Lenten Devotions - Day 40

“When the two women ran from the tomb, they were confused and shaking all over. They were too afraid to tell anyone what had happened.” Mark 16:8

Fear is a powerful motivator. It so often controls our actions, even when we know there to be a better way of doing. Fear is often irrational, but at times it is the very rational aspect of fear that keeps us from living according to faith.

Mark’s gospel originally ended with this verse. Apparently, the text was changed by editors and copyists to reflect the fact that the resurrection story did get told. They wanted the text to speak more of Jesus’ resurrection than as Mark had ended his narrative. It made for an uncomfortable ending, after all. The women go to the tomb, find Jesus, then slip away quietly in fear. Mark’s is a brilliant literary device. It is effective. It stirs our emotions. It makes us question the women, but also ourselves. Too often, however, we read the text as those early editors, seeking a reinforcement of the message we want to share or hear, so we miss the point Mark was making.

This is the most fast-paced of the gospel narratives. Mark presents Jesus teaching, and doing. We are at one place, then another. We hear Jesus’ words and see him act. We find Jesus healing and touching the lives of all kinds of people in order to continue the task of teaching the disciples in memorable ways. He leads us to the cross, then the tomb. Here we are faced with the seemingly unreasonable news that Jesus has risen from the dead.

This is the climax of Mark’s account. We have been introduced to Jesus and Jesus’ teaching the disciples. We have watched the disciples fail in understanding the gospel time after time. They were always missing the point behind Jesus’ words and actions. They battled Jesus over the question of his death. They argued over the wrong definition of greatness and misunderstanding the messianic reign as Jesus presented it. It is easy to read the text and accuse them of falling down on the job. As the women come to the tomb, however, it is no longer the disciples who must respond to Jesus. They have all abandoned him. They have all departed, and only the women are left to care for him. As they approach to hear the news of Jesus’ resurrection, they also fail and run away. Now we are the only ones left. We are now faced with the question of how we will respond.

It is easy to accuse the disciples of falling down on the job. Mark casts them as easy targets— dense fishermen who were always missing the boat. As these women come to the tomb, however, it is no longer the disciples who must respond to Jesus. All have abandoned him—the crowds, the twelve, Peter, and the other women who stood by the cross. They had all departed, and only the women are left to care for him. As they approach to hear the news of Jesus’ resurrection, they also fail and run away.

Now we are the only ones left. Now we are the ones faced with the question of how we will respond. What will we do? Will we run away in fear, or announce the message of the risen Lord?

Give the risen Christ center place in your life. Allow his resurrection to live in you.

“Lord, grant me the courage to see how I have failed to understand your gospel, the to proclaim your word in the character of Christ Jesus, crucified, yet risen from the dead.”

—©Copyright 2009 Christopher B. Harbin http://www.sermonsearch.com/contributors/104427/

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Gospel Is Not Conservative

God in the Hands of Angry Sinners

Our Language of Choice