



There are somethings we can mistakenly embrace about Easter that distract us from the real hope that can help shape our lives. These things are worth evaluating, not to deflate us, but to focus us on where the real hope lies.

1) “My excitement is the point.”

Easter points us to our daily lives: Coming to work Monday morning after Easter can be a bit like coming home from summer camp. It is an admixture of both afterglow and let down. There is so much enthusiasm over the weekend it can send us off to work feeling invigorated or bummed about the mundane tasks that face us. Either way, Easter is very much about directing us toward, not pulling us from, the lives we are called to live. God is still God, and the resurrection still the resurrection even during my 3pm afternoon sleepy time at work. Easter points us forward to our calling.

2) “We are always right.”

Easter is, in fact, a dare: The resurrection, as I had tried to observe before, is not vindication for Christians in the sense it means we can go around saying “neener neener.” If anything, it is a dare. It is a dare to believe we can take great risk of love, even with people who are very different from us. We can even love people we might be afraid of, as Jesus did in Jerusalem and when confronted by soldiers in the garden. It is ours to love, even at great cost. It is up to God, not us, to judge our lives.

3) “I will never die.”

Easter confronts our inevitable death head on: I know on face value Christians don’t leave Easter actually thinking that death will not one day confront us, but it does seem sometimes to make us look the other way. We focus so much on how God has conquered death that we look away and pretend it is not there. On the contrary, the hope of Easter means we have the strength to look seriously at our own death, squarely in the eye. “Always keep your death before you,” writes Saint Benedict. This is not to be grim, but to acknowledge our mortality and what we plan to do with our lives while we have them. Easter means we can take seriously the fact that our days are numbered. It compels us to the urgency of love in the short time we have on the planet.

4) “Everything is going to be ok.”

We can take the risks to make life better: Everything will not be ok right away. Everything is not ok right now. The world is full of profound hunger and starvation. The is a great deal of suffering in some of our own lives and in our neighbors’. The resurrection doesn’t mean we will always be happy, or that we should rest on our laurels. It means we can face what is rough and not recoil because, again, God will have the final say, and God will be with us in the meantime.

5) “Jesus came back from the dead.”

God raised Jesus from the dead: This is key. It is the only point I am making. Jesus is not a superhero who took a nap till his spiritual alarm clock went off. Jesus died without holding the power over his own death. “Into your hands,” he says, “I commit my spirit.” This is the lesson. Jesus didn’t raise himself. God raised Jesus from the dead. Now I recognize there is some complex trinitarian theology in here. So be it. We should check into that.

The take away is that Easter is about trust. It is trust that God has the final say on our lives. What this leaves with us, far more than comfort, is courage. It is courage to love and to confront things or systems that stand in the way of love. It means that risking our lives to emulate Christ is not a bad gamble.

If we can possibly take this to heart, our lives and the lives of our neighbors will never be the same. He is risen indeed. Therefore, let us pray,

“Into your hands, I commit my spirit.”

Amen.