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Things Aren't Always As They Seem


The Easter story is a vivid example that things aren’t always as they seem.

In a way, Easter is a celebration of the greatest story twist in history, one that’s so subversive it changes everything for all time. It’s easy to gloss over the Easter story — we’ve heard it so many times — and forget the surprise and shock of the resurrection. It’s easy to read through the Gospels without that “aha” moment it really delivers.

We have the privilege of reading the resurrection into the teachings of Jesus — we know how the story ends — but for the disciples, the moments before the resurrection were steeped in fear, darkness and confusion. For the disciples, the resurrection provided an incredible twist that made the story come alive in a new way … past experiences began to make sense. It changed everything.

Eugene Peterson explains it like this in his book Christ Plays in Ten Thousand Places: “The Christian life begins as a community that is gathered at the place of impossibility, the tomb.”The scandalous plan of God, revealed in the death and resurrection of Jesus, reveals to us that what we see is not all there is. Easter tells us that a man convicted is not really guilty, that a cruel instrument of torture and death is really a symbol of remarkable hope and grace; it also tells us that an empty tomb is what we should have expected all along.

On the surface, the story of Easter reveals a plot by the religious leaders of Jesus’ day to take down a rebel once and for all. As Jesus is handed over to the authorities, the picture that’s painted is that Caesar is king, his kingdom rules and the Roman cross would have the last say.

Even homeless peasants with an unusually impressive following and a supernatural track record would be trumped by the empire for rebelling.

The path to the cross was a willing conviction accepted by God in the most subversive act on Earth — a conspiracy to take on the sin of the world and launch a counter-kingdom that would overthrow every worldly empire. Not by violence or brute force, but by love and sacrifice — through Christ.

What looked like defeat was actually ultimate victory.

The Easter story is a vivid example that things aren't always as they seem. Easter reminds us that even though injustice may run rampant at present — even though it appears that darkness is pervasive and final — we know God is working, that his love is greater and that resurrection is real.

Through the brilliant light of the resurrection we can walk in newness of life.

At a time when the Caesars of our day still claim to rule and injustice seems commonplace, the revolutionary hope of new life springs up in our hearts as we embrace the promise of Christ and experience the call of an extreme God to believe.

This new way, this subversive hope, is a call to live counter to the mainstream tendencies of darkness and selfishness and to embrace the resurrection life. In this, we not only celebrate the story of Easter, but we join it as ones who have received an unspeakable gift.

As Miraslov Volf says in his book Free of Charge, “When Christ died on the tree of shame outside the gates of Jerusalem, God bore our sin, and we were both condemned as sinners and separated from our sin, and in our lives, God lives somewhere unfathomably deep within us — behind our faculties of knowing and willing — and swallows up our sin and transforms our lives.”

This transformation through Christ is our twist in the story — our aha moment. Through Christ, we continue to live out the resurrection life in our own generation — continuing the subversive plot that God initiated in Christ.

So this Easter, relive the surprise ending; relive the story with a fresh passion for the genuine hope that we embrace. Relive the reality of a risen Lord and new life.

May this hope continue to paint our future in every possible way.

Blessings on your journey this Easter!


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