Easter season is 40 days when we remember the risen Jesus
present with his disciples. Easter season includes Sundays and ends on the
Thursday of Ascension Day. The 40 days of Lent do not include Sundays and begin
Ash Wednesday. The light of the Paschal
candle reminds us of the light of the risen Christ who ate with his disciples,
men and women, and taught them. Our first Bible reading in Easter season is
from the book of Acts not from the Old Testament. The Epistles this year are from
the Revelation to St. John, next year A from the First Epistle of Peter, then year
B from the First Epistle of St. John. The gospels are from St. John, first the
Resurrection and then from Jesus’ teaching at the Last Supper.
Let’s look today at the reading from the Revelation. Revelation
is the last book of the Bible. It is said to have been written in the late 90’s
in the time of a great persecution ordered by Emperor Domitian. This was about
25 years after 7O AD when Domitian’s younger brother Titus put down the Jewish
rebellion and destroyed the Jerusalem Temple. Revelation is John’s report of a
vision received while John was an exile on the Aegean island of Patmos. John
says he was in the Spirit on “the Lord’s Day.” That suggests that Christians
were keeping Sunday, then as now, as the weekly remembrance of Jesus’
Resurrection. John’s report of his vision of the end times forms a letter to 7
Christian communities in what is now western Turkey, then called the province
of Asia.
John begins his letter, “Grace to you and peace.” When
Jesus appears to the disciples Easter evening he begins, “Peace be with you?’
When he appears again the next Sunday he begins, “Peace be with you.” God’s
will for us, for his church, for the world Jesus has redeemed, is peace. God
wants us to live in peace, in reconciled peace with God and with our neighbors.
But peace is not easy; peace in a sin-filled world means that we are reconciled
after conflict, that we forgive and we are forgiven. From early times an
exchange of peace came before communion.
The Agnus Dei has, “O Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world, have
mercy on us, have mercy on us, grant us your peace.” In the exchange of the peace moved from words at the altar party to greetings in the pews,
obeying Jesus’ command, “When you bring your gift to the altar, make peace with
your neighbor.” After the Prayers of the People we share God’s peace with one
another, the reconciling peace the risen and living Jesus shared with the
disciples on Easter Day and the Sunday after Easter, and every time he meets us.
That peace, John says, is “from him who is and who was
and who is to come, and from the seven spirits who are before his throne, and
from Jesus Christ, the faithful witness, the firstborn of the dead, and the
ruler of the kings of the earth.”
In 1924 a Mississippi lawyer William Alexander Percy
wrote a poem, “His Peace”
I
love to think of them at dawn
Beneath
the frail pink sky,
Casting
their nets in Galilee
And
fish-hawks circling by.
Casting
their nets in Galilee
Just
off the hills of brown
Such
happy, simple fisherfolk
Before
the Lord came down.
Contented,
peaceful fishermen,
Before
they ever knew
The
peace of God that filled their hearts
Brimful
and broke them too.
Young
John who trimmed the flapping sail
Homeless
in Patmos died.
Peter,
who hauled the teeming net,
Head
down was crucified.
The
peace of God, it is no peace,
But
strife sowed in the sod.
Yet
brothers pray for but one thing –
The
marvelous peace of God!”
The last verses are Hymn 661 in the Episcopal Hymnal 1982.
Peace, John says, is “from him who is and who was and who
is to come, and from the seven spirits who are before his throne, and from
Jesus Christ, the faithful witness, the firstborn of the dead, and the ruler of
the kings of the earth.”
Jesus Christ, our Messiah, died and rose almost 2000
years ago. We believe his resurrection began the Messianic Age. Isaiah 2:4 and
11:6-9 describe that age: “They
shall beat their swords into
plowshares
and their spears into pruning hooks; nation will not lift sword against nation
and they will no longer study warfare. (2:4)
The wolf will live with the lamb, the leopard will lie down with the
goat, the calf and the lion and the yearling together; and a little child will
lead them. . . . They will neither harm nor destroy on all my holy mountain,
for the earth will be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the
sea. (11:6-9)
But
almost 2000 years later the sword has become the hydrogen bomb, Christians are
murdered in church on Easter Day, and tourist families at breakfast are torn
apart by suicide bombers. People continue to harm and destroy on the holy
mountains. The gospel has been widely preached, but the earth is not yet “full
of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea.” Glaciers are
retreating, polar ice is melting, sea waters are covering more and more of the
earth. The Messianic Age is not evident to the eye of the senses. It is to the eye of faith.
Between
1927-29 Georges Lemaitre, a Belgian priest, and American astronomer Edwin
Hubble developed the “big bang” model of the beginning of the universe – about 14
billion years ago. If all the physical world had a beginning, will it have an
end?
St.
John says, “yes.” Peace is “from
him who is and who was and who is to come . . . and from Jesus Christ, the
faithful wi1tness, the firstborn of the dead, and the ruler of the kings of the
earth.” Science and religion agree that
the world as we know it will end. In the meantime we know “Jesus Christ, the
faithful witness, the firstborn of the dead, and the ruler of the kings of the
earth.”
Remember that John’s vision came in a time of conflict
and persecution. Human nature seeks liberty and autonomy, increased power to
rule ourselves, to do what we want, when we want, as we want. Totalitarian
governments before, during, and after the Roman Empire sought and seek complete
control over the lives of their subjects.
John’s vision, and the experience of Christians in all
ages, is that Jesus Christ is Lord, “the faithful witness, the firstborn of the
dead, and the ruler of the kings of the earth.”
When Jesus Christ is our Lord we are assured of his love and grace. Our
sin is forgiven and we share new life in Christ. Alleluia! The resurrected Jesus has set us free to
offer ourselves, our souls, and bodies to God’s service as members of his kingdom,
priests serving his God and Father, sharing in his heavenly banquet as we
receive the sacrament of his new life in the Holy Spirit. Amen.