Luke 24:1-12
An Idle Tale
James Sledge
Resurrection of the Lord April
21, 2019
In
recent weeks I’ve seen several versions of an Easter Facebook joke that goes something
like this. “In an effort to be more biblical, only women will be attending the
Easter sunrise service.”
Over
the years, many have remarked that the story of women being the first witnesses
to the empty tomb must be historical. No one would invent this sort of Easter
story. People still dismiss what women have to say in our day. Imagine what it was
like in a day when women were not even citizens, when they couldn’t be
witnesses at a trial, when they were considered property that belonged to a
man, either their father or husband.
And
sure enough, in Luke’s version of that first Easter morning, no one believes
the women. You’ve heard the story before. Some of Jesus’ female disciples, and
apparently none of the men, had followed when Jesus’s body was taken to the
tomb. Then they had gone back, prepared spices, and rested on the Sabbath as
the commandment required.
Early
Sunday morning, they took the spices to the tomb, hoping to give Jesus the
tender care they had not had time for on Friday evening. But when they arrive,
they find the tomb open and the body missing. As they are wondering what to do,
two men in dazzling clothes, later described as angels, say to them. “He
is not here, but has risen,” and remind the women how Jesus had told
them that he would be crucified and rise on the third day.
And
so Mary Magdalene, Joanna, Mary the mother of James, and other women hurry back
to tell the eleven and the others what they had found. But these words seemed to them an
idle tale, and they did not believe them.
I
probably wouldn’t have believed them either, even if this had happened in 2019
where women aren’t routinely dismissed… unless they are contradicting a man. I
know what’s possible and what isn’t. I know that dead people stay dead. Even if
I believe that a soul moves on somehow, I know that the body stays in the
grave. “He is not here, but has risen.” What a cockamamie idea. Who
would believe such a thing?
But Peter got up and ran to the tomb. He was among
those who didn’t believe the women’s report, and yet he rushes to the tomb. Why
rush to investigate an idle tale?
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