Theme:
Halleluiah, Praise the Lord!
A certain
kindergarten teacher was telling her students the story of Jesus. In her class
was a little boy who came from a non-Christian family. He was paying very close
attention to the story because it was all new to him. As the teacher told how
Jesus was condemned and nailed to the cross to die the boy's countenance fell
and he murmured, "No! That's too bad!" The teacher then went on to
tell how on the third day Jesus rose from the dead and came back to life. The
boy's eyes lit up with delight and he exclaimed, "Totally awesome!"
On Good Friday we heard the story of the suffering and death of Jesus. Like the
little boy many of us felt like "No! That's too bad!" Today we hear
the rest of the story and again with the little boy we can now exclaim
"Yes! Totally awesome!" Today we can again sing
"Halleluiah" that we have not sung all through Lent. This is
the day the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad
(Psalm 118:24).
Why do we rejoice
today? We rejoice because our faith in Christ has been vindicated, truth has
triumphed over falsity, justice over injustice and tragedy has turned into
comedy. It is like watching one of the episodes of Batman. First you see an
innocent and helpless victim being attacked, robbed, kidnapped, assaulted and
tortured by a wicked assailant. And we feel so bad seeing the triumph of the
bad guy. Then, almost at the point where the victim has given up hope and is at
the point of death, down from the skies comes Batman to the rescue. He battles
and defeats the bad guy and rescues the innocent victim. And we feel happy
inside at the triumph of justice.
The story of the
suffering and death of Jesus on Good Friday is the story of the triumph of
falsity over truth, of injustice over justice, of evil over goodness. Jesus was
falsely charged of crimes he did not commit, and unjustly sentenced to a death
he did not deserve. His good friend betrayed him, his trusted companions
deserted him and his number one man denied him. The people he loved demanded
his crucifixion and chose to have the bandit Barabbas released in his place. It
is a story of betrayal and lies, dishonesty and meanness, unfaithfulness and
wicked violence directed against an innocent and apparently helpless victim.
All this comes to a head on Good Friday when we see Jesus scourged, mocked, led
on the death march, nailed to the cross where he dies after a few hours and
hastily buried in a tomb. If that were the end of the story that would be a bad
story, a tragedy. But glory be to God it is not.
Death is not the
end of the story. There is one more chapter. This is the most important chapter
because, as the saying goes, they who laugh last laugh best. And in the last
chapter of the story of Jesus we see him rise from the dead in all glory and
majesty. He is vindicated. His enemies are shamed and confused. Jesus regains
his eternal glory with the Father. He is the Lord who will prevail over all
humankind, his enemies included. For us his embattled followers this is good
news.
It is good news to
know that truth is immortal. We can suppress Truth, accuse it of being a lie,
condemn it, torture it, kill it, bury it in the grave but on the third day
Truth will rise again. Remember this and do not give up on Truth even when
everybody seems to give up on it. Do not give up on Truth; do not give up on
Justice. Do not give up on doing what is right. True will always be true. Just
will always be just. Right will always be right even when the world around us
would have it otherwise. We must learn to believe in the sun even when it is
not shining, knowing that by and by it will shine again. It is the end of the
story that counts. That is why the church asks us today to rejoice and be glad.
Even when we are going through very difficult times: through betrayal, unjust
discrimination, lies, misrepresentations; even when the enemy seems to be
winning the battle in our lives. Today Christ has won. And we know that in
Christ we shall overcome. Halleluiah, Praise the Lord
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