Third Sunday of Easter
A Sermon preached by Fr. James Heard on Sunday 19 April 2015
‘Think again, unshackle yourselves, repent’. These are
not my words (though they might have been), they aren’t even words of scripture
(though they might very well have been). They are the words of David Burke Jnr,
an American expatriate living in London who helped launched the Annual ‘TV
turnoff week’, now described as Screen Free Week. ‘Think again, unshackle
yourselves, repent’. Turn the telly off argues Burke Jnr, unshackle yourself
from the sofa, turn outwards, step outside in the spring sunshine, smell the
flowers, chat to your neighbour.
From the very bowels of the Office for National
Statistics, we learn that Britons currently watch on average, about 4 hrs TV
per day - or, more startlingly, by the age of 75 the average Brit will have
spent more than 12 years of his or her life watching TV. ’Think again,
unshackle yourselves, repent’ - his words.
They might well be words from scripture - the unspoken
words of the Risen Christ - or rather the message which the presence of the
Risen Lord plants in the lives of the disciples: that this continuing
conviction, this mysterious new life, this incomprehensible and uncontrollable
Jesus – their friend, their teacher, their inspiration, their great hope, their
crashing disappointment –somehow it isn’t over with him. He can’t be nailed
down to a cross, he can’t be sealed away in a tomb, he can’t be held onto by
Mary Magdalene. The early followers of Jesus come slowly, falteringly, to
realise that this resurrection is perhaps not so much important for what
happened to the dead body of Jesus, as for what is happening to the living
minds and hearts of his disciples.
Jesus rose in their understanding, from the death of
their own misinterpretation of him as a temporal, worldly leader, to the
present icon of divine human living – the pattern of true humanity, the window
onto God.
Slowly, painfully, scarily, the disciples moved from
seeing resurrection as being about then (whether, as in today’s Gospel, a then
that was a mere week ago, or from today’s perspective a resurrection that was
2000 years ago). They had to move to see resurrection now – the experience of a
living identity, a relationship with this Jesus for today. And they were
changed by this resurrection, changed by it because they were witnesses to it,
as this known, but somehow unknown and different Jesus came among them anew,
but repeating the words and actions they knew so well – greeting them with
God’s peace, spending time with them, encouraging them, eating with them,
explaining the scriptures to them, sending them out to live and talk and heal
and feed others. And through this they discovered that they were ‘thinking
again, unshackling themselves from their hopelessness, repenting, turning again
because they were, as Jesus said, witnesses to these things.
In all three readings today these words ‘you are
witnesses’ are used. The Gospel finishes with Jesus’ reminding the disciples
that they are witnesses to these things. Luke, in the Acts of the Apostles,
justifies his words to his hearers because ‘to this, you are witnesses’ And in
the first letter of John ‘we will see him as he is’. The Greek word, in which
the New Testament was written down, is martures [μάρτυρες] – witnessing,
testifying to, seeing things as they really are. It gives us the English word
martyr, someone who not only experiences an event, but also willingly attests
to it. A martyr is someone who by witnessing something, seeing it truly, is
changed by it. The Jews had long worked with a centripetal model – the
nations would come to Jerusalem – but Jesus’ witnesses will engage with a centrifugal
mission – going in to ‘all the world’ (Martyn Atkin).
For these disciples in the Upper Room, on the road to
Emmaus, on the lakeshore in Gallilee – or Paul on the road to Damascus,
Augustine changing his lifestyle, Mother Julian in her medieval cell in
Norwich, Elizabeth Fry in her work for Penal reform, Wilberforce in his
engagement to end slavery, Maximillian Kolbe who offered his own life for
another in a WW2 concentration camp, Archbishop Tutu in his fight for equal
human dignity for all God’s children regardless of colour, social status,
sexuality, religion. Millions of other such witness to the resurrection, known
and unknown, have realised that to be a witness to the Risen Lord means the
need to ‘think again, unshackle oneself and turn again – to be a martyr, to
change one’s way of being, to sacrifice self, to move from self-absorption to
God-absorption, from self-centredness to God-centredness.
For the resurrection is no resurrection if it remains
something that happened one week ago or 2000 years ago. If that is all it is
(as well as a chocolate bonanza and two days holiday) then it is a cruel con.
The real testimony to the truth of this mystery of the
Risen Lord for us – every bit as much as for those frightened friends, locked
in an Upper Room, or retreating to the supposed security of their former jobs
in Galilee – is that the resurrection answers not only to our hearts’ longing,
but also to our experience. ‘We are witnesses’ in the words of the Risen Jesus.
We are witnesses that there is hope for living life to the full, hope as well
as despair in life. We are witnesses that while people and things pass away –
we constantly lose what we love – our parents, our youth, our jobs, our
figures, my hair – new things also come to us when we dare to look. The
breaking through of the divine constantly surprises us, keeps us living,
trusting, and finding new grounds for hope. The excitement of new love, new
birth, forgiveness. The loving care by neighbour, nurse, or nephew, or a nobody
(in the world’s eyes) can change us.
And as we are witnesses to the mysterious presence of
this Risen Christ in the worship of the Eucharist – in simple gifts of bread
and wine – as in the worship of our daily life, so we are also martyrs in that
we are challenged to ‘think again, to unshackle ourselves, to turn around’.
Ours is not so much to search for him back there, to
fret over the details of what happened in that tomb and garden, road and
lakeshore. We won’t find the living among the dead, instead we are indeed called
to turn off the TV and tablets and smart phones and to go out beyond the
doorsteps of our homes or schools or clubs into God’s boundless future and
follow his way, knowing that, while we will never catch up with him, we will be
changed, martyred, when as witnesses our eyes are sufficiently open to the
world out there, every bit as much as in here, the world which the Risen Lord
inhabits today and tomorrow and into which he challenges us to walk with him.
Alleluia Christ is Risen. He is Risen indeed Alleluia.
References: Martyn Atkin, Brian Leathard