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Focus on Lively Virtues
Worthy of Cultivation:
The Power of
Transcendence
sermon from the pulpit
of
Christ Presbyterian
Church
a center of faith
for abundant living
The Reverend Clyde E. Griffith, pastor
References:
From the Ancient Texts: Isaiah
65:17-20a,24-25
From the Early Church: Luke
24:1-12 |
Easter is the birthday of a whole new
world -- a whole new life -- a whole
new way of living -- a whole new way of looking at the world -- a whole
new religion!
Easter re-creates our cosmology,
it provides a new perspective on the order of things, it expands our
understanding of things temporal and things eternal.
In Isaiah God announces a re-creation of
the
world -- new heavens and a new earth, a new relationship between God and
the whole creation, a new expression of faith, a new Jerusalem: a place
full of joy and happiness -- "Be glad and rejoice forever in what I
create" -- a place where even God will be full of joy.
e.e. cummings has an Easter expression
appropriate for each one of us:
i thank You God for most this
amazing
day: for the leaping greenly spirits of trees
and a blue true dream of sky; and for everything
which is natural which is infinite which is yes
(i who have died am alive
again today,
and this is the sun's birthday; this is the birth
day of life and of love and wings: and of the gay
great happening illimitably earth)
how should tasting touching
hearing seeing
breathing any -- lifted from the no
of all nothing -- human merely being
doubt unimaginable You?
(now the ears of my ears awake
and
now the eyes of my eyes are opened)
I thank you God for this most amazing
day!
I who have died am alive again today!
Every year now for nearly twenty
centuries, Christians have been
coming together at this time of year
to celebrate the single most important event of their
history!
Since Jesus was a Jew, and lived as a
Jew, and preached as Jew, and spent
his entire ministry among Jews, it was quite natural for his followers to
tie this Easter event with the traditional Passover Celebration.
For centuries, the Passover had been celebrated
each year to remind people of their unique history and of their unique
relationship with their God. What Passover was to the Jews, Easter became
to the followers of Jesus.
For truly, it wasn't until after the
Resurrection that the disciple's eyes
were opened and they saw for the very first time: that what they had
experienced with this man from Nazareth was indeed a whole new thing. It
wasn't until after the Resurrection that they began to call him the Christ
-- and saw him to be the fulfillment of the Passover -- the promise that
been made each year over and over again for centuries.
So clear was this to the early
Christians, that they began to meet
on the first day of each week at dawn to celebrate Easter -- the coming of
the new time -- the new creation -- the new week -- remembering the
fulfillment of the Passover.
Our story goes that the women went to the
tomb that morning concerned about how they were going to move the stone
that blocked them from doing their ministerial task with the corpse. Even
though they were concerned and anxious about it, their faith moved them on
down the road just knowing that somehow the obstacle would be removed, and
they could do what they needed to do.
Of course, we know, when they arrived at
the tomb, the obstacle was moved all right, but they were the first to
discover, and the first to hear, that something very significant --
something very out of the ordinary -- had happened.
The Jesus they knew so well;
the Jesus they were friends with;
the Jesus they thought they understood;
the Jesus they lived with;
the Jesus they saw defeated and overcome;
the Jesus they watched die;
the Jesus they placed in this tomb --
their friend, Jesus of Nazareth
was much more than they ever thought or understood.
Not only was their religious practice
changed significantly; but now, the
known laws of the physical universe were overcome as well.
They came to work on the corpse of Jesus
-- and they heard the incredible
words: "Why look for the living
here among the dead?"
This made no sense. They saw him die.
They placed his lifeless body here in this tomb.
And again, the messenger of God spoke:
"Go back where you came from. Go back to Galilee. There you will find
him. Alive and well, just as he said you would."
It was the a re-creation of the world --
a new heaven and a new earth -- new
definitions of life and religion -- the birthday of a whole new world --
the birthday of life and of love and
wings.
Easter announces to all that the presence
of Christ cannot be snuffed out. That God transcends the boundaries of
space and time. New boundaries of our life and faith have been drawn up. A
new heaven and a new earth have been created. There is a new Jerusalem, a
new religion wherein God and his creation are not so far apart: Where God
no longer dwells above us, or in ark in the Temple, or even solely in the
confines of a particular person who lived in Galilee some 2000 years ago.
This is something totally new: "a new heaven and a new
earth" wherein God is constantly present with us where we live our
lives -- defining anew what it is to be human, what it is to be alive,
what it is to die.
This transcendence of space between God
and man,
this transcendence of time between birth and death,
this transcendence of God between heaven and earth is what is behind our
celebration of Easter today. It is what is unique about our Christianity.
It is what enables us to live fully and abundantly. There is tremendous
power at work here: power largely unrecognized and largely untapped; but
power that can give each one of us a new lease on life.
Some of you may be familiar with the work
of Bernie Siegel. Dr. Siegel is a surgeon and works primarily with cancer
patients. For several years now, an important part of Dr. Siegel's
practice and research is with what he calls "exceptional" cancer
patients -- patients diagnosed with terminal illnesses -- most given a
very short time to live. Dr. Siegel sees patients sometimes individually,
and most times in groups, and helps them to choose to really live in the
limited time they have left.
Time and time again, Bernie Siegel, and other doctors who are doing this
now, observe something that is almost beyond belief. Given just months or
weeks to live, facing their inevitable death, and coming to terms with
their mortality, patients, more often than not, consciously change their
way of living.
Time and time again, these doctors see from that day on, these patients do
only what they really want to do. They don't let something go unsaid,
because they know there may not be a tomorrow. They became quick with
hugs, quick with "I love yous", quick with "thank yous",
quick to show appreciation and quick with "I am truly sorry."
Once having made that choice, this is the
totally unbelievable part, and until you have been there, it is so hard to
understand, but we need to learn from it: 100% of his patients say that
their lives are infinitely better than it was before they were diagnosed
with their terminal illness.
They reported things went better for
them.
Relationships with other people were more
positive.
Life was more fuller, richer.
Days and time had meaning.
Each day was greeted with thanksgiving.
They had new enthusiasm for living --
even though they knew their days were numbered.
And, do you know what?
Truly remarkable things happen among the
patients.
Once they choose to live each day to the
fullest, they actually stop dying!
Oh, they all do die. We all do.
But, these patients all live well past
the expected time limits of their disease, and they live healthier -- even
with their terminal illness, and they are freer of
pain during their illness. Through Dr. Siegel and his
faith in what they can do and can be, these terminally ill patients come
to know what Jesus called an abundant life. Bernie Siegel writes:
We must all confront the reality that no one lives forever.
Illness and death are not signs of failure; what is a failure is not
living. Our goal is learning to live -- joyously and lovingly.
And, you know, that is exactly what we
are about here at Christ Church in
Drexel Hill! Helping people live more
fully, more abundantly, like Jesus said.
I have spoken of my interest in some of
the findings of recent comprehensive
longitudinal studies of peoples' health. One of the findings of one of the
studies, hidden among many findings, and virtually ignored by the press,
was this:
They found that people who go to church regularly were healthier over all
than people who did not go to church regularly.
And hidden among the findings of another large study was this:
People who go to church regularly live longer than those
who do not go to church regularly. Do you hear this? It's a fact:
People who go to church are healthier, and
people who go to church live longer, than those who don't.
Why do you suppose that is?
Because of some other studies and reading
I have done, I found some clues, and come up with several reasons why
folks who go to church live longer and are healthier than those who do
not. Scientific studies from several fields of inquiry provide evidence
that there is real healing power in many of the things that we practice,
and teach, and experience here in church.
Over the past several weeks we have
looked at studies that prove that there is healing power in prayer, that
there is healing power in laughter, that there is healing power in
attitude, that there is healing power in forgiveness, that there is
healing power in ritual, that there is healing power in community, and
today, there is healing power in transcendence.
Easter is about transcendence. It is
about creating and choosing new life.
It is about new heavens and a new
earth. It is about a new way of doing
religion. It is about new joy-full living.
Indeed, the chief characteristic of this
new world ushered in at Easter is joy
and happiness. Our Scripture describes a God full of joy, and a joy-full
people living in thanksgiving for a full and
abundant life.
And that's what we are about here at this
church.
Christ Presbyterian Church is "A
Center of Faith for Living
Abundantly."
Jesus said, "I have come that you might have a fuller, more abundant
life."
There are people in this room who know exactly what I am saying, and have
experiences to prove it.
And the promise is made to each one of
us: You can live a better, fuller, healthier, longer, more abundant life.
God intends this for you. And we know how. Join us, or put another way,
let us join you. This Easter Sunday, 1999, when facing the choices all of
us make every day, choose life.
Choose to live each day to the fullest.
Choose to be a part of the most powerful
force in the universe: the presence of Christ in the world today.
I thank you God for this most amazing
day!
I who have died am alive again today!
Amen.
How to Live Healthier and Longer:
Focus on Lively Virtues Worthy of Cultivation:
Find
Out About The
Power of Prayer
Find Out About
The Power of Attitude
Find Out About
The Power of Ritual
Find Out About
The Power of Community
Find Out About
The Power of Forgiveness
Find Out About The
Power of Transcendence
Find Out About
The Power of Laughter
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