Your life in Christ is lived in what Mark left open, where you, like believers for centuries, let go of your fear and witness to God’s life in the world.
Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Resurrection of Our Lord, year B
Texts: Mark 16:1-8
Beloved in Christ, grace to you, and peace in the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen
It wasn’t Jesus’ death that frightened the women. It was his resurrection.
These women were as brave as anyone could be in the days of Jesus’ suffering and death. While most of the men who followed Jesus hid away in fear after his arrest, this core group of women who’d been with Jesus from the beginning kept vigil at the cross as Jesus died, watched Joseph and Nicodemus take his body down, saw where he was buried. Sunday morning, while others locked the doors, these women gathered together what they needed to anoint Jesus properly, and headed for the place they saw him buried.
That’s courage. At every point.
And yet, after the women meet a young man who tells them Jesus is now risen, and shows them the empty tomb, Mark ends his Gospel with this: “They went out and fled from the tomb, for terror and amazement had seized them; and they said nothing to anyone, for they were afraid.”
Now they were afraid. Terrified. When they’d just heard the best news of their lives.
Because it was also the most terrifying news of their lives.
All they endured in those three days was the way of the world under Roman rule, except that it was their Jesus who suffered. But there were always trials, floggings, crucifixions.
And death is death, and they knew what to do when loved ones are dying. You weep and grieve. And you take care of them. You keep watch as they die, and lovingly take care of the body after. Of course it was hard. And they could’ve been imprisoned, or worse. But they knew the duty and courage love demanded from them, and they loved Jesus to the end.
But they didn’t know what to do if death itself ended. If Jesus was still dead, they’d know how to go on. The way they always did. But if Jesus is alive, everything is changed, and they didn’t know what that meant. And that terrified them to their core.
Now, of course that didn’t last.
Mark writes his Gospel in a time when everyone knew that these women got it together that very morning, shared the news of Jesus’ resurrection. They were the first witnesses. And yet Mark still ends this way. It was so unsatisfying to later believers, some ancient scribes added their own endings, verses of which might be included one of your Bibles. The other evangelists, writing after Mark, made sure to include multiple stories of what happened after that early moment at the empty tomb.
So if everyone knows the women lost their fear and spoke up, why does Mark end where he does?
Maybe he wonders if you and I are frightened by Jesus’ resurrection, too. Maybe Mark wants you to write the next verses of this Good News, this Gospel, by how you live your life filled with the risen Christ. Like these women did. But he needs you to know that will mean letting go of your fear.
So, what if you could live your life free of your fear of death?
These women might have known how to deal with death and suffering as part of their regular existence, but what Jesus’ resurrection eventually taught them is that death no longer frightened them. They could live boldly, but ready to go when their time came.
So how would this Gospel continue if you wrote your ending, your life, without fear of dying? Without fearing that your loved ones will die, because of course they will, but God has them well in hand. Without pretending you alone somehow will make it through this life without dying? What if you embraced your failing body or mind, even your death, as part of the gift of living?
Imagine your witness to others if you lived every day with joy and hope as if it were your last, your only day, unafraid of what was next, and ready to go whenever it’s your time.
And what if you could live your life without fear of living?
In Jesus’ resurrection, these women learned that their future was utterly changed, that they had a life to live in Christ that they thought was over. But to live it, to know Jesus’ abundant life, it meant releasing their fear of living fully. It meant trusting God was with them in all things. For their friends, it meant unlocking the door.
So how would this Gospel continue if you wrote your ending by releasing all the things you cling to in fear? All your grasping for possessions or security, all your fear that you can’t prevent problems from happening to you, all can be let go in Jesus’ resurrection life, and you can find true, abundant life here and now as Jesus promised.
Imagine your witness to others if you unlocked the door and lived free of all the things that cause fear, and your life witnessed with joy – even in serious difficulty and suffering – to God’s life living within you.
And what if you could live unafraid to love?
That’s the tenacious fear. These women, and the other disciples, learned in Jesus’ resurrection what it meant to live into his command to love, and they did. At first, everyone shared everything, no one went without, all lived in love together. But even early in the book of Acts it starts to fall apart. This fear clings. Allowing yourself to be vulnerable to others in sharing love, or forgiveness, risking being wounded by others, it’s frightening. But how would this Gospel continue if you wrote your ending unbound from this fear?
All the justice and equity, the ending of oppression and violence, all that God dreams for in our world and that we dream too, all can start to happen when we love without fear. Because we will see the power of Christ’s love working in people, one at a time, for healing and hope.
Imagine the witness and healing your self-giving, sacrificial love could be to others as you joyfully let go for the sake of your family, your neighbors, your world.
Mark left open the end of his Gospel for you to add the rest of your story with the risen Christ.
We know the women and so many others over the centuries let go of their fear of dying, of living, of loving, and transformed their homes and neighborhoods and worlds with the risen love of Christ. That was the gift of the Spirit of God, moving in them, easing their fear, giving them courage to live in love no matter what happened.
And that Spirit is now given to you, and speaks in your heart saying, “don’t be afraid to die. Don’t be afraid to live. Don’t be afraid to love, I am with you. Now go and live in a way that shows the rest of the world how this Gospel, this Good News, continues. Until all are whole and well in God’s love and life.”
In the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen