“I Have Seen the Lord”
John 20:18
Imagine the excitement in the voice of Mary Magdalene when she went back to the disciples with those words. The way that the passage is written, I don’t think the emotion of the moment comes through in the words, “she went and announced to the disciples.” For a second time she probably ran all the way back to where the disciples were and with a real excitement in her voice, maybe a little out of breath, let them know what she had seen and heard. If you put yourself in her position, you probably would have done the same thing. This was big news. They had seen Jesus’ dead body late Friday afternoon. It was placed in the tomb before sundown. The purpose of going to the tomb now on Sunday morning was to anoint the body according to the custom of the day. The women who went to the tomb were not expecting the body to be gone. They certainly didn’t expect to see Jesus alive. Mary got to see Him face to face. The account that you heard in the Easter Gospel describes a mixture of sadness and confusion and finally overwhelming joy when she realized that the man speaking to her was truly her Teacher, Jesus. She was filled with joy when she was able to report to the disciples, “I have seen the Lord.”
To be able to see the Lord was a great privilege. Until Jesus came down to earth there were only a few people who could say that they had seen the Lord. When the Lord did appear to someone, it marked a very significant time in the history of God’s relationship to His people. As we think back into the Old Testament, we can think of Adam and Eve as not only the first people but as the first ones to see the Lord. Sadly, the time that is recorded for us in detail is after they had disobeyed God and brought sin and judgment on all mankind. In addition to the judgment of death, the Lord also promised that the seed of the woman would defeat the seed of Satan. That was the first promise of a Savior. I would say that this was a very significant event in the history of God’s relationship with His special creation.
Moses saw the Lord on Mt. Sinai . When he received from the Lord the two tablets of stone which contained the Law, the Lord established with His people a Covenant based on obedience and sacrifice. This pointed the people ahead to the time when the Savior would come to fulfill the Old Covenant and establish the New Covenant that was by faith in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. That too was certainly an important event in the history of God’s people.
Mary and Joseph were the first people then to see the Lord as that New Covenant was unfolding. The little baby that was born to Mary was the Promised One. They saw the Lord in His human form. Others, of course would see Him but they wouldn’t fully understand who He was or His purpose in coming until much later, but His coming into the world was definitely an important moment in our relationship with the Lord.
While others saw a man named Jesus, it was John the Baptist who saw Him at the Jordan River and identified Him as the “Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.” That description connected Jesus to the Old Covenant Passover Lamb and the New Covenant sealed with Jesus’ own blood. That appearance brought attention to Jesus as He was about to begin His earthly ministry. The disciples who followed Him got to see glimpses of His glory as Jesus healed the sick, raised the dead and taught with divine wisdom about the Kingdom of God . Even though those disciples got to see Jesus everyday for the better part of three years, some of them were not sure what to make of Him and what His teaching and His life were all about.
There was one man who saw Jesus close up if only for a short time who made a remarkable statement at the foot of the cross. It was the Roman centurion after he witnessed all that took place as Jesus was dying on the cross that moved him to say, “Surely this man was the Son of God.” He understood what many of His day did not. The religious leaders of the people didn’t get it. Many of the people were looking for a revolutionary leader to free them from the Romans. Jesus didn’t fit their idea of a Messiah. Even some of the disciples didn’t understand the bigger purpose of His coming to earth.
When people started seeing Him alive after his very public death on the cross, then they began to understand that His words were true. When Mary told the disciples, “I have seen the Lord,” they certainly started thinking back to some of the things that He had told them about dying and rising again on the third day. “Oh, so that is what He meant.” “He really meant it when He said that He would be alive again.” But then those old fears and doubts started to creep back into their heads. Do you suppose she really saw Jesus or was she just making that up? They should have known that what Jesus said was the truth. He told them that too. Remember His words, “I am the way, the truth and the life, no one comes to the Father except through me.” His resurrection affirmed that all of His teaching was the truth. He said that He would be raised from the dead and sure enough, that is what happened. If that was the truth then you could be sure that everything else that He taught was also the truth. He is the Christ, the Anointed One. He is the Son of God. He and the Father are one. Whoever believes in Him will not perish but have everlasting life. He would send the Comforter, the Holy Spirit, who would give us the power to believe and the power to serve the Lord. He will come again. All His teaching is the truth. His resurrection affirms that for His disciples then and for all who would believe in Him through the power of the Holy Spirit in the years to come. That includes all of us.
By the power of the Holy Spirit, working in you through the Means of Grace, the Word and the Sacraments, you can believe His teaching, you can believe that He lived a perfect life for you and He died on the cross for you. You can believe that He rose from the grave and that He lives and reigns over all things now and forever. In a real sense, you can say, “I have seen the Lord.” You have seen Him through eyes of faith. In the Word, in the water of Holy Baptism, in the Bread and wine, the Body and Blood of Holy Communion, you have seen the living Lord. He died and rose again for you. He won the victory over sin, death and the power of the devil for you. Your sins of doubt and fear, your sins of disobedience and rebellion against God, your sins of selfishness and greed are forgiven because Jesus took those sins to the cross and paid the price that was required. He gave up His life. To show that His sacrifice was accepted by the Father, He rose again to life.
Like Mary Magdalene and the others who saw Jesus alive on that first Easter day, our hearts are filled with joy. Like Mary, you can go and tell others that you have seen the Lord. You know Him and the blessings that He has for you, the blessings of the forgiveness of your sins and the promise of life forever with Him in the glory of heaven. Your joy can express itself in words as you tell the Good News as well as in your actions as you respond to God’s blessings with a life of worship and service. You have seen the Lord. You have the privilege of joining the countless others down through the ages who have seen the Lord through eyes of faith and have responded with shouts of joy and a never-ending songs of “Alleluia.” Amen.
Rev. Gerald Matzke
Easter 2013
Zion Lutheran Church
Painesville, Ohio