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Bishop Mark S. Hanson

Bishop Mark S. Hanson

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Easter 2011: Let Your Life Sing

Posted: 04/23/11 04:35 PM ET

When Mary Magdalene and Mary went to Jesus' grave that first day of the week, they were expecting to find death (Matthew 28:1). Are we different? Daily, from newspapers and radio, broadcasts and websites, electronic games and popular fiction, we absorb words and images of violence, destruction, hatred and death.

Along with these images some attempt to impose a suspicious, cynical narrative about who cannot be trusted, about who is to blame for what is wrong in the world, about why, as a result, you cannot live confidently, freely, generously, joyfully. It is a story of death.

As the women approached Jesus' grave, there was an earthquake. A resurrection messenger announced, "He is not here; for he has been raised." When they hurried to tell others, the risen Jesus met them. They were changed, taken up into the story of Jesus and his resurrection life.

Jesus lives. He continues to meet you in resurrection messengers. We cannot deny the reality of poverty, malnutrition, disease and injustice -- the power of death in its manifold expressions, often compounded by natural disaster.

But those realities do not define you, nor are they the resurrection that found and claimed you in baptism. Your story is the one proclaimed by Pastor Josephus Livenson Lauvanus, resurrection messenger and president of the Lutheran Church of Haiti, during my visit in February. He told me, "We will not be defined by rubble, but by restoration, for we are a people of the resurrection."

Pastor Livenson Lauvanus and the people of Haiti sing of the steadfastly faithful God whose goodness can be trusted. They joyfully sing of how Jesus lives and, in him, God is making all things right, even amid all that has gone wrong. Their lives sing of the Spirit's powerful liberation to serve confidently, generously and joyfully.

The readings are filled with messengers -- Jeremiah and the psalmist; Jesus, John and Peter (Acts 10); the angelic messenger at the tomb (Matthew 28:2) and Mary (Matthew 28:8; John 20:18) -- and with the message of God's promise of "everlasting love" (Jeremiah 31:3) being fulfilled in Jesus' resurrection.

In a 2003 article for Gospel and Our Culture, Edwin Searcy describes how this story acts as a "figural narrative" that gives shape to the Christian community's life and witness.

He writes: "The cruciform pattern of Good Friday, Holy Saturday and Easter Sunday provides the coherent narrative that is rehearsed in sermon, in liturgy and in all aspects of the congregation's life together. This movement from aching loss (Friday) through forsaken absence (Saturday) to astonishing newness (Sunday) stands in stark contrast to the dominant figural narratives provided by a culture of satiation and self-reliant success."

What happens when we listen to these messengers -- Mary Magdalene and Mary, Pastor Livenson Lauvanus and the people of Haiti -- and join our voices to their resurrection witness? The world yearns for new life and deserves to hear this story: the song, the life of God's liberated people, messengers of resurrection hope and freedom.

This post was originally published on livinglutheran.com.

 
When Mary Magdalene and Mary went to Jesus' grave that first day of the week, they were expecting to find death (Matthew 28:1). Are we different? Daily, from newspapers and radio, broadcasts and websi...
When Mary Magdalene and Mary went to Jesus' grave that first day of the week, they were expecting to find death (Matthew 28:1). Are we different? Daily, from newspapers and radio, broadcasts and websi...
 
 
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f0rTyLeGz
Everything is falling.
05:22 AM on 04/28/2011
All the prayers and charity that have been heaped on Haiti, and it still is a corrupt, hopeless mess.
11:10 PM on 04/24/2011
Thanks for an inspiring Easter message Bishop Hanson!
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08:54 PM on 04/24/2011
Thank you, Bishop. Your leadship is an example of excellence for all Christians.
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soma77
Author, Speaker, Retreat Facilitator
08:19 PM on 04/24/2011
Thank you Bishop for the positive message. We cannot live by science alone because science is only perceptions of our environment; we also need patience, sympathy, understanding, love, and hope. "...Man shall not live by bread alone..." This saying tells us it takes more than food and a pill to make us happy and healthy. Dead bodies are all the same, but living individuals are not because of our minds. Without positive feelings and the thought that life is unobstructed, science cannot heal. We need to know that life is expressing itself in us and through us with all its perfection. http://thinkunity.com
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FoxReincarnated
Red Ninja Warrior
12:29 PM on 04/24/2011
Goebbles, though he may be evil, said something that stuck in my head: a lie told many times becomes the truth if told enough.

I may not agree with Christians, but this statement I do agree with. Revisionism has made it to history books, and fiction becomes truth to those that repeat it enough.
06:50 AM on 04/24/2011
Thank you so much Bishop for these wonderful words of hope and challenge.
02:06 AM on 04/24/2011
Great job, Bishop. I love the reminder that we still have work to do to tackle poverty and to be creating Easter for those without the time or the privilege to pause from surviving for moments such as these.
09:00 PM on 04/23/2011
Thanks for the words of wisdom, Bishop. I've often thought about just how incredible all of this is – the resurrection messengers, an empty tomb, the risen Lord. Lift every voice and sing!
07:54 PM on 04/23/2011
Thanks, Bishop Hanson for your wise words and call to fully live out our baptismal vocation that points to resurrection life in the world.
02:51 AM on 04/23/2011
Lovely. Thanks for your words and leadership, Bishop!
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Martin Eldred
Alaskan runner, singer, pastor.
02:40 AM on 04/23/2011
Another insightful reflection, Bishop Hanson--thank you.