From the time I was a small child, I knew that Easter was a
special day. Our family was not wealthy and there were six children in my
family, but each year we would get new church clothes for Easter. I know it
cost my father a huge portion of his paycheck to get dresses and shoes for six
girls.
The Easter service at church was always special, too. There
would be lilies filling the altar and trumpets and kettle drums would join with
the pipe organ in the most beautiful music. The choir always sang the Hallejuah
chorus and by the time we left church, we knew that we had celebrated the
resurrection of Jesus Christ.
I grew up knowing that we recognized Good Friday as the day
that Jesus was crucified and that Easter Sunday was the day we celebrated his
resurrection from the dead. It was part of my life and it continues to be a
part of my life.
The other day I thought about all the people in this country
who don't have that heritage. Those folks who have never set foot inside a church
on Easter or any other Sunday. What do they think Easter is all about? What
does it mean to them? If they get off work for Good Friday do they understand
why?
Some things that we, as Christians, just take for granted
may be complete mysteries to those who don't know Jesus.
I'm going to try to explain the mystery. But before I can
explain Easter, I have to remind you of Christmas. Christmas is the day we
celebrate the birth of Jesus. He was no ordinary baby. Jesus had an earthly
mother, her name was Mary, but his father was God. God sent his Holy Spirit to
impregnate Mary and he entrusted her and her husband, Joseph, with the
responsibility of raising his son.
Since Jesus was the son of God, he was a very special man,
with supernatural powers. The Bible tells some of the miracles that Jesus
performed while he lived on earth. God sent him to earth as an example for us.
He was like the epitome of what God created each one of us to be.
God had a specific purpose for sending Jesus to live on the
earth. A blood sacrifice was needed to make amends for the sins of the world
and the only blood that would satisfy a Holy God was sinless blood. Jesus was
the only person on earth who had that type of blood and he knew that his
mission was to sacrifice his blood for all of mankind.
When he was crucified on the cross on Good Friday, his blood
took care of the sin issue in the world once and for all. That is why
Christians call it Good Friday. He paid the price for our sins, that should
have been us on the cross but because we are all sinful we couldn't pay the
price ourselves.
But that isn't the end of the story. Jesus was placed in a
borrowed tomb after his death on the cross. The Jewish rulers were concerned
that his followers would remove his body so they placed a large stone across
the entrance to the tomb and had Roman soldiers stand guard.
On the third day, early in the morning, women who had been
followers of Jesus and his disciples went to his tomb to anoint his body with
spices. When they arrived at the tomb, the large stone had been rolled away and
his body was gone. They met a man nearby and asked him if he knew where the
body had been taken. It turned out that the man was the resurrected Jesus, he
knew them by name.
God had raised his son from the dead. Jesus was now a
resurrected savior. Forty days later, Jesus ascended into heaven to be with his
father.
There is even more to the story. Ten days after he ascended
into heaven he sent his Holy Spirit to live inside his believers. That is his
connection with us today. It is a mystery and it is supernatural, but all of us
who believe that Jesus died for our sins, that he is truly the son of God and
that he arose from the dead have his spirit living in us.
The Bible tells us that all who believe, will one day be
like Jesus. We too will have resurrected bodies and eternal life and that, my
friend, is what makes Easter such a special day.
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