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  Easter Sunday (cycle a)

Holy Week Resources
 

Texts & Discussion

Acts 10:34-43 or Jeremiah 31:1-6
Psalm 118:1-2, 14-24
Colossians 3:1-4
John 20:1-18 or
Matthew 28:1-10

 

Other Resources:

Commentary:

Matthew Henry,    Wesley

Word Study:
Robertson

This Week's Themes:

God's Victory Over Darkness
Lord's Resurrection
Redemption & Salvation

Hope & New Life in Jesus

 


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 Texts in Context | Commentary:   PsalterFirst LessonEpistleGospel
Prayer&Litanies
|  Hymns & Songs | Children's Sermons | Sermons based on Text

 


Easter Video ($4.95)

Skits/Readings:

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easteregg.gif (3630 bytes)He is Risen Indeed
a sermon based on Matthew 28:1-10
by Rev. Thomas N. Hall

Today is that one time in the year when the pastoral staff out-numbers the congregation. We end up with more preachers than congregants! We all get into the act and become preachers on Easter Sunday. And have we preached a whale of a sermon this morning! The choir has preached to us in four-part harmony, the lectionary readers have proclaimed the story. And did you see what happened right at the beginning of our service? This parade of people walked through the middle of this congregation bearing altar candles, white paraments, offering plates, and that big Bible that sits on the lectern. In their own way our processional has proclaimed visually what the musicians have proclaimed audibly: Christ is risen! And did you hear the preaching from the orchestra pit? The sermon came out a tad jazzed up thanks to the brass and percussion sections. We heard the sermon in bold pizzicato; in other places that tune was plunked, whacked, honked, bowed and trilled. Even our orchestra has preached a powerful sermon.

Yes, the entire congregation becomes preachers on Easter. Your raised voices, your presence in this place, your joy have preached the most eloquent sermon of all. We don't need another sermon . . .

that raises and debunks resurrection theories . . .
or preaches about caterpillars becoming butterflies . . .
or empty egg shells with chicks peeping out . . .

It's hard to improve on Mystery. We can affirm God's faithfulness even when we don't have all the answers. So your sermon has preached loudly and clearly that Jesus Christ is Risen! He is Risen indeed!

But just in case someone may still be a bit out of the loop as to what we've been preaching for the past twenty-five minutes, I'm going to ask you to help me. Everytime I say, Christ is risen, you respond by saying, He is risen indeed! Now just a note of caution. This is one of those occasions when you don't want to be too polite. There is great power in number when we say together what we affirm and hold to be true. Remember, you're on the pastoral staff this morning. So I invite you to throw caution to the wind on this Easter Sunday morning and preach the sermon with me. Whenever you hear those three words, Christ is Risen, please respond with the four words, He is risen indeed! Ready for a trial run? Christ is risen . . . he is risen indeed! That is our sermon and that is our faith. That call and response tells us that God is faithful. Was, is, and will be faithful to us.

Matthew tells us that on the first Easter morning, two women make their way to the to the graveside of Jesus. We are told that they have come “to look” at the grave. But why? Why would two women want to come unaccompanied in the early hours to a cemetery? Maybe they sought a quiet place to reflect upon the past days' events? To be as close to their master as they could. But standing inside a cemetery at 4:00 am is not my idea of a quiet, reflective place. Wouldn't that place give anyone the creeps? But perhaps they went because they wanted to give Jesus a decent burial. That's what Mark's gospel suggests. Jesus was dead. So they'd gone to honor their fallen hero. That's the least they could do. Give the man the dignity that the Romans stripped from him Good Friday. These women had no clout with the Roman authorities—they could not offer Jesus a proper burial. The Sabbath had further frustrated their plans. So this morning they move toward the cemetery under the cover of darkness to pay their final respects.

But have you ever considered that maybe; just maybe they went to the cemetery because they expected the resurrection to happen? After all, they must have overheard Jesus speaking about rising from the dead. On three occasions Matthew lets us in on Jesus' vision of the future that once in Jerusalem he would suffer many things from the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed and on the third day be raised. So the women here probably caught wind of the conversations. Maybe, just maybe they had enough faith to believe that Jesus had survived death.     [continue]