Sermon by The Reverend Richard Helmer
Audio version is here: http://oursaviourmv.org/podcasts/p.php?file=2012-04-08_sermon.mp3.
Gay collects Lilies for Sunday Easter Service |
Sermon for Easter
Sunday
April 8th, 2012
April 8th, 2012
Delivered at The
Episcopal Church of Our Saviour, Mill Valley, California
by The Rev. Br.
Richard Edward Helmer, n/BSG
Rector
Rector
Mark 16:1-8
I have a question for you: Why are you here?
Maybe there are as many answers to that question as there
are people in the room. But I invite you to dwell on that question this Easter Day.
Father Richard being helped by Children of the Parish Easter Day |
When I was growing up in the Midwest, I remember when I was
six or seven years old piling into the car and driving thirty miles up the road
to the Cathedral in Salina, Kansas. We were going to a one-man dramatic
presentation of Mark, something a number of fine actors do around the country
to this day.
I invite you this Easter to take a couple of hours, and read
through the Gospel According to Mark in a single sitting. Mark is a fascinating
gospel, and this day we heard the original ending to the book. It’s an ending
which does not leave us with any grand proclamation or mission, but rather with
the women fleeing with terror and amazement from the empty tomb. They are
silent. They tell no one what they have seen.
At some point in the later first century or early second
century, somebody came along and decided he didn’t like this ending to Mark, so
he tacked on a new, little ending. Then again, another person or community came
along a bit later and decided they didn’t like that ending, either, so they
tacked on yet another longer one. For many years, when I would open my study
bible, this original ending really bothered me, too. It didn’t sit well with me
as I was searching in earnest for something more final, more definitive, more
compelling to prove the Easter story.
But now, I have grown to like the original ending because it
leaves us hanging. It leaves us with a question.
The beauty of Mark’s gospel is that it’s really pithy,
short, and direct. In a way, you could say it could be titled “Jesus and the
Three Stooges.” Jesus is out preaching, proclaiming, teaching, and healing,
while the disciples are biffing and bopping one another and saying, “We don’t
get it.” Mark understands that there is always another character in the story –
perhaps the most important character of all (other than Jesus) – and that is
Mark’s audience. He is always teasing us in a way, tickling us under our chins,
contrasting our faith with that of the disciples’, our awareness of what this
is all about in contrast with their comedic ignorance.*
What I most remember about the dramatic presentation of Mark
at Christ Cathedral was the actor himself, a short man perhaps in his fifties,
dressed in a simple tunic and pacing back and forth barefoot on the cold
concrete of the chancel step, beads of sweat forming on his brow as he re-told
the fast-paced narrative with a fiery passion.
At the end of his telling I also distinctly remember a woman sitting
nearby who said to someone sitting next to her in a pragmatic way that only a
Kansan could, “Well! I’d be surprised if he didn’t catch pneumonia.”
Looking back on it now, I don’t think she quite got it.
But then, that’s the thing about Mark. Nobody in the gospel
gets it. The women at the tomb don’t get it! We hear about them today
approaching the tomb expecting to find a body, and thinking about very
practical things, like how they might roll away the stone sealing the entrance
to the tomb. They, like us, think they know how life should be, just as we
think we know how life should be: We are born, we live what we hope is a decent
life, and then we die. We spend a huge amount of energy building institutions,
financial plans, and societal structures around this assumption, this
assumption of the linear model of being human: birth, life, death (and maybe we
end up with a plaque someplace with our name on it.)
The women were going to embalm the body of their Lord and
Savior. They have walked with Jesus through his passion. In some ways, they
have been more faithful than the apostles, who all betrayed Jesus and fled
during his trial and execution. Who knows where they are? Sleeping in on a
Sunday morning? Hiding out someplace out of fear? But the three women are at
the tomb, and they are startled to be greeted by an open tomb and a figure
inside who says, “He is not here.” In a way, he is asking the women, “Why are
you here? Why are you looking for Jesus amongst the dead?”
These days in the secular press, it’s very clear in
black-and-white that the Church is dying, along with so many other institutions
in the West that are floundering. If you read only a little more deeply, you
can easily reach the conclusion that there are ecclesiastical authorities who
are more than happy, it seems, to help the Church die.
Why are you here? Have you come to look for Jesus amongst
the dead? Have you come to a dying institution for sentimental reasons, for
family reasons, or for the Easter Egg hunt?
Why are you here? Mark poses these questions to us in
today’s Easter gospel. What are you looking for?
He is not here!
Jesus has gone out ahead. He is risen! He is not stuck here within
these walls simply for you to come by and get your “Jesus fix.” What we’re
about to do is give you a small portion of bread and share a common cup to
remind you that Jesus is risen, but not to tell you that Jesus is stuck up here
on the altar. Rather, we share in communion to remind one another that he is
risen in our hearts and he is risen in the world out there, waiting to greet us
where we are called to serve, just as he was waiting to greet his followers in
Galilee!
I challenge you this Eastertide not to come to church simply
to find Jesus here, but to look for Jesus out there: the work and the life of
the Risen Christ waiting to meet and greet you in acts of mercy, justice, and
compassion; defying death; confronting the world’s linear notion of life. Our
life is not linear. Nor is it cyclic or karmic. It is instead what one of my
spiritual directors calls the spiritual life of the spiral: the spiral upwards
towards God’s heart. And that spiral driven more by questions than answers is
an eternal journey that binds together all of the human family: living, dead,
and yet to come in the Risen Life of our Lord and Savior.
And this Easter life is not what you’d expect. You will be
amazed, you will be frightened, you will be inspired, and you will be
devastated.
But you will be given new life.
For this is how we live, and how are called to be as an
Easter People.
_______
*I owe this perspective in large part
to The Rev. Dr. Katherine Grieb, Professor of New Testament at Virginia
Theological School, and a retreat she led on Mark with the Brotherhood of St.
Gregory in January, 2011.
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