John 20:19-31
It was
a Friday night and my husband was out of town so I told the kids we
could have a slumber party in the downstairs. After much excited
hopping and giggles we began our preparations. They grabbed their
sleeping bags, pillows and about 20 of their favorite stuffed
animals. Together we pushed the coffee table out of the way and
created a cozy space for us. I brought down snacks, drinks and the
carefully selected movie of choice: Trolls. Teeth were brushed,
jammies selected and snuggly positions taken.
Trolls
is everything a kid's movie should be: bright, colorful, sparkly,
loud and full of dancing, singing and silliness. It's also a movie -
and like almost every movie it builds tension and conflict. We learn
that the Trolls are in a far away hidden place because the bad, mean,
sad, scary people called the Bergens would like to eat them if they
find them. My kids were happily enjoying the pop tunes, rainbows and
cute figures until things started to get a little scary. At this
point my six year old asks me to please turn it off. “It's too
scary mommy. I don't like this movie.” I tell him it will be
fine, it's fun, let's keep watching. His pleas become more urgent
and heart felt “Please mommy. I don't want to watch this. I
can't. Please turn it off!” His little brother joins in “It's
too scary. Turn it off.” I hug them and tell them it's a kids'
movie, it will be fine. I even promise them that I know it will all
end happily. They look at me with angst, doubt and disbelief. I
tell them “let's eat some pizza and enjoy the movie. I'm right
here with you. It's going to be ok.” They continue to ask me to
turn it off until eventually they are so captivated by the movie that
they stop and go back to shaking in excitement at the tense scenes
and cracking up at the silly jokes.
That
was about a month ago. They now have listened to the soundtrack so
many times they know most of the words. They get excited when they
see merchandise with the characters, they told their dad how great
the movie was and list it among their favorites. And last week at a
play date they watched it again with their friends and have no
recollection of the horror, dread and faint-heartedness it created
just a month ago.
It's
the in between time that got them. The beginning is all
possibilities, excitement and newness, then comes the hard part- when
you don't know which way it will go -the uncertainty, the questions,
the doubts, the pain and sadness. The end will come, but it seems
doubtful and far away.
When
we enter the story in today's Gospel that's where the disciples are,
the in between time. The beginning was full of miracles, healings,
teachings and the constant security of Jesus who was with them. When
things pointed toward Jerusalem it changed. Darkness, dread, fear,
doubt, pain, anguish and now loneliness. They are standing around in
a locked room because they are scared. Jesus died a terrible death.
They know that insult, pain and perhaps even death await them.
Sure,
Jesus told them all of this would happen. He explained again and
again that he must die and be raised again. He even gave them a
specific timeline, but now they aren't so sure. It seems impossible,
distant, maybe even unlikely. Until he comes. In that room with the
locked doors, after he was killed on the cross, after he was put into
the tomb, among those he preached to who now hide in fear . . . He
comes.
This
is it. The part he told us was coming. This is the ending that was
promised. He tried again and again to reassure us, but our doubts,
our fears, our inability to comprehend made the words slip right from
our grasp. Through the darkness of Lent, the tears of Good Friday …
this end, the resurrection, was coming but it was hard to see.
Some
days I want to lock myself in a room and hide in fear like those
disciples. Almost two months ago I sat in these very pews and wished
I could hide in fear. You see it was February 15, the day after the
children were killed in their school in Florida. When I heard about
it my stomach hurt but the next morning after I left my children at
school it got worse. The stories, the lists of all the school
shootings, the emotional social media posts … the fear- it chipped
away at my soul. My mind went to that dark place that it sometimes
tries to go at night, but I try not to let it … Sandy Hook and what
happened to all those little children. I thought of the shelter in
place drills my son does with his fellow kindergartners. I thought
of how hard it is to leave them, to send them out into this world
with strength, courage and assurance. I felt overwhelmed. I was
volunteering in the church office and when I do that I come over into
this space and put the children's bulletins and welcoming pamphlets
out on the tables at the entrances. That day I paused. I sat down
in this big space lit only by sunlight filtered through holy glass
images. I poured out my heart, I confessed my fears, I prayed for
answers, direction, hope, courage … for the sinking feeling in my
gut to subside. I looked upon Mary. She gets it. She understands
what it's like to send your child into a scary world, to watch them
suffer and feel helpless.
Pain,
fear, death, darkness, doubt. It's all part of life in between. In
between our innocent childhoods and our final resurrection with
Christ. We know what the Bible says, Jesus promises that the death
and darkness are not the end, but sometimes it just seems like it is.
Sometimes we plead and beg: “make it stop!” “turn it off!”
“it's too scary” “I can't do it.” Jesus assures us that he
is here, that it will be ok. But it's scary.
But
today we are here. The lights are on, the flowers are blooming, the
hymns are joyful and the Alleluias are flowing because our human
limitations are no match for Jesus. The cross, the heavy rock at the
tomb, the locked doors, the fearful hearts, the disbelief, our
limited minds, our fears, our inability to comprehend, our forgetful
hearts do not stop Jesus. He is risen. He has broken through. He
is with us and he brings peace.
Jesus
got through every kind of barrier meant to keep him out. He got
through and he breathed on them. He breathes on them and he says
“Peace be with you.” Take a deep breath with me. It's that same
recycled air that the disciples breathed in that room. That same air
infused with the Holy Spirit, that same breath Jesus left us when he
said “receive the Holy Spirit.”
It's
ok if you don't get it the first time. Look at Thomas. He needed
proof and he was right there with Jesus. It's ok if your heart is
afraid or future hope seems far away. It's ok because Jesus breathed
on us the Holy Spirit and that same breath is here for you.
When
pain breaks your heart, when loss closes your throat, when tears soak
your cheeks, when the fear chips away at your confidence and
hopelessness shakes your core. Breathe. Jesus is here, he has
promised us and shown us the ending and it will be ok. When the
nights are long and the frustrations pile up. When the brokenness of
others and the world goes beyond your pack of band-aids. Breathe.
Jesus is here, he has promised us and shown us the ending and it will
be ok. When we realize our inability to protect those we love, when
we fail at life, when the shame steals our voice. Breathe. Jesus is
here, he has promised us and shown us the ending and it will be ok.
Receive the Holy Spirit. Know that Jesus has left us his peace and
it is attainable for even the doubting mind.
At the
end of the Gospel reading it says, “But these are written so that
you may come to believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God,
and that through believing you may have life in his name.” This
story is for you. It was written down so that we can have the peace
of Christ, even as we live in the in between. And we can have life,
joyful, hopeful, peace-filled life in the name of the one who breaks
through the tomb, the locked doors and the closed minds.
I
suppose I should title this sermon “Spoiler Alert.” Because I'm
giving away the end of the story. Turns out the Trolls do not all
get captured and eaten by the Bergens. The end of the animated movie
is not a multi-colored blood bath of high-pitched despair and
glittery tears. Love wins, courage prevails, hope is realized and
the music is chipper.
Another
spoiler. The Jesus story does not end at the cross. It does not end
with the tears of a hopeless mother, the pounding hearts of terrified
disciples and unfulfilled promises. The tomb is empty. Death is not
the final word. Peace prevails into eternity. So breathe deeply the
peace of Christ.
I want
to leave you with this poem. It came from the last book by Rachel
Held Evans that our Tuesday women's book group read and it was and is
exactly what I need to hear. It is a quote from Saint Teresa of
Avila:
Let
nothing upset you,
Let
nothing startle you.
All
things pass;
God
does not change.
Patience
wins all it seeks.
Whoever
has God lacks nothing:
God
alone is enough.
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