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ELCA Presiding Bishop Mark S. Hanson's Easter
Message 2006
The Easter Gospel lesson from John
ends with Mary Magdalene's cry of faith, "I have seen the Lord."
Mary - vigilant, faithful, and weeping - is the first to declare
her faith in the risen Lord. The joyous good news comes after a
vigil of darkness and despair.
The forty days of Lent have been a
time of vigilance for us as well. With ashes on our brows on Ash
Wednesday, we committed ourselves to be vigilant through prayer,
fasting, and almsgiving. We sought to be vigilant and faithful,
but our vigilance wavered. Like the disciples asked to keep watch,
weariness overwhelmed our best intentions.
Vigilance is difficult for us. Our
minds wander and our spirits despair. We forget the good news for
which the poor ache. We neglect our call to be public witnesses in
our churches, in our homes, among all people. We fail to proclaim
God's word.
The good news of Easter morning
revives us. Jesus calls us by name. We, too, see the Lord. We see
the fulfillment of Christ's promise in the empty cross and the
empty tomb. We know joy and discover renewed hope. We remember the
fresh waters of Baptism and reclaim our call to tell the good news
to the poor, strive for justice and peace, show compassion, and be
God's people. From the ashes of Good Friday, a fire ignites and we
are renewed.
"I have seen the Lord!" Thanks be
to God.
(Inspired by a sermon by Bishop
Paul Stumme-Diers, Greater Milwaukee Synod)
The Rev. Mark S. Hanson Presiding Bishop Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
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