What Easter Means (and why what literally happened on Easter morning is irrelevant)
What matters most is not what
historically happened on Easter morning to the body of Jesus, but what the
Easter story means.
The Easter stories in the Gospels are
religious/spiritual/theological stories, not historical reports. That is not to
say there are no historical echoes or reflections in the stories, but my
contention is that whatever actual memories may be imbedded in them such
historical recollections are irrelevant to the meaning and appropriation of
these stories by people of faith.
Did the original writers/editors of
these Easter stories believe the actual body of Jesus was resurrected? Did they
believe the body of Jesus was changed into a different kind of body? Were these
appearances like apparitions or dreams or were they something more tangible?
Did the authors/redactors of these stories intend them as metaphorical
narratives (like parables) teaching spiritual truth?
There is no way to know from a
historical perspective how much is actually history or legend or myth, nor does
it matter. Historically, about the most that can be said is that some of the
first disciples of Jesus became convinced that God raised Jesus to new life
because they experienced Jesus alive after his death.
Their experience of Jesus alive
(whatever this may have actually involved) brought them out of their great
grief and despair igniting and fueling new faith, hope, love, and courage. It’s
doubtful there would have been any sort of Jesus movement if not for the Easter
experience. If the Lukan accounts in Acts reliably reflect the key elements in
the early Messianic preaching, then the Easter experience was critical and
central.
Luke attributes to Peter in his first
sermon on the day of Pentecost the concluding point,
"This Jesus God raised up, and of that we are all witnesses. Being therefore exalted . . . and having received from the Father the promise of the Holy Spirit, he has poured out this that you both see and hear. . . . Therefore let the entire house of Israel know with certainty that God has made him [the man Jesus] both Lord and Messiah, this Jesus whom you crucified" (Acts 2:32-36).
Had there been no Easter experience, it
is hard to imagine where the motivation and empowerment for the Messianic
movement would have originated.
What actually happened is irrelevant. What
matters is the Easter story! – its spiritual meaning and theological
significance. The resurrection stories are spiritual stories imparting
spiritual truth.
In the Easter story (or stories) I see
three big spiritual realities:
First,
Easter was God’s vindication of Jesus and all that he valued and stood for. Jesus is affirmed as a unique embodiment of the
divine (or paradoxically, what it means to be fully human) and God’s agent for
accomplishing God’s will. Jesus – as boundary breaker, prophetic challenger of
the status quo, radical reformer, teacher of nonconventional, counter-cultural
wisdom, empathetic and compassionate healer, lover of the poor and outcast, host
to all manner of sinners, liberator of the oppressed – this Jesus who died a
violent death at the hands of the political and religious authorities without
returning the violence or even harboring violence in his heart was vindicated
by God. Easter was God’s “Yes” to Jesus’ life, teaching, and vision of a world
healed, reconciled, and made whole.
Second,
the Easter story affirms that death does not have the final word. I know that many conservative Christians have made
the Christian faith all about the afterlife. For many such Christians the
gospel is nothing more than a prize of heavenly glory for believing orthodox
doctrines or practicing the right rituals. Salvation is mostly a legal,
juridical transaction of sin/guilt remission that guarantees the “believer” a
place in heaven.
Progressives, like myself, emphasize
God’s dream for this world and the importance of our participation in its
realization, and the need for personal and communal transformation right now. We
emphasize Jesus’ prayer: “Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.”
Still, I believe Easter signifies that
not only will God never give up on this world, God will not allow our mortal
lives to be all there is. How does love ultimately win and restorative justice
prevail if there is not “more” to this life than this life? It was no doubt
this sort of evolution of thought that spawned the development of Jewish belief
in resurrection during the intertestamental period. Think of all the children
of God who have died prematurely through disease, war, natural disaster, etc.
and suffered immensely under the dominant power of oppressors. Without
something “more” how would their suffering be vindicated?
While I do not agree with all of Paul’s teaching
about resurrection in his letters, I think he makes a legitimate argument to
the Corinthians who had collapsed the teaching of resurrection into a
completely realized eschatology. They said that the resurrection is all now and
this worldly. Paul argued, not so! It’s both/and. He argued that the good news
cannot be all that good if our hope is confined to this world alone (see 1 Cor.
15:1-28).
Third,
the Easter story evokes response. God’s “yes” to Jesus is God’s invitation to
trust in, share in, and be faithful to all that Jesus lived and died for. Easter means that the work for a just, good,
redeemed, and reconciled world continues through us as the Spirit of Jesus
fills us and expands our capacity to love and give of ourselves for the good of
others.
Albert Nolan in his classic, Jesus Before Christianity, says this
beautifully,
“In the last analysis faith is not a way of speaking or a way of thinking, it is a way of living and can only be adequately articulated in a living praxis. To acknowledge Jesus as our Lord and Savior is only meaningful in so far as we try to live as he lived and to order our lives according to his values. We do not need to theorize about Jesus, we need to ‘re-produce’ him in our time and our circumstances.”
(This article was first published at Baptist News Global).
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