In our increasingly digital world,
it is getting harder and harder
to avoid being scammed.
“You’ve won a brand new car!
I just need your Social Security number,
a valid credit card,
and your mother’s maiden name
to verify your identity.”
Or an email
from an all-too-official looking address,
bearing the seal of a government agency
you’ve never heard of,
says you have unclaimed property,
but they need to have access to your bank account
to transfer the money directly to you.
We’ve all heard sales pitches,
multi-level marketing schemes,
and fishing scams
to the point that I am genuinely surprised
that any of these tactics still work on the general public.
One born every minute I guess.
As a general rule,
if something sounds too good to be true,
it usually is.
And maybe that’s what we would have thought,
way back in the first century,
when someone tried to tell us
of the resurrection.
Maybe we would have received the good news
with a raised eyebrow
and suspicious glance at the folks next to us.
“Raised from the dead, huh?
What do I look like;
an easy mark?
What’s your angle, anyway?
You know they killed him, right?
You wanna be next?
I don’t!”
Each of our lessons for today
tell us of the apostles
or Jesus himself
trying to persuade skeptical onlookers
that the resurrection
is not some marketing ploy,
a publicity stunt,
or conspiracy theory.
Peter has commanded a disabled man
to rise up and walk
in the name of Jesus.
The crowd is dubious
and Peter explains
that not only is the healing real,
but so is the faith that comes in the name of Jesus,
so is the promise of repentance
and forgiveness,
and they can trust it
because they just say it with their own eyes.
In I John,
we are told that we can call ourselves
Children of God,
because that is what we are.
We are told that we will be righteous
when Jesus is revealed,
because we will see him as he is—
that is,
not as we may have imagined,
not has we have feared,
not in some fantasy, vision, or nightmare,
but in reality,
flesh and blood reality.
Speaking of flesh and blood reality,
that is exactly what happens in the gospel;
Jesus appears in their midst of those gathered
in the upper room,
and they are terrified.
They saw him crucified,
they watched him die.
Is this a ghost?
“No,”
Jesus says,
“because ghosts don’t have flesh and bone,
like you can see I have.
They don’t have empty stomachs, either,
for that matter;
Y’all got anything to eat around here?”
Half scared
and half overjoyed,
they give him some fish
and he eats it.
And if we’re being honest,
its maybe just as hard to believe all this resurrection business
in the 21st century
as it was in the first century.
The good news doesn’t seem all that good.
It barely sounds like news.
The proclamation of the resurrection
in our day
isn’t met with a
“How can this be?”
but with a
“Who cares?”
or “So what?”
But the news of the resurrection is real,
whether or not we receive it as good.
To some folks,
even if it is real,
it sounds more like bad news than good.
Repentance sure seems like bad news
if you’re the one being asked to give up
the very things that resurrection
is bringing to an end,
things from which your benefiting
in the here and now.
Repentance is a call
to change our perception of reality
and take responsibility for the role we’ve played
in making things the way they are.
Once Jesus finishes his fish,
the gospel says
that he explained the scriptures to them
opened their minds to understand it,
and then called them to preach
repentance in his name—
that is,
to open the hearts and minds of others
with this good news
and call them to give up all the ways
they benefit from the way things are—
because they had been witnesses of these things.
They had seen these things with their own eyes.
They could see reality as it is.
With our minds opened
and our hearts changed,
repentance is simply coming to terms with reality
as it is
because we can see it as it is.
We can call ourselves children of God,
because that is what we are.
We can grow in our likeness to Jesus
because we can see him as he is—
because we can see ourselves as we are
and through the good news
we can see ourselves as we will be.
And rightly seeing things as they are,
we are called to participate
in the making right of the world
while we wait for the fullness of justice to come
at the resurrection.
The good news of the resurrection
is not too good to be true.
And since the resurrection is true,
so is the call to repentance,
the call to change our hearts and minds
to perceive reality as it is,
the call to take responsibility for the way things are,
and to participation in God’s remaking of reality
into what it will be.
The resurrection will confront us
before it comforts us.
It will scare us to death
before it calls us to life.
It will raise our eyebrows
before it raises our consciousness.
The resurrection is not too good to be true.
It is not a scam or a conspiracy theory.
It is the call to perceive reality as it is
and to hope in what it will be.
So open your minds
and change your hearts
and you too
will be witnesses of these things.
Amen.