Monday, April 6, 2026

April 5, 2026 Easter 10:30 Worship Matthew 28:1-10

At the beginning of the service I asked the question, “People of God, why are you here?” And you responded, “We have come to give thanks to God. We do not go to church. We are the church.” I picked that up from the Master of Sacred Theology thesis by my colleague, the Rev. Johanna Rehbaum. She, in turn, got it from someone else. It may seem like a cute little question, but it gets at a deeper point. Why are you here? There are probably as many answers as there are people here. But it is worth asking.

It has become a common belief in our culture that all religions are just different branches of the same tree. Additionally, it is a common belief that you can be a moral person without Christianity; in fact, without any religion at all. Atheists can quite easily be highly moral people.

There’s also a widespread belief that when you die you pretty much automatically go to heaven. The qualifications for going to heaven are that you were a good person and lived a good life.

So, if all of those things are effectively true, then we need truly ask ourselves, why are we here? What’s the point of it all? Indeed, the majority of people in this nation today will not think one thought about the resurrection of Jesus or Christianity at all. It’s just a secular holiday of baskets filled with candy, egg hunts, and a brunch with your family.

It is not my place to judge who goes to heaven or how you get there. That is God’s work and God’s business. I won’t pretend to know. But what I do know is that our society’s understanding of all of these things are simply wrong.

Why are you here? Because you know that there is much more going on than morality or every good person being rewarded for their good behavior by God and given eternal life.

It is Easter Sunday. We are celebrating the resurrection. You can’t get to the resurrection of Jesus without him first dying. If you can simply be a moral person on your own, and if good morality gets you to heaven, then what was the whole point of the crucifixion? I’ve never actually seen it, but I understand that in the 1960s a newspaper comic was created depicting Jesus on the cross. The caption read, “If I’m okay and you’re okay then what am I doing hanging up here?”

That’s an important realization. It also gets at why you are here today.

There is something much deeper than morality at work here. For indeed, an atheist can easily be a highly moral person. The deeper thing is the nature of evil.

Evil is not something that polite people talk about. The idea of evil is not a socially acceptable one. That is one of evil’s greatest tricks – to convince people that it doesn’t even exist. We prefer saying things like someone is acting out of ignorance, or someone is being motivated by fear. We would not call it evil. Or we define evil as some deeply and profoundly insanely immoral act. But all of this is wrong.

Evil has no problem with morality. In fact, evil loves highly moral people. Evil also loves people who are good. They fall into evil’s hands very easily. Evil loves it when people think, “I can be good and moral without Christianity, and without any religion at all.” Evil says, “Why waste your time going to worship on Easter? Wouldn’t it be time better spent relaxing, or doing something entertaining, or spending the whole day with your family. Or even better yet, why not spend Easter doing a community service project? That would be truly good indeed!”

Yes, evil loves good morals. Evil easily convinces people that morals are an end unto themselves. Evil easily convinces people that goodness is an end unto itself, and that it is the fundamental quality God is looking for in humanity.

You see, evil’s real intention is to convince you that you can live a good, virtuous, perfectly fulfilled life all on your own. That was the basic trick that we find in the Garden of Eden stories when the serpent says, “God knows that when you eat of the [forbidden fruit] your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.”

It is a very clever promise of fulfillment.

The truth is that we are not okay. The truth is that we all fall into evil’s traps. We are quite ready to believe that we can be our own selves apart from God. We let possessions, and earthly security, and social status become the places where we turn for fulfillment. Ironically, as we think we are free to do to as we choose and be our own selves (as long as that self doesn’t appear to hurt anybody) we actually become slaves to evil. That slavery might take the form of greed and destruction and death. There evil is obvious. Evil doesn’t care about that. But what is far more often, and what evil really likes, is a life of good morals; but brokenness from God the creator. I am certain that far more death, hurting, and destruction happens in this world in the name of good morals than by overt evil.

Easter is a grand holiday celebrating Jesus’ resurrection from the dead. But you cannot get to Easter without going through Good Friday. Evil leads to death. On Good Friday God conquers the power of evil by innocently accepting a horrific death. In so doing, God breaks evil’s grip. Evil is caught a bind of its own creating. And only God can do it. For we are too sinful, too apt to turn somewhere other than God for trust.

Today we read the Easter scene from Matthew’s gospel. It is almost comic in several regards. How strange is it to have soldiers guarding the tomb of a dead man so that the dead man’s followers, all of whom fled at his arrest, do not somehow find courage and come back and steal the corpse? And how strange is it that when the angel descends these guards – fully alive – Matthew tells us they are so afraid they become like dead men. Isn’t it funny that the men outside are dead and the man inside is not dead? Meanwhile the two women who have come to the tomb to mourn are indeed afraid, but not that afraid.

But the women are also in for a surprise. Isn’t it surprising that Matthew depicts the angel rolling back the stone and the women see that that tomb is empty? Is Jesus a ghost? But then where is the body?

The women follow the angel’s instructions and they go and tell the disciples that Jesus will meet them in Galilee. Along the way they encounter the resurrected Jesus. His first word to them is “Greetings!” It’s not a grand pronouncement or profound. It’s like a playful “Good morning!”

But then there’s Galilee itself? Why would Jesus meet the disciples in Galilee? Well, that’s where Jesus’ ministry began, so it makes sense to wrap things up there. But why would God choose to work in an uneducated, unimportant, unsophisticated place like Galilee in the first place?

These are all fun twists and turns. But in the midst of them there is a subtle thing. Unfortunately, it usually gets lost in translation. The angel’s words to the women are, “I know that you are looking for Jesus who has been crucified. He is not here, for he was raised.” Do you note the subtle difference? In Greek the crucifixion is in the perfect tense. The resurrection is the simple past tense. What that means is that while the resurrection is an event in the past, the ongoing reality, even on Easter, is that Jesus is the crucified one.

Why are you here? Because, whether you’re conscious of it or not, you know that you are a sinner. You know the power and subtlety of evil, which tells you that you can be a good and moral person without faith; and that all good people go to heaven.

It is our recognition of the power of evil that we see defeated by God in the crucifixion that then draws us authentically to God. We desire God’s love. We want God’s acceptance. We want the wholeness of being that only comes from God. We know that everything else is a lie.

Then resurrection becomes a miracle. Only when we recognize that God made us whole right from the beginning, and that God always holds us securely in that wholeness even when we wander off or fail, that we can truly love God.

Could eternal life really be all that good if you’ve spent your whole earthly life trying to discover yourself apart from God? Could eternal life really be any good at all if it is just perpetual self-determination? Can you really enjoy a resurrected life and not crave being loved by the one who created you in the first place? For if you exist and are not loved securely and absolutely then it sounds more like hell than heaven.

People of God, why are you here? Because we are sinners who easily fall into evil’s traps. But we know that our all-powerful and all-loving God has suffered death so as to defeat evil at its own game. And in so doing show us love. It is anticipation of that eternal love that we can truly rejoice and live in freedom.

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