The
holy gospel according to Luke. (24:36b-48)
[36While
they were talking about this,]
Jesus
Themself stood among the eleven and their companions and said to them,
“Peace
be with you.”
37The
disciples were startled and terrified,
and
thought that they were seeing a ghost.
38Jesus
said to them,
“Why
are you frightened,
and
why do doubts arise in your hearts?
39Look
at my hands and my feet;
see
that it is I myself.
Touch
me and see;
for
a ghost does not have flesh and bones
as you see that I have.”
40And
when Jesus had said this,
They
showed them Their hands and feet.
41While
in their joy those gathered were disbelieving and still wondering,
Jesus
said to them,
“Have
you anything here to eat?”
42They
gave Jesus a piece of broiled fish,
43and
Jesus took it and ate in their presence.
44Then
Jesus said to them,
“These
are my words that I spoke to you while I was still with you—
that
everything written about me
in
the law of Moses, the prophets, and the psalms must be fulfilled.”
45Then
Jesus opened their minds to understand the scriptures,
46and
said to them,
“Thus
it is written,
that
the Messiah is to suffer
and to rise from the dead on the third day,
47and
that repentance and forgiveness of sins is to be proclaimed
in
Their name to all nations,
beginning
from Jerusalem.
48You
are witnesses of these things.”
The
gospel of the Lord.
------
A
couple weeks ago, Rev. Beth Wartick, a colleague in this synod, posted on Facebook, “Friends: the resurrection is for bodies.” The post was a bit unsettling at first, because I think I’ve
gotten pretty used to making the resurrection into an exclusively spirit and
soul-centered or even an intellectual reality, I like to talk about it, but I’m
less sure about its physicality. Our resurrection accounts both last week and
this week, however, provide us with ample evidence for her statement.
Last
week we encountered Jesus in the gospel of John presenting hands, feet, and
side to the slow-to-believe and fear-filled disciples, prompting Thomas’ great
declaration of faith, “My Lord and my God!”
Jesus’
presentation of Their actual resurrected body, wounds and all, speaks to the
disciples in a way that no number of eye-witness accounts could have, and this week’s
resurrection account is no different.
Jesus
has just spent the day walking along the road to Emmaus with Cleopas and
another disciple, explaining everything that Holy Week—Maundy Thursday, Good
Friday, and that very Resurrection morning—meant. Jesus had literally and figuratively walked them through all
of scripture, interpreting it just for them.
But
it wasn’t until Jesus sat with them and blessed and broke bread—the nourishment
for their own bodies—that they recognized the Resurrected One. And when Jesus shows up with the rest
of the disciples in today’s reading, it is once again about the body: “39Look
at my hands and my feet; see that it is I myself. Touch me and see; for a ghost
does not have flesh and bones as you see that I have,” says Jesus.
Jesus
knows the same truth as Pastor Beth: “The resurrection is for bodies.” There is knowledge and wisdom in our
bodies and embodied lives that our intellect can only ever grasp at futilely. Jesus knows that our bodies carry in
them the truths of our lived experiences, of our ancestors’ lives, and even the
sparks of stardust that are scattered throughout the cosmos.
Each
body comes from and is nourished by the dirt of the earth and is also made up
of the stardust of that first Big Bang of life. Each body reflects a piece of the image of God. Jesus’ resurrection is about bodies
because bodies matter to Jesus.
Bodies are part of our whole selves and when we create this false binary
that divides souls from bodies, we fracture who we are. We lose track of the fullness of our
humanity and our belovedness by God.
We don’t just do this with words and ideas, we fracture the whole body
of Christ, the image of God that we bear together, in physical ways as well.
Before
moving to Iowa, I served as a pastor in rural southeastern Minnesota and I
spent quite a bit of time with beloved children of God who worked on farms near
town—not only those who owned or ran the farms, but especially those who make
the oftentimes difficult and life-threatening trip north from Mexico and
Central America to get up in the middle of the night to milk the cows, or early
in the morning when it’s still below freezing to start harvesting the crops.
Their
immigrant bodies, which carry so much of the burden and weight of feeding our country,
are part of Jesus’ death and resurrection and Jesus loves them.
The
bodies of those who cultivate the earth on farms, in personal or community
gardens, and even in potted plants are also part of Jesus’ death and
resurrection and Jesus loves them.
Your
bodies, our bodies, weary from carrying us through decades of life, from
backpacks full of school books, from the energy and demands of new babies and
young children, or from the pressure to be or act a certain way are part of
Jesus’ death and resurrection and Jesus loves them.
The
bodies that struggle with stairs, standing, or even eating are part of Jesus’
death and resurrection and Jesus loves them.
The
bodies of victims of violence, whether the violence happens in the confines of
their home, at a party late at night, in the stares and fear of others on the
street or at the coffee shop, across the world with chemical weapons and bombs
in Syria, or anywhere in between are all part of Jesus’ death and resurrection
and Jesus loves them.
The
bodies of refugees, fleeing violence, seeking hope and compassion, allowed in
some countries and not in others are part of Jesus’ death and resurrection and
Jesus loves them.
The
bodies around the world, in our fullest possible diversity—bodies that don’t
look anything like yours and bodies that are so similar it isn’t possible to
deny that you are kin—all of these bodies and your very own body are part of
Jesus’ death and resurrection and Jesus loves them.
Bodies
contain wisdom and understand truths that can be hard for us to grasp. Jesus presents first a body with
wounds—a broken, yet resurrected body—knowing that once the body understands
the reality, the structure or skeleton, of the resurrection, then the words can
give flesh to those bones. Jesus’
words are good, but first Jesus’ body must convey the truth.
Jesus’
resurrection is bodily. Jesus
blesses and breaks bread. Jesus
eats broiled fish! Jesus loves
bodies.
And
so a blessing from Pastor Beth:
“Friends:
the resurrection is for bodies.
The resurrection is for: skinny
bodies, fat bodies, in-between bodies.
The
resurrection is for: brown bodies, black bodies, olive bodies, white bodies.
The
resurrection is for: female bodies, transgender bodies, male bodies, tall
bodies, short bodies.
The
resurrection is for: undocumented bodies, citizen bodies, visitor bodies,
immigrant bodies.
The
resurrection is for: wrinkly bodies, smooth bodies, hairy bodies,
swimsuit-ready bodies, sweatpants-ready bodies.
The
resurrection is for: old bodies, young bodies, able bodies, disabled bodies,
tired bodies.
The
resurrection is for: any bodies, every body, your body.
Jesus
loves your body enough to give it new life. Treat your body and your neighbor's
body with the same respect you'd show to anything beloved by God.”
Amen.
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