my collar.
I was walking down the hall and a man
stopped me.
He wanted to talk about his parent’s
death.
He missed them.
I said, “You know they are well cared
for that they are at peace.
That they are surrounded by love.”
There is was the promise of the
resurrection spoken into a moment of death on a Wednesday at the State House.
Life goes on, it turns around.
I was at the hospice house this week
visiting with someone whose mother was dying.
We prayed.
As I left I whispered into her
mother’s ear.
“You are going to be fine. God is
with you know and forever.”
She woke up and whispered back,
“Thank you”.
The resurrection is our hope at the
end of all things.
Life goes on, it turns around.
Since the New Year I have been at
four different funerals, and I have officiated at two others.
Every time I am at a funeral I am
thankful to hear again that promise of life eternal given by Jesus Christ.
The story of Easter is important each
time.
Life goes on, it turns around.
That is why we need this story.
It is why we want this story.
We want it to be part of our
adventure.
What is amazing about the ending in
Mark is that we know that the story doesn’t end there.
We know that it continued to be told
over and over again.
We know this because we are all here today.
This means that even if we don’t tell
it, believe it, or share it the story still goes on, because it is really
ultimately about God.
That God really wants us to know
about this story.
God wants it to be part of our adventure so that whatever path we choose good or bad, we know that God is there with us, bringing life from death, hope from despair, and grace from sin.
God wants it to be part of our adventure so that whatever path we choose good or bad, we know that God is there with us, bringing life from death, hope from despair, and grace from sin.
This story is important part of who
we are as God’s people, as people.
One of the things I notice about this
time of year is that there are lots of specials on television about the history
of Jesus.
There are specials about archeological
evidence, about historical records.
Some of you might watch these and if
they help you to understand the story or to believe it that is good.
I love history.
And I too find those specials to be
of great help.
But they also fall short for me, because
the story is about faith, not about fact and figures.
It is about what we are going to
believe about our lives.
It is about what is the story that
will help us to make sense out of our adventure our lives.
And of all the stories that I have
heard I simply cannot find a better one.
This is the one that brings me
comfort and hope.
It is the one I want with me when I
stand over the grave of someone I love.
It is the one I want with me when I
hold a new born baby.
It is the one I want with me on cold
snowy night.
And the one I want with me on a warm
sunny morning.
Today as you live your adventures.
As you make decisions about your
lives and what they will be, I hope and pray that you will take this story with
you, so that you may know the power of knowing God who makes life out of death.
Amen.
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