Mark 16:1-8
Here in the original ending of Mark we see the women going to anoint Jesus’ body. This is part of life; death. It is known that all living things die. It hangs over all of us and its reality is important to how we live on earth. Call it survival if you want, call it thriving, but death shapes how we live.
Fear is an important theme in this passage, but it was not fear of the dead body or of death. I am always struck at how fearful some people are to be with a dead body, but these women were going to do the things we have professionals do today. They were going to handle the body to pay deepest respects to the one lost. No the fear was that Jesus was not there.
It is in this fear that Christian hope begins. Remember Sarah laughs when she is told she will bear a child. Yes because it is funny, but out of fear of this great possibility that can only happen because of the Divine. The empty tomb is much more radical and hence the running in fear, not just nervous laughter.
God is the only true other. What I mean is that because of death being part of life on earth, we are all in the same boat, or globe, what have you. God is however beyond this as the creator. I remember learning about Creation ex nihilo, in seminary, and questioning it like any good seminarian, for in the first verses of Genesis, there is reference to the deep, to chaos, as if something existed before creation. Well I was studying with Dr. Rev. Joe Jones in a study group (a great theologian of the Christian Church), and he made it clear it was less about the existence of matter before creation, but that creation was not made of God’s own self. That is nothing God created is Divine, we may see something or experience something and say “Wow that is Divine,” however I believe we are pointing to the great Divine with that experience. God created, to have relationship with, not to simply be an extension of God. This is however, not to support the gnostic idea that all earthly and physical is inherently evil. I remember that God said it was Good when it was created, but it is not God. It is physical and that with life does die.
Thus the fear of the women was the realization that God is truly the only other. We are all invited to the wedding banquet, as the parable Jesus tells in Mathew 22. We are all invited and we wear our wedding robe (of course the people on the street did not really have their special robe with them), but when the one not wearing a robe asked he was without word. He did not understand, he would have stood at the empty tomb and thought “I wonder who took the body?” He would question the angel and may had experienced fear, but not the fear that sent the women running.
Their fear was that the resurrection did happen. It meant they would have to deal with their doubt, their sin, their shortcomings to the one that is coming with a winnowing fork. The one that would separate the chaff from the grain with the help of the Holy Spirit. To accept you were that loved that Jesus would go to the cross and to face him, is wear the fear comes from, and the hope begins.
Listen! I am standing at the door, knocking; if you hear my voice and open the door, I will come in to you and eat with you, and you with me. Revelation 3:20
Hope stirs when we realize Jesus does not avenge, but witnesses as the ultimate other. The one that knows the truth is that forgiveness blooms on earth as it is in heaven. For when Jesus comes through the locked door He says, “Peace be with you.”
No comments:
Post a Comment