Sermon for Easter Day

“Christ is risen from the dead”

The truth of this day is that we are, actually, absolutely dead; dead in ourselves, that is to say. Why? Because we only live when we live for one another. And, yet, how can we live for one another? It is one of the great questions for our age.

The great insight of Holy Week is that our humanity, collectively and individually speaking, is dead when it lives only for itself. It is dead in the world’s conflicting demands; dead in the unceasing contradictions of all our souls; dead in its pretensions and follies; dead in its antagonisms and enmities. The pageant of Holy Week has shown this in all its fullness. “All is vanity,” an empty nothingness, as Ecclesiastes put it so long ago.  We have, of course, all felt this at one time or another. Yet, all this is nothing new, as “everybody knows.”

The further point is that we can’t live for one another unless we live for God. We are only alive in him. This goes down hard in our world and day and yet it is almost, we might say, an empirical statement. We do hurt those whom we love the most, and, no, we don’t always do what is even in our own best interest. To pretend that “it’s the end of the world and I feel fine” (with thanks and apologies to Great Big Sea) is just that, a pretense. We don’t feel fine whether it is or is not the end of the world.

If we are honest, we know that things are not altogether as we would like them to be, let alone what they should be from almost any kind of ethical consideration. If it isn’t scandals in the Church, both sexual and other forms of abuse, such as the abuse of power, all of which suggest a “lack of credibility,” it is scandals everywhere else. As the Leonard Cohen song suggests, there is nothing new about this. “Everybody knows that’s the way it goes,” the world’s way of deceit and betrayal, the way of self-interest and denial, whether in society or, sadly, in the Church. Yet precisely against this deadly cynicism stands something radically new. It is simply this.

We only live when we live to God. This is the burden of our teaching, for then, and only then, we live beyond ourselves, beyond the death of ourselves, beyond the death of the human community and beyond the death of the world. We live simply (and only!) in the unending life of God. Such is the teaching of the resurrection. We can only begin to learn what it means by running with the Word of the Risen One in the glory of the resurrection.

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Week at a Glance, 5-11 April

Monday, April 5th, Easter Monday
10:00am Holy Communion

Tuesday, April 6th, Easter Tuesday
10:00am Holy Communion
6:00pm Prayers & Praises – Haliburton Place

Thursday, April 8th, Easter Thursday
1:30-3:00pm Seniors’ Drop-In

Sunday, April 11th, Octave Day of Easter
8:00am Holy Communion
10:30am Holy Communion
4:30pm Evening Prayer at KES

Upcoming Events
Saturday, April 17th, 7:00-9:00pm: Newfoundland & Country Music Evening
Friday, April 30th, 6:30pm: Choral Evensong with KES Cadet Corps
Saturday, May 8th, 4:30-6:30pm: 5th Annual Lobster Supper. Click here for more information.

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Easter Day

The collect for today, Easter-Day, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962) :

ALMIGHTY God, who through thine only begotten Son Jesus Christ hast overcome death, and opened unto us the gate of everlasting life: We humbly beseech thee, that as by thy special grace thou dost put into our minds good desires, so by thy continual help we may bring the same to good effect; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, ever one God, world without end. Amen.

The Epistle: Colossians 3:1-11
The Gospel: St John 20:1-10

Mantegna, ResurrectionArtwork: Andrea Mantegna, The Resurrection, 1457-59. Tempera on wood, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Tours.  (Originally the right-hand predella of the San Zeno Altarpiece, Basilica of San Zeno, Verona.)

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