Mike Hosey, An Elder |
In our culture, Christmas seems to trump Easter. Just think about it for a second. Christmas, essentially, is a month long
holiday for Americans and other westerners.
Stores begin decorating in November, and sometimes in October. We have
parties beginning on December 1st and they continue all the way through
December 25th. There are parties at your office, and parties at your
church groups, and parties at your school. Christmas music plays on the radio,
having begun sometime shortly before Thanksgiving. People run themselves ragged
trying to fulfill a perceived religious obligation, while also trying to meet
the dictates of their larger culture, pushed along by a hyped commercialism
that is interested in cash more than it is in the birth of God to humanity. The baby Jesus is almost front and center for the month, even in secular and
worldly circles. He is only partly eclipsed by Santa Clause.
But not Easter. Easter
gets no parties. Have you ever been invited to the office Easter party? There’s
no Easter music on the radio. No one
runs themselves ragged. For the most part, the celebration of Easter is limited
to a single day. Interestingly, at Easter there are no images of Jesus in the larger
culture – only in Christian circles. There is no Easter equivalent of the
nativity scene in your local mall. You won’t find any depictions of the stone
rolled away, or an empty tomb, or an empty Cross. Jesus is not just eclipsed by the Easter
Bunny, he’s simply not there at all.
Of course this is not a dig on Christmas. You can’t, after all, have Easter without
it. But Easter is, by far, the more
significant holiday. And its greater significance likely is the reason you find
Christmas being celebrated with so much more fervor. Satan does not wish for
Easter to be celebrated with the same intensity. To paraphrase how one writer
put it not too long ago: You don’t have to believe that Jesus is God to enjoy
Christmas. You can celebrate Christmas as the birth of a great or wonderful man
who taught us to love one another. But he’s still just a man. This is not the case with Easter. Easter shouts how Jesus died for humanity,
and reconciled it to God -- and not just humanity as a collective, but every
human individually. It also shouts, triumphantly, that his death (and yours) doesn't have to be permanent. If you are reading this, the significance of Resurrection
Sunday is that you can have eternal
life, and that your past can be erased, and
that a future of goodness is guaranteed.
You can look at Christmas and reject its divinity. You
cannot do so with Easter. The empty tomb
is proof of divine involvement. Easter
is the fulfillment of God’s mission to earth.
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