Easter Sunday; St. Stanislaus parish.
Do you how much
Americans spent on gift wrap last year?
Well, neither do I. In the
busy-ness of this week, the most recent data I could find was from 2010, when
this country spent 9.36 billion dollars on gift wrap. That’s over $30 each. And gift wrapping isn’t a purely modern or
uniquely American phenomenon. The
earliest reference to it is 2200 years old, and comes from China. Why do we do it? Why do we wrap presents, or to take an example
that might be more timely: hide eggs?
There’s something very humane about the wrapping of gifts. Somehow, the giving and, more importantly,
receiving of a gift is made even more joyful when it’s wrapped.
But,
there are other, more worrying, forms of hiding and wrapping. There are the wounds we bandage because
they’re not scars yet, and we’re afraid of what the world might do to
them. There are the things we’re ashamed
of, the rug bought solely to cover the stain.
There’s the hiding of a smuggler, trying to steal and deceive. There’s the fraudster Wizard of Oz pleading
with you to pay no attention to the man behind the curtain. There’s the stick in a jacket pocket, mimicking
a gun, trying to coerce and threaten with only imagined power.
Perhaps there
are parts of each of us, fears, temptations, memories of injustice suffered or
inflicted, that we think we’ve drawn a curtain over, convinced that they cannot
come to light, that we daren’t expose even to God’s healing touch. The Light of the World is shielded from them,
so they, and we, remain in the darkness, like Mary Magdalen at the beginning of
this gospel.
Easter is
about unmasking all hidings and wrappings.
Stones don’t just roll away from tombs, and Mary knows it. She’s gone, she’s dared to leave her home at
night, maybe she can’t sleep for grief, and she’s gone with courage to the
place where the man she still names Lord, she still loves, lays, hidden,
she thinks, in his deathliness. But that’s
not true. The stone has been rolled
away. Could it be grave robbers, what
could have happened? She goes and she
reaches out to Jesus’ trusted disciples and she laments, she dares to share her
shock and sorrow and the disciples take this and act. They run and go and return to the place that
by all natural rights should be the place of death, the monument to
death’s relentless power, that coerces and threatens, and sets out to conquer
their beloved Lord.
But, it
didn’t. That’s what they find. The stone has been rolled away. The victory monument of death has been
defaced, but by what? As fast as he ran,
the Beloved Disciple pauses before he enters.
Is it reverence? Is it fear? Is it that the cautious little-by-little
tearing off of the wrapping paper on a gift?
Peter, true to his character, barges in, and sees. There was no grave-robber… why would a
grave-robber take a body and leave the grave clothes behind!? The Beloved Disciple follows him and sees and
believes… what?
He sees
and believes that death has no power.
The grave clothes are empty. The
trappings of death are empty. The face
cloth has even been neatly folded, lovingly resigned, and placed in a
corner. The curtain has fallen, the
stick is out of the pocket, the pretense that it’s a deadly gun is over. The vanquished signs of death show its
impotence.
But
why? What has conquered death? There are more layers of wrapping paper to be
taken off this gift. God in Christ has
conquered death, has conquered death in love.
The face cloth is laid to one side because it isn’t needed any more:
God’s glory is no longer veiled. Moses
had had to put a veil on after seeing God because his face shone with a
brilliance the people found blinding. In
Christ, God gives His very self, the fullness of His glory, for us, and gifts
are best given wrapped. But the wrapping
exists to be removed. And it is; the
face cloth, the veil, is folded and put away, because Christ doesn’t need it
any more. Or, one might better say, we
don’t need any more, because it was all for us, all of this: God sending His
only Son, as a babe, in flesh, to teach, to heal, to suffer to die and to rise…
it was all for us. It was all for us to
show that greatness of His love, a love so powerful that not even death, death
at our hands, could keep him from being with us.
And it still
can’t. The veil is off. God has sent us the Spirit, that Jesus handed
over as he gave up his last breath for love of us, and the Spirit dwells in us. Whatever we thought we had to hide, is
transparent to God’s life-giving touch, for we have been made dwelling places
for God’s own Spirit. Our wrapping paper
has been torn off and God dares to accept us as gift.
Given in baptism, in
the life-giving stream of water that flowed from Christ’s pierced side, and
strengthened in confirmation, the Spirit renews and reveals our redeemed
beauty. In letting his very flesh be
torn open for us, Christ tore down every barrier, every shield, every wall that
could keep us from living wholly and holily with each other and with Him
forever. He has gone to prepare a place
for us, and the ribbon-cutting ceremony is done, done in his Flesh.
And today, we renew our
baptismal promises, we renew our commitment to live openly in the light of day
as disciples of so loving a Lord. And
then we’ll move to the altar and witness our God break for us, unwrap our gift
of life eternal. Christ is risen:
Alleluia!
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