This sermon was delivered on
Easter Sunday at St. Gabriel and All Angels, Liberal Catholic Church in Fairfield, Iowa in
the U.S.A.
Good morning to all of you and Happy Easter. I wish particularly to welcome those of
you who are not regular attendees at St. Gabriels, and, even more especially, those
of you who are not regular attendees at any church but who join us on one or both of the
Two Great Christian Festivals-Christmas and Easter. I will speak today, in connection with
Easter, about going to church and not going to church, but dont worry-Im not
going to criticize anybody or anybodys church going practices.
This morning we heard read to us St. Matthews account of the Resurrection.
Unfortunately, however, the version in our Liberal Catholic Liturgy leaves out a few words
that, in my opinion, are very important. After the angels words, Go quickly
and tell his disciples that he is risen from the dead, the following words occur in
St. Matthews account: and, behold, he goeth before you into Galilee; there
shall ye see him: lo, I have told you. And, after the disciples fall at Jesus
feet and worship Him, He says these words: Be not afraid; go tell my brethren that
they go into Galilee, and there shall they see me. Similarly, in St. Marks
account, the angel says these words to the first witnesses:
he goeth before
you into Galilee: there shall ye see him, as he said unto you.
Now lets get back to church attendance.
St. Gabriels, of course, like all churches, is a very holy place, but it is not
the holiest Catholic church in the world. That honor would be reserved, in the opinion of
most Christians, for the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem, which contains within
its vast area the site of the crucifixion and death of Jesus and the site of his tomb,
based on historical and archeological research. Throughout many centuries it has been
considered very meritorious to go there and pray, if only for a few minutes, at the site
of Jesus tomb and resurrection. I myself was privileged to do so about ten years
ago.
Well, not too long ago I met up with one of my high school religion teachers, a Jesuit
priest (I went to a Jesuit high school for four years), and he told me the following
story:
He had been working in Africa for several years, in both the Sudan and Kenya, and,
while in Kenya, he came to know a British Roman Catholic nun, who had been teaching
adolescent boys for many years at a Roman Catholic school in Kenya. She was no longer
young and had not been out of Kenya for many years, so, one day, she got this message from
the head of her religious order. Her superior said, Sister, youve been working
very hard here for many years, so we think we should give you a little time off. Tell us
where you want to go-anywhere in the world, for several weeks-and well pay your
airfare, your hotel bills, and all your other expenses. She immediately replied,
I want to go the Holy Land. She left on an El Al plane, but, just a few days
later, everybody at her convent and school got a big surprise: after only a few days she
was back in Kenya-she didnt even last a week in the Holy Land. When they asked her
what happened she gave an unforgettable explanation: she said that, when she entered the
tomb of Jesus at the Church of the Holy Sepulcher and knelt down to pray, she was forcibly
reminded of these words of the angel at the tomb, He is not here-He will meet you in
Galilee. She realized immediately that Galilee for those who received that message
was where they had come from when they came to the tomb, where their homes were, where
their relatives and friends were, in short, where they lived their day to day lives. And
in the same instant she realized that Galilee for her was that Catholic school in Kenya
where she was working with those adolescent boys.
Its very interesting to reflect that, while the Easter narratives in all four
gospels differ in many respects, they are all alike in one very important respect: in
every account the witnesses are told to leave, and immediately, that very holy place,
which today is considered the holiest of churches, and get back to Galilee, where they
live their daily lives. The angel gives this command-to leave immediately and go to
Galilee-in St. Matthews and St. Marks gospels. In St. Johns gospel Mary
Magdalene sees Jesus outside the tomb, whereupon he tells her not to embrace Him,
but go to my brethren, and say unto them, I ascend unto my Father, and your Father;
and to my God, and your God. In St. Lukes gospel no specific command is given,
but we find this explicit mild rebuke: Why seek ye the living among the dead? He is
not here, but is risen. In other words, You fools, why are you looking here
for the Lord of Life? This is a tomb for Gods sake!
Yes, its a good thing to go to church, but, this gospel suggests, where it really
is is outside church. Think of professional counseling or psychotherapy: what good does it
do you if it becomes an end in itself, if it has no connection to your life outside the
counselors office?
In the gospel read in our Church today, Matthews account, the witnesses are
ordered to proclaim the good news of the resurrection, and, as they go forth
to do that, we are told Jesus met them on the way. What does it mean for us to
proclaim the good news of the Resurrection? Not usually to go around like pests
buttonholing people and saying, Hey, did you hear about this man Jesus who rose from
the dead two thousand years ago? Our context is different from the context of those
people two thousand years ago-everybody in our society has heard about these events;
believe me, whether they believe anything or not, theyve heard about it. To
understand what such a proclamation means to us, I think, we need to recall the words of
St. Francis of Assisi: Preach the gospel at all times. If necessary use words. St.
Francis was suggesting that our proclamation is not primarily religious discussion, but
rather living the reality of the Resurrection in our own lives. How do we do that?
Easter is the point of Christianity. Good Friday is not really the point. Christmas is
not even really the point because Jesus came at Christmas only to win the victory of
Easter. Jesus entered His tomb only to come out of it, and, strictly speaking, not to come
out of it Himself, but to lead us out of it, and, even more strictly speaking, not to lead
us out of His tomb, but to lead us out of our tombs. We were already dead when Jesus died,
and He died so that we might die to our limited dead identities and rise to authentic new
life-that we might, in a sense, exchange His tomb for ours, and then follow Him out of it.
So we proclaim the Resurrection by coming out of our own tombs. For example, if
youre addicted to some harmful substance, come out of that tomb. If youre a
family man and everything with your wife and your children is a power struggle-if
youre a shut up and listen, my way or the highway type of guy, who
doesnt consider the rightness or wrongness of anybody elses opinion but always
has to win, snap out of it, wake up, come out of that tomb! If youre a
woman who sees men as the enemy, give up that living death and start living a
full human life. If youre given to espousing and articulating negative, pessimistic
philosophies of life, rise from that tomb!
Easter Day in particular, but the whole Easter Season too, is a time when great
spiritual energies are available to all of us, and the Eucharist is a wonderful conduit
for those energies. We earnestly invite all of you-Catholics, Protestants, Jews, Hindus,
Buddhists, everybody-to our communion table, and nobody here will disrespect your
spiritual path or try to convert you. Ask the Lord Christ what tomb you most
need to come out of this Easter. And then leave here today without your shroud, without
the habiliments of the grave, and get back to Galilee. The people you live with will
notice the difference, and, as was the case with these witnesses in todays gospel,
He-i.e., the Lord Christ, will meet you on the way.