Summary: Looks at what the resurrection meant for various people.

John 20:19-23

He was dead, and with him died all of their dreams, all of their hopes everything they believed in. They had given everything to him, their past, their present even their future and up until three days ago it seemed like a pretty good bargain. All he had wanted was everything, and they gave it. All he had asked was that they believe and oh how they had believed. And why not they had seen the impossible, they hadn’t just thought the impossible, that’s easy what was it the Queen of Hearts told Alice, “Sometimes I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.” They had seen the impossible, they had seen blind men see, they had seen lame men walk, they had seen dead men live. They believed with all their hearts, but not any more, now their beliefs were as dead as their master was.

And there was nothing to do but to go home, to leave Jerusalem, to leave their hopes to leave their dreams and just go home. They might as well try and recover their yesterdays because their tomorrows were as dead as Jesus was.

They had seen him beaten, they seen him crucified, they had seen him killed and they had seen him buried and they knew the dream was as dead as the dreamer. Unless, unless it was true what Mary had seen, she had seen an empty tomb, she had seen empty grave clothes and she had seen Jesus. And if that was the case than he wasn’t dead, he was alive. And if he was alive than everything was going to be all right. The video that we showed at the beginning of the service may have been disturbing, but then again crucifixion is disturbing. But Easters not about his crucifixion it’s about his resurrection, Easters not about his death it’s about his life. It’s not about mourning it’s about celebrating. The first Easter morning 2000 years ago must have begun much like our service did this morning, with Jesus followers remembering what had happened, remembering the horror of Friday, remembering that their friend was dead and their dreams were shattered. But then the cry rang out he’s alive, he’s alive. And then, it happened, as quickly as turning on the lights, they weren’t mourning his being dead they were celebrating his being alive. It wasn’t defeat it was victory. Because he wasn’t dead he was alive.

But what did that really mean, other than the obvious that he wasn’t dead?

Because He Lives Peter Was Forgiven You remember Peter don’t you? Peter who was one of the twelve. Peter who was one of the inner circle. Peter who was one of Jesus’ closest friends. Peter who walked on water, Peter who offered to die for Jesus. Peter who grabbed a sword in the garden and tried to fight off those sent to arrest his friend. Peter who denied he even knew Christ, not once, not twice but three times.

Jesus had been arrested and his followers scattered, all but two of them disappeared. John and Peter followed Christ, but not together. We don’t really know if John was challenged about knowing Christ, and if he was we don’t what his response was. But we do know what happened in the case of Peter.

Biblical Scholars tell us that the Book of Mark was probably the first gospel written. The same scholars tell us that even though it was written by a young man named John Mark, that he was probably just acting as a secretary for someone else. Someone who had been an eye witness to everything that Christ had done. And that somebody was in all probability Peter.

With that is mind let read Peter’s account in Mark 14:67-72 Meanwhile, Peter was below in the courtyard. One of the servant girls who worked for the high priest noticed Peter warming himself at the fire. She looked at him closely and then said, “You were one of those with Jesus, the Nazarene.”

Peter denied it. “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” he said, and he went out into the entryway. Just then, a rooster crowed.

The servant girl saw him standing there and began telling the others, “That man is definitely one of them!” Peter denied it again.

A little later some other bystanders began saying to Peter, “You must be one of them because you are from Galilee.”

Peter said, “I swear by God, I don’t know this man you’re talking about.” And immediately the rooster crowed the second time. Suddenly, Jesus’ words flashed through Peter’s mind: “Before the rooster crows twice, you will deny me three times.” And he broke down and cried.

Come on Peter, what is going on? This is Jesus, the same Jesus that called you from being a fisherman and turned you into a fisher of men. The same Jesus that walked on the water, feed the hungry, healed your mother in law and raised Lazarus from the dead.

You don’t know him? You practically lived with him for the past three years and you don’t know him? You ate together, travelled together, laughed together and you don’t know him? He taught you learned. Maybe you simply forgot that you knew him. What was it you couldn’t remember? Was it when you said in Luke 9:20 “You are the Messiah sent from God!” or was it when you said in Matthew 14:33 “You really are the Son of God!”

Peter do you even have the slightest recollection of saying to Jesus in Mark 14:29 “Even if everyone else deserts you, I never will.” Or Mark 14:31. “Not even if I have to die with you! I will never deny you!”

But you did deny him, not once, not twice but three times. And if Jesus had stayed in the tomb than Peter would have lived a life of defeat. Wallowing in guilt, self-pity and grief. But Jesus didn’t stay in the tomb. And when the two Marys found the tomb empty, and the angel told them that Jesus had been raised from the dead, the angel told them in Mark 16:7 Now go and tell his disciples, and especially Peter, . . .

Especially Peter. Peter who denied him, Peter who swore that he didn’t know him, Peter who turned his back on him when he need Peter the most. Not to fight for him, not to try and rescue him from the Roman Centurions. He just needed Peter to be there. He needed to see Peter in the crowd needed to know that those three years weren’t wasted. He didn’t need Peter to die for him; he simply needed Peter to live for him. And Peter denied he ever knew him.

And when Jesus hung on the cross, with the blood from the crown of thorns dripping into his eyes, and he pulled himself up by the iron nails driven through his wrists and said

Father forgive them, he was looking for Peter. Mark Twain said “Forgiveness is the fragrance the violet sheds on the heel that has crushed it.” And that was certainly the case here as Jesus looked out at those who betrayed him, denied him. Those who demanded his death, and those who gave into those demands.

But that forgiveness is powerless unless it comes from one who has the power to forgive. Unless it came from one who had the power to say, defeat death. Without the resurrection that forgiveness would have been worthless, simply more words from a prophet proved wrong by his death. But when he stepped out of the tomb everything he said, everything he taught was proved to be right. And his forgiveness became a certainty.

Have you denied him? With your words, with your behaviour? Have you wondered whether or not Jesus could ever forgive you? The answer is “Yes”, not only can he forgive you, he wants to forgive you and his resurrection proves that he has the power to forgive you, if that is what you want.

When Peter realized what he had done, the Bible says he broke down and cried, that was remorse, he was sorry for what he had done. God’s forgiveness is there for each one of us but first we need to acknowledge our wrongs, and be sorry that we did it, not just sorry we got caught doing it, but sorry that we disappointed Jesus.

Because He Lives Thomas Believed You ever get tagged with a nickname? Especially one you didn’t like. You have to feel sorry for Thomas. This was the disciple that tradition says was responsible for taking the gospel to India. We are told that he was martyred for his faith in the Indian city of Madras. If you read through the accounts of Thomas in the Gospels you see a young man fully devoted to Christ. And yet how do we know him? Yeah that’s right 2000 years later we still call him “Doubting Thomas” Why? One mistake, John 20:24-25 One of the disciples, Thomas (nicknamed the Twin), was not with the others when Jesus came. They told him, “We have seen the Lord!” But he replied, “I won’t believe it unless I see the nail wounds in his hands, put my fingers into them, and place my hand into the wound in his side.”

As if he was the only one who had doubted. When the women first came with the news of the resurrection listen to what happened Luke 24:10-11 They told the apostles what had happened, but the story sounded like nonsense, so they didn’t believe it. Doubting Thomas indeed. But he probably verbalized it better, saying I won’t believe unless I can see it myself. Not a impossible or unreasonable request considering the time and circumstances. Not like Woody Allen who said “If only God would give me some clear sign! Like making a large deposit in my name at a Swiss bank.”

All Thomas was saying was “you’ve seen him, if I’m going to believe than I need to see him too.” Not unreasonable at all. And when he saw Christ he believed, he looked at him and said “My Lord and my God” And do you remember what Jesus said John 20:29

Then Jesus told him, “You believe because you have seen me. Blessed are those who haven’t seen me and believe anyway.” That’s you, blessed are you who haven’t seen him and believe anyway. You do believe in the resurrection don’t you? You can’t take bits and pieces of the Bible, believe some of it but not the rest. Augustine said “If you believe what you like in the gospels, and reject what you don’t like, it is not the gospel you believe, but yourself.”

If you don’t believe that Christ rose from the dead why are you here? If I didn’t believe I could think of a dozen other things I’d rather be doing than being in church on Easter Sunday morning.

Everything that Jesus Christ said and did could be duplicated or fabricated right up to his resurrection. But at that point it became very apparent that he was not a man, he was not just a prophet or a teacher. He was and still is God. And what does that mean for you on April 15th 2001? Well in Romans 4:25 The Bible says He was handed over to die because of our sins, and he was raised from the dead to make us right with God. And again in Romans 6:4 And just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glorious power of the Father, now we also may live new lives.

Have you been made right with God? Are you leading a new life? That’s why Jesus was raised from the dead, so that you could be forgiven, so that you could believe and so that you could have a new life. And all you have to do is reach out and accept it.

It’s Easter Sunday, and He is Alive.

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