Saturday, November 20, 2021

The Words, not the Source [part 2 of 2] ...

God did something nobody expected.  Often, when we focus on the story of the resurrection, we focus singularly upon Jesus, and that is the main part of the story worthy of our focus.  But it is not the entire story.  As we noted in our last study, women were the first to carry the gospel or good news of Jesus.  Mary Magdalene the first to be directly commissioned by Jesus to go and tell the others what she has seen and heard of the gospel, a personal testimony of which she alone could give account.  I wonder how many of our pastors today have an equal testimony to offer?  How many tell us about things, stories or events, but not the testimonies they have been a personal part of.  But as we also noted in our last study, too often people cling to their personal biases, and when the source of truth is not what we think worthy, or good enough, or appropriate, we reject the truth because of our judgment of the source of it.  This is why the priests of the days of Jesus largely rejected what Jesus had to say.  You see, Jesus was humble, from Nazareth, and had no formal training or endorsement.  How on earth could He possibly be right?  How on “earth” indeed.

So even the personal testimony of Mary Magdalene was not swaying the believers as yet.  But let us back the train up just a little bit.  Taking us back to the angel descending from heaven to the tomb of Jesus, the entire Roman company fell before that angel as dead men locked in fear they had never known.  Watching that stone roll away as nothing, watching those chains snap as tissue paper, watching that seal be broken in two as nothing.  And then out of the tomb emerges Jesus Christ in a brilliant light.  Imagine the fear and guilt that burns within the heart of each soldier there.  They had asked for proof of His divinity while torturing Him, never believing for a second in some Jewish version of God, in some Jewish version of Messiah of all power.  But here He walks right out of the tomb from death to life, by the power of His own will.  If there were ever a doubt in the mind of a Roman soldier about who Jesus was, and more importantly what Jesus was, that doubt vanished in terror at what each of them saw with their own eyes.  It was more than just the angel who descended from heaven to unlock the door and get their attention.  It was the risen Lord who walks out of the grave in a brilliant robe of light, by the power of His own will.

But there is something else.  Had this been Jupiter, or Mars, or some other form of any Roman idea of deity, where all their gods demanded obedience and sacrifice for favor; and should they fail to please their gods, they visited great destruction upon them.  Jesus is different.  Jesus is certainly God, He is proving that now is mind bending ways.  But the expression on His face is NOT one of anger.  Jesus is not looking for revenge.  None of them are hurt, not at all.  Jesus stares at them with such love in His eyes, that love breaks their hearts and tears at the very fabric of their souls.  Jesus is not angry and full of righteous fury.  He should be.  He deserves to be.  He should be wreaking revenge upon them and tearing the flesh from their backs, revisiting the crown of thorns driven deep into their heads, beating them, punching them, and finally driving spikes or spears deep into their flesh.  They have it coming.  They laughed at Him.  They did all this while laughing and spitting on Him.  They made fun of the shame of His nakedness.  They still had His stolen clothes in their possession.  Even though He seems not to care about any of this at all.  He is looking into each of them deeply, with a look of love that would break the hardest heart of stone.  And everything they knew, or thought they knew, was now going to change.

What the priests hoped to contain was now to backfire on them.  Instead of guards to keep Jesus in the grave, a full Roman detachment now moves from non-believer to personal witness of the resurrection of Jesus.  And it gets worse … for them.  More than just one grave opens.  And not just in one place.  All over Judea, specific graves tear themselves open at the call of Jesus, and patriarchs and prophets from the history of Gods people from Adam until Christ, begin to come forth at the call of Jesus.  A first fruits offering for God the Father.  These men and women who bear testimony to the divinity of Jesus will come forth and begin spreading the gospel about what has happened throughout Judea.  A personal testimony to a resurrection called by a living Lord, a risen Lord.  And when the ascension happens, these first fruits will ascend with Jesus to heaven forevermore.  Wakened from the sleep of death, and transformed into what we are all to become, perfect in the eyes of our Creator, who re-creates us thus as He intends us to be.  Now throughout all of Judea, the dead will also bear testimony to the divinity of Jesus the Christ.

The gospel message is beginning to explode.  Yet still the disciples are unaware of all of this.  They still congregate in fear in an upper room.  And fear crushes belief … for now.  Luke continues the story in chapter 24 of his letter to his friend about what we believe and why.  Picking up in verse 13 it says … “And, behold, two of them went that same day to a village called Emmaus, which was from Jerusalem about threescore furlongs. [verse 14] And they talked together of all these things which had happened.  Two of those disciples gathered in that upper room decide to strike out for a small village of Emmaus.  It could be they had family there to hide them.  It could be it was just friend.  But while they walked, they had much to talk about.  Rumors of Roman soldiers who give testimony as to a risen Lord, until the Priests could buy their silence with some story about sleeping on duty.  But if they were sleeping, they would not be bragging about it, because the penalty for that was death.  So you know some small fortunes must have changed hands to keep them alive and quiet as to the real truth.  And still the truth was leaking out.  Then even more rumors about past prophets arisen, maybe one of them was supposed to be in Emmaus.  Then the testimony of the women.  They claim to have seen angels.  They claim the angels spoke of the Lord as among the living, a risen Lord.  Could it be?

Luke continues in verse 15 saying … “And it came to pass, that, while they communed together and reasoned, Jesus himself drew near, and went with them. [verse 16] But their eyes were holden that they should not know him.  And once again God does something we did not expect.  And He does it in a way we did not expect.  These men did not expect Jesus but here is Jesus.  Yet their eyes are “closed” in such a way they are unable to see Jesus for who He really is.  Ever wondered if you have encountered Jesus and did not recognize Him for who He is?  Ever wondered why?  Why would Jesus appear to us and keep us from recognizing Him?  Perhaps because the words matter, the truth matters, and source is less important.  Our favorite religious preachers are capable of getting the message wrong.  And the homeless man on the street is capable of getting the message right, even when we are not comfortable with it.  It is the truth that matters.  Truth will not disagree with truth that came before it, for truth cannot change.  But sometimes truth will shatter our interpretations of truth.  Take these two disciples for example.  They believed the Messiah would come and end Roman oppression.  But Jesus did not do that.  They believed Messiah could be the very Son of God, and Jesus did that.  But then Jesus was tortured and killed, how could God allow Himself to go through that.  The truth was consistent.  But our interpretations and expectations were simply completely wrong.  And perhaps Jesus would shield the eyes of these disciples to first correct their beliefs, founded in the truth of scripture, before He revealed Himself.  Let them accept the correct truth of scripture, not the incorrect expectations of our past.

Luke continues in verse 17 saying … “And he said unto them, What manner of communications are these that ye have one to another, as ye walk, and are sad? [verse 18] And the one of them, whose name was Cleopas, answering said unto him, Art thou only a stranger in Jerusalem, and hast not known the things which are come to pass there in these days?  Luke reveals one of the two disciples was Cleopas, although not one of the twelve he may well have been one of the 70 and had been with the others in the upper room to hear what was going on.  Jesus asks them what they are talking about and why they are so sad.  Cleopas asks this stranger if effectively he has been living under a rock?  How could he not know what was going on in Jerusalem this past weekend?  Luke continues in verse 19 saying … “And he said unto them, What things? And they said unto him, Concerning Jesus of Nazareth, which was a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the people: [verse 20] And how the chief priests and our rulers delivered him to be condemned to death, and have crucified him. [verse 21] But we trusted that it had been he which should have redeemed Israel: and beside all this, to day is the third day since these things were done. [verse 22] Yea, and certain women also of our company made us astonished, which were early at the sepulchre; [verse 23] And when they found not his body, they came, saying, that they had also seen a vision of angels, which said that he was alive. [verse 24] And certain of them which were with us went to the sepulchre, and found it even so as the women had said: but him they saw not.

Jesus asks the two disciples “what things” in order to probe from them what they have heard, and deeper what they believe.  Cleopas and his companion begin with a description of Jesus, a “prophet” mighty in word and deed before God and all the people.  It is here where the foundation of their faith just did not quite go far enough.  The story of prophets come to an end.  The story of God does not.  Have you ever considered that the problems you have in life, or in your relationship with God come because your faith just does not go quite far enough.  You trust God.  But do you trust God a little, or completely?  You believe in God, but believe a little, or with everything you have?  Put it this way, do you trust and believe, even when things make no sense to you, even when it is not logical, even when it looks stupid to do so?  Maybe your life is coming up short, because the foundation of your faith has had some artificial limit you set for it.  Many believe as long as it makes sense.  Many will love others, as long as others love them back.  But loving the stinky, the repellant, the difficult is just too hard.  And so we live lives of mediocrity, content to have a notion of God within us, but never giving Him everything.

Then Cleopas continues telling of the betrayal of Jesus by the chief priests and rulers.  And these two disciples believed Jesus would have redeemed Israel.  Not from sin mind you, but from the Romans.  But it is the third day since all of this took place and Israel is still under Roman rule and Jesus was killed.  But then, the story should have taken a turn for the better.  Strangely, it did not.  Cleopas tells of the women who “had seen a vision of angels”.  Again their faith was not large enough to embrace the truth of what the women said, it was no vision, it was an encounter.  But the angels said He was alive.  Even though the men who went to the same grave found everything as the women had said, but did not find angels.  We need men to prove out what the women said?  We refuse to embrace the truth, because we can only accept the words when it comes from a source that meets with our standards.  And in so doing, we join our Pharisee forefathers and reject the Truth of Jesus, for what good thing could ever come from Nazareth?  And sometimes our accepted sources are just like the men who went to the same grave, and saw not.  The Truth was right there, it came from the mouths of the women, it was the truth.  The men could not give testimony to it, because they did not embrace it.

And our biases are not just a male / female thing.  They extend to age-ism.  Someone is too young, or too old to be a proper source of truth.  Too new in the faith.  From a different denomination or brand of Christianity to have a message from God for me.  Our biases extend to race.  We refuse truth because the source does not share our racial experiences or past.  Our biases extend to wealth.  Surely the very poor or the very rich could never really understand the Truth of God, in a message for us.  The poor are too lazy.  The rich are too spoiled and greedy.  And so Jesus must disguise Himself in order to get through to us, and we so biased, are not even willing to hear Jesus because He does present Himself in “right package” for us to pay attention to.  But it has never been the package that matters.  It has always only been the message that matters.  If the message is truth, then it is truth.  Because it comes from the lips of a sinner or saint does not make truth less true.  Nor can it make a lie more true.  It can however, make a lie look more appealing, when it comes from a package that is appealing to our biases.

Jesus listens to the whole story of the gospel already laid out by these two followers, who despite saying it, have yet to believe it.  Then Luke continues in verse 25 saying … “Then he said unto them, O fools, and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken: [verse 26] Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into his glory? [verse 27] And beginning at Moses and all the prophets, he expounded unto them in all the scriptures the things concerning himself.  “Fools”, a word Jesus does not use lightly.  And yet are we any different?  We have all the truth we need in front of us, preserved at great cost in the Bible we now want to throw away as nothing but stories.  And yet the first thing Jesus does to prove Himself, is NOT a great revelation of divinity and power, but instead just a walk through of the scriptures taught the right way.  Jesus wipes out the bad interpretations.  Jesus shows them in the printed word, everything that would come to pass exactly as it has.  He reveals what was there all along.  If we were willing to let go our ideas of certainty we might have found it from the beginning.  If we were willing to let the past go, we might have seen what God was trying to show us in the present and for the future.  Trusting God first, letting Jesus lead, letting Jesus teach our hearts and minds.  Jesus was validating the message of the women who carried that gospel to them, validating it through scripture.  What was true is still true.

This conversation had changed.  While they still did not recognize Jesus in physical form, there was something distinct about what this man was saying.  Luke continues in verse 28 saying … “And they drew nigh unto the village, whither they went: and he made as though he would have gone further. [verse 29] But they constrained him, saying, Abide with us: for it is toward evening, and the day is far spent. And he went in to tarry with them. [verse 30] And it came to pass, as he sat at meat with them, he took bread, and blessed it, and brake, and gave to them. [verse 31] And their eyes were opened, and they knew him; and he vanished out of their sight.  Jesus pretends as if He has farther to walk.  But the two disciples are eager for Him to stay the night.  So He agrees.  Sometimes Jesus likes to be asked for things.  Sometimes our prayers accomplish just that.  Our prayers teach us what we really want, or perhaps should want.  Jesus stays with them.  He visits with them through the evening.  And when supper comes, He takes the bread and blessed it as He had done thousands of times before, and broke it and gave it to them.  And at that moment their eyes were opened, and they saw what was there right in front of them all along.  It was Jesus.  Jesus was alive.

Luke continues in verse 32 saying … “And they said one to another, Did not our heart burn within us, while he talked with us by the way, and while he opened to us the scriptures? [verse 33] And they rose up the same hour, and returned to Jerusalem, and found the eleven gathered together, and them that were with them, [verse 34] Saying, The Lord is risen indeed, and hath appeared to Simon. [verse 35] And they told what things were done in the way, and how he was known of them in breaking of bread.  And Luke reveals the name of the other disciple here along the way as Simon.  He is not specific as to whether this was Simon Peter, or Simon the former Zealot (probably the latter).  But now Cleopas and Simon talk about how their hearts burned within them as Jesus had opened the scriptures to them the right way along their journey.  They became so excited, they left to run back to the upper room, braving the night.  For fear had departed, they had been with Jesus.  The coming of Jesus into your heart will displace the fear you might otherwise carry.

They burst into the upper room, startling everyone there quite a bit.  And the first words out of their mouths was the same as that of the women who preceded them.  The Lord is risen indeed.  He appeared to both Simon and Cleopas along the way to Emmaus and at dinner breaking bread as He always did, in the same manner and habits.  The first two male disciples to carry the gospel were not Peter and John still locked away inside the upper room fighting incorrect perceptions, sadness, and fear.  But were instead Cleopas and Simon who had left the safety of the upper room to travel to small village called Emmaus.  Have you ever wondered if God is waiting for you to take action first?  To leave the safety of your home or church pew, in order to join with you in your mission.  God may radically redirect what you were intending to do.  The women went to ordain a dead body with spices and ointments, that task of love was not needed or finished, a greater task of carrying the gospel was assigned instead.  These two men went to Emmaus for whatever reason, and they barely stayed there, a greater task of carrying the gospel back to the others was something that called them past their fears.  It does not matter what you set out to do.  It matters what you may find God assigns you to do, even if it is something completely different then what you intended, and something totally different than anything you would have ever thought of on your own.  But the point is, your first action out the door is required, before those assignments are ever presented.  You need to be moving.  Stepping out in faith.  Then listen, follow, and do what God leads you to do.

When we finally embrace the truth, the gospel is opened to us.  When our humility trumps our pride, the Truth is able to break down the barriers we have erected for it, and the gospel is opened to us.  Are you brave enough, and humble enough, to hear past the biases you have long carried to the voice of God calling just to you, with a message He has just for you.  Its there.  God is not silent.  Can you listen, in spite of what you might think about the source, or the package it may come in? …

 

Saturday, November 13, 2021

The Words, not the Source [part 1 of 2] ...

High Priests of the ancient Jewish religion were always men, and men of the Levite tribe (with a few exceptions).  In fact, the priesthood overall was made up of men, scribes were men, and the Sanhedrin were men.  This was Jewish tradition since Moses until now.  If you were to seek out the word of God in the times of old, you would generally find it in men.  But that was then, this is now.  Not the days of you and I, but I am referring to the days of Jesus Christ.  In fact, one of the first people on planet earth to be told the good news of the gospel was a devout young woman named Mary.  She was told by an angel.  And it was confirmed by the Holy Spirit.  During the time of the silence of the father of John the Baptist, it was his very old wife Elizabeth, who had to recount the story of the gospel, and the role their son John (the baptizer) would soon play in it.  The coming of the Messiah was the bridge between the old religion and the new.  The need for Jewish sacrifice and symbolism was coming to an end.  The need for a singular Temple in which to perform rituals and rites was coming to an end.  And the need for the gospel of Jesus Christ was about to explode.  And the new gospel, the gospel of Jesus, was to include women in just as many proportions as it did men.  The new church was to look like the entire human family, not just the male side of it.

It is perhaps the most ironic phenomenon that during the time of Jesus, the Truth of the word of God could only be found from His lips.  Had you sought truth from the High Priest in the days of Jesus, you would have found only grievous errors, lies, hypocrisies, and a doctrine that would lead to the very death of Jesus the Son of God in a vain effort to preserve the ways of the past.  You would have been better off seeking truth from Mary the mother of Jesus, or Mary Magdalene the redeemed of Jesus, or Mary the sister of Martha and Lazarus who sat at His feet, or Martha who served Him, or Joanna, or from any number of women who stood by Jesus throughout His ministry.  The woman at the well of Samaria who becomes one of the greatest evangelists recorded in scripture for the cause of Jesus Christ.  The woman who merely touched the hem of His garment for healing and started a trend in that day that would rival the greatest of social media trends in our own, and had nothing but her own personal testimony to see it spread.  The new church would be filled with women commissioned by faith, and by calling, to spread the gospel of Jesus Christ.  And the only truth that mattered was the story of Jesus.  And the only power behind that testimony was what Jesus did for you.  “Who” you were, did not matter at all, “what” you said was the difference between the past and the future.

But this change in church composition, and roles, would put many a soul to the test both in those days and in our own.  Throughout all of time, listeners have been unable to shed their own bias to the hearing of the truth, because the source from which it comes is not appealing to them.  The priesthood could not accept the truth from the mouth of Jesus, because He came from Nazareth, looked too plain and simple, had no social elitism; seemed more like a hippie than the Son of God.  Jesus baptized.  Jesus preached.  Jesus did the things he should have needed clearance and endorsement of the church of the past to do, but Jesus had no such clearance or endorsement.  Jesus did His own thing.  And the church of the day refused to hear it.  And if the ways of the past would not hear the Truth from the mouth of Jesus the Son of God, why on earth would they hear it from the mouth of broken down fisherman, societal rejects, and God forbid, women?  They would not.  Is it any different today? 

But as further testimony to the truth of the Bible, its author’s reveal the humiliations of the truth in what they write, not just the glory stories where everyone was a hero, and no one made any mistakes.  The first gospel commissions would be examples of just such stories.  Luke offers us one couched in the greatest world event we will ever know, the resurrection.  Luke writes to his friend about what we believe and why in the last chapter of his gospel, the 24th chapter beginning in verse 1 it states … “Now upon the first day of the week, very early in the morning, they came unto the sepulchre, bringing the spices which they had prepared, and certain others with them.  When Luke uses the word pronoun “they” we get all warm and fuzzy and just assume this group is a mix of men and women, followers of Jesus intent on completing the preparation of Jesus’ burial that had been interrupted by the Sabbath falling on Friday evening at sunset.  But that is not quite true.  It was a group of folks, but it was only women, no men at all.  Firstly, men did not often prepare the dead as in Jewish tradition this was a very unclean work and required them to isolate themselves from society afterwards.  It was something like changing a toxic diaper that made you unclean for a while.  Women were just more willing to perform this duty, for love would drive them to it.

But the real truth behind the absence of men was set more in fear than anything else.  Now that Jesus was dead, killing his disciples, his closest followers in general was sure to be the next step of the angry Sanhedrin in order to stamp out all the loose ends and put the story of Jesus to death fully and finally, once and for all.  So the disciples were not out preaching in the streets, they were hiding in an upper room, afraid to venture one foot outside those shut doors.  Women faced all these same fears too.  And in addition, knew that if they were taken by enemies, they would be raped in the course of their torture, and still wind up enduring the same death their male counterparts would face in a situation like this.  Romans after all, had little sense of morality or respect, especially of Jews.  So when this company of women ventured out to complete the anointing of the body of Jesus, they had absolutely no idea what they would face or find in the process.  And what they found did nothing to calm their fears, at least at first.

Luke continues in verse 2 saying … “And they found the stone rolled away from the sepulchre. [verse 3] And they entered in, and found not the body of the Lord Jesus.  First, these women had no idea there would have been such a great stone rolled in front of the tomb to seal it.  But there it was having been rolled away from the door.  The great iron chains that once bound it to the tomb were snapped like so much tissue paper.  The Roman seal that promised death to any who would dare to break it was snapped in two without any hesitation or thought for safety.  And beyond all this, there was evidence of a great company of soldiers here guarding this place.  The remnants of campfires nearby with coals still orange with glow of heat from them.  Scattered Roman weapons, shields, armor, and soldiers clothing scattered about as if the entire company were caught by surprise and had themselves fled in terror.  But there was no signs of a battle, just the great stone rolled away (something women could have never done), and evidence of a terror that sent Romans running for their lives.  Jews could never have done this.  Romans were used to fighting Jews, even Zealots.  If it had been a battle, there would have been at least some blood and much less fear.  But there was not.

Beyond all of this, these women entered the tomb to do their work, and did NOT find the body of Jesus within.  What could have possibly happened?  Who could have done this, to take a dead body, even the body of Jesus, and for what purpose?  Hadn’t Jesus suffered enough, hadn’t they?  Their minds raced as Luke continues in verse 4 saying … “And it came to pass, as they were much perplexed thereabout, behold, two men stood by them in shining garments: [verse 5] And as they were afraid, and bowed down their faces to the earth, they said unto them, Why seek ye the living among the dead?  While their minds yet raced about where was Jesus, and why; all of the sudden two great men appear before them in shining garments.  These were no Romans.  Romans do not appear out of thin air.  These were no members of the Sanhedrin, the Sanhedrin have never worn robes of brilliant white light.  These were something way more than men, they were angels, perhaps cloaked to look as harmless as angels are capable of looking, but still pretty intense to a group of women already expecting the worst.

But then the words of the angels reach into their hearts and sound like deep music from within them.  The truth matters, the words matter, the source not so much.  Jesus is plainly gone.  And the angels have asked them, why do you seek the living among the dead.  This means Jesus is not dead.  This means Jesus is alive.  But how could this be?  Luke continues with the testimony of angels in verse 6 saying … “He is not here, but is risen: remember how he spake unto you when he was yet in Galilee, [verse 7] Saying, The Son of man must be delivered into the hands of sinful men, and be crucified, and the third day rise again. [verse 8] And they remembered his words,  Jesus is not here.  He is RISEN.  Those words sink deep into the hearts and minds of every woman in this company.  They drop the spices prepared for His burial.  They don’t need them anymore.  Then the angels remind them of the very words of Jesus Himself about all of this.  He will be delivered to the cross, and be raised again on the third day.  Today is the third day.  Today Jesus has risen again.  The greatest news that could ever be told to human ears happens first NOT in the upper room to his cowering disciples.  But instead in an empty tomb where women have braved their own fears to come and finish the work of love they must do for the body of their Lord.  But there is no body here.  There is only the trumpeting of angel voice in their very souls proclaiming a Risen Lord.  After Lazarus they each know what this means.  Jesus is alive.  Jesus said all this would happen.  Their minds open up and they remember every nuance of His voice when Jesus uttered these very words.

The gospel starts here in an empty tomb.  The first commission begins here with a group of nothing but women.  They set out for the upper room.  But Mary Magdalene tarries.  Luke misses this part of the story, but the heart of Mary breaks at all of this and she begins to weep.  The news is just too much.  It is just too good.  Seeing a Man she mistakes as the gardener she begs to know from Him where they have moved the body.  Fear prevents her from believing what angels have already told her.  But the Man is Jesus and He calls her by name.  Now it is beyond real to her.  Now, nothing can make her doubt ever again.  Jesus tells her not to touch Him just yet, because He has delayed ascending to His Father at this point, to see if the sacrifice is enough.  He delayed for love of Mary.  He delayed for love of each of us.  He would have stopped to heal our broken hearts as surely as He longs to heal them today.  The news is solid.  The news is good news therefore gospel news.  Mary leaves the garden racing back to the upper room.  She will be behind the group, but has the same story to tell, this time from Jesus Himself.  The new church will begin with women.

Luke picks up again in verse 9 saying … “And returned from the sepulchre, and told all these things unto the eleven, and to all the rest. [verse 10] It was Mary Magdalene, and Joanna, and Mary the mother of James, and other women that were with them, which told these things unto the apostles.  Note what Luke states, they returned from the empty grave and told the whole story to the other eleven, AND to all of the rest.  It is here where Luke finally reveals it was “other women” who were with them at the grave.  We have no idea how many men and women were back in that upper room.  There could have been many.  We do know some of the women by name that gave this testimony.  Once again, the first carriers of the gospel bore a message from angels, backed by personal testimony of sight and sound.  And once again they are not believed by the men closest to them.  The men who heard the same words as the women did by Jesus Himself.  The men who saw the work of Jesus alive in these women, as Jesus had been alive in themselves as well over the last 3-4 years.  As Joseph the fiancée of Mary was ready to put her away until an angel spoke directly to him, so now the disciples were no more inclined to hear the words of these women and their testimony of this gospel, and of the truth, because of their own bias.

They resisted because these were women.  Luke says in verse 11 saying … “And their words seemed to them as idle tales, and they believed them not.  Imagine, the gospel rejected, by those who should have been the first to accept it.  Because it looks to them like the idle tales of women chattering.  Some girl’s dream who is just unable to face the hard truth of the death of Jesus, which the men all had seen albeit from a distance much farther than that of the women.  But the gospel begins in humility.  The gospel grows in humble soil, and is stamped out upon the rocks of our pride.  You must humble yourself to hear the message of God to your soul, as that message may come from someone else, someone you deem unworthy, or not good enough to carry it.  But on the heels of the group of women who have brought this testimony to all this assembly of people comes Mary Magdalene running as fast as her feet would carry her.  She is ablaze.  She is on fire.  She repeats the story of the other women and now adds a new personal chapter of her own.  For she has met Jesus risen for the grave for herself.  She heard His words to come to tell them all.  She knows He is alive.  She has just spoken with a risen Jesus.  And she will not be dissuaded. 

While there are far more than 2 witnesses to all of this, the personal testimony of Mary Magdalene has begun to kindle a fire in the room.  Luke continues in verse 12 saying … “Then arose Peter, and ran unto the sepulchre; and stooping down, he beheld the linen clothes laid by themselves, and departed, wondering in himself at that which was come to pass.  Peter cannot take this anymore.  He decides to run to the grave and look at these things for himself.  John goes with him.  And they find exactly what the women have said, exactly as they have relayed it.  Except there are no angels in this place now.  Where the women went away with a gospel commission, Peter and John go away empty now wrestling with their own doubts and faith and memories.  The gospel begins in humility.  The women were humble enough to heed the words of the angels.  The men do not expect to find those words to be true, even though every evidence is as the women described it.  A great stone rolled away, something the women could never have done.  Great chains of iron that once bound the stone to the grave broken like tissue paper.  A Roman seal promising death, broken in half without a moment’s hesitation.  A camp deserted in fear outside the tomb with Roman leftovers everywhere.  An empty tomb with grave linens not scattered about, but folded neatly and left on the bench within the tomb itself.

Men left that place WITHOUT the gospel, because up to this point men had refused to embrace the gospel.  The women carried it.  The men did not.  The new church was here.  It began on Friday when the whole sacrificial system was fulfilled and torn down in the death of Jesus Christ.  It rested on the Sabbath day as Jesus had created and once again did; even in the work of our salvation, He rested.  And now on Sunday, the third day of the new church, Jesus rises and leaves the tomb with neatly folded clothes.  A robe of light will now once again cover our Lord.  In the new church, not like in the old one, the first folks to carry the gospel will be a company of women.  And the first soul to see a risen Jesus, even before Jesus resumes the work of our salvation and verifies the sacrifice with His Father God, is Mary Magdalene.  Mary is given the first gospel commission by Jesus Himself.  She is ablaze.  She carries fire in her testimony because it is a personal one to her.  No one can make her doubt ever again.  But whether we believe the message of God carried through her is up to us.

Are you ready to hear what God is trying to say to you, ignoring the source, and closely examining the words for the Truth He is trying to convey?  I don’t care what you believe about whether women should be pastors or not (despite my belief that Jesus is very clear about this).  Nor do I ask what you believe about any particular doctrine of your church or mine.  But I do ask - are you hearing the message of God that is intended specifically and only for you at this very moment of your life?  You were not meant to drift from day-to-day, following proscribed patterns of prayer, and fellowship, and study, but only to keep drifting from one day to the next.  Doing what you do, over and over again, but never really hearing what God wants you to do, what God will enable you to do if you but seek Him, and follow His instruction in your life.  To let God lead, we must start in humility, abandoning our ideas as the foolishness they are, and letting God retrain us how to think, how to love, and what to want.  In the process of our transformation will come a work each of us is intended to perform.  It will be different for each of us, as we are all different from each other.  So I cannot tell you what your work will be, but I can tell you, that you have one, and when you find it, and follow it, you will never be happier in your life.

Scripture offers us guardrails.  But only a personal relationship between you and Jesus will get you into the process of transformation, and engaged in the work of your particular life.  And if God sends you a message, meant just for you, examine the words, not the messenger, and find the peace Jesus has in store for you, even if in the middle of the raging seas well beyond your control.

And Luke was not yet done with the story of our first church and what it means to discard the messages Jesus has sent us …