Sunday, April 05, 2026

The Resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ (Easter), Year A (2026)

Acts 10:34–43 / Psalm 118:1–2, 14–24 / Colossians 3:1–4 / John 20:1–18

 

This is the written version of the homily given at Flohr’s Evangelical Lutheran Church (ELCA) in McKnightstown, Pennsylvania on Sunday, April 5, 2026 by Fr. Gene Tucker, Interim Pastor.

“EASTER DAY:  BEWILDERMENT TURNED INTO JOY”

(Homily text: John 20:1–18)

It is the first day of the week, and the eleven disciples have greeted the new day with a restless and troubled night, for they are all looking at each other, and wondering if, and when, there might be a knock on the door of the place where they have been in hiding since last Thursday evening.

The knock they fear is one that might be delivered by the officer in charge of a detail of temple police and soldiers, who have come to arrest them, just as they had done to Jesus four days earlier.

They wait, but there is no knock. They are relieved, but only a little.

They know that the temple authorities wouldn’t hesitate to hand each one of them over to Pilate. They shudder at what would happen next.

The sun is beginning to come up, just a little.

Then, there is a knock on the door. It isn’t a loud one, but it’s still a knock. No one moves. They look at one another, fearful of what will happen next.

Then, there is another knock, followed by Mary Magdalene’s voice. Someone goes and opens the door, but only a little, for they are afraid that those who managed to get rid of Jesus the previous Friday may have used Mary to find their way to the eleven.

The minds of those eleven begin to spin….they knew what happened to those who wound up on Roman crosses: They were dead, completely and totally dead. Jesus was dead.

And now they had no idea what would become of the movement that was shaping around His movement.

Mary is almost out of breath. She says she’s been to the tomb, but it is empty. Peter and John bolt out of the room, seemingly unaware that they could be caught on their way to the tomb by the temple authorities. The confirm what Mary said.

Mary returns to the tomb, and a bit later, she returns and says, “I have seen the Lord!”.

Later on that same day, as ten of the eleven huddle in that locked room[1], and as they continue to wonder about the reports that Jesus had risen from the dead, suddenly the Lord appears in the room. He now is free of the limitations that normal human beings experience, for He comes into their midst, and says, “Do you have anything to eat?”[2] He eats in front of them, and invites them to touch Him.

The disciples’ heads continue to spin: That previous Friday, the Lord had seemed like a downtrodden and abused slave, slowly dying a criminal’s death. The sign that hung above His head was a cruel mockery, that sign that said, “The King of the Jews”. There is no glory for this king, only a downward movement into the depths of despair.

It had been quite a week for those first followers of Jesus: He had been hailed as the son of David eight days earlier. But on Thursday evening, He had been betrayed by Judas, and in a few short hours, had been convicted and sentenced to death by Pilate. The week had begun on a high note, but on Friday, it couldn’t have gotten any lower.

The highs and the lows that had happened that week seemed like some out-of-control emotional roller coaster.

Now, on that first day of the week, the eighth day, the Lord’s appearance among His chosen disciples confirms God’s power to create and to re-create. Christ is alive!. Death and hell have been conquered. Satan has been defeated.

The God who raised Jesus from the dead draws back the veil of his nature, showing us that God is one who seeks to love us, to serve us, and to lead us, redeem us, and renew us. All of these divine qualities inform one another.

This is, my friends, the divine mystery: That God is a God of love and mercy, a God of service and of servanthood, but also God of all power, might, majesty and awe.

That such a God would want to be in a personal, intense and loving relationship with each one of us, is another part of that divine and wonderful mystery.

Thanks be to God.

AMEN.



[1]   Remember that John tells us that Thomas was absent on Easter Sunday.

[2]   Luke 24:41