Easter, 2026
Acts 10:34-43
Colossians 3:1-4
Matthew 28:1-10
Psalm 118:1-2, 14-24
In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Happy Easter! The Lord is risen! The Lord is risen indeed. And . . . so what? Well, we’re all certainly very excited about it. We got all dressed up and came to church. We put up with the priest’s insistence on using incense on the high holy days. The Lord is risen indeed, and . . . so what? Why does it matter? Is it like, score one for Team Christian? What difference does it make?
Well, I think context is important here. But first, Easter is the pinnacle of the Church year. You might think that would be Christmas, based on how our society treats the two holy days. But Christmas is just a way to get the story started. The peak, the climax, the reason we even have Christmas is because of Easter. Easter is the third of what we call the Three Days. Maybe you’ve heard the word “triduum” before. It’s a Latin word that means “three days,” and those days would be Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Easter (which started last night with the Vigil). The three days are considered one long service in three parts. If you missed Maundy Thursday and Good Friday, you’re just in time for the final act!
Let me catch you up on what you might have missed this week. We heard different descriptions of the betrayal, arrest, beating, mocking, and humiliating death of Jesus. We also heard that story on Palm Sunday. So if you’ve been to church at all in the past week, you know how we got here today. And even if you weren’t in church, you probably know how the story goes.
Judas Iscariot offers to betray Jesus for 30 pieces of silver. He leads the authorities to the garden, and one of the disciples draws his sword. Jesus says to put the sword back in its place. Then they take Jesus to the religious authorities, and then to Pilate, who supposedly does his best to release Jesus, but the crowd shouts over and over that they want Pilate to crucify him. He has Jesus beaten, whipped, and mocked, and sends him off to be crucified. Jesus’ guy friends all run away in fear, and he is nailed to a cross between two thieves, where he suffers an agonizing death. Two secret followers bury his body in a tomb.
All along the way in that horrible story, nobody says, “stop.” Nobody says “enough.” Everyone just went along with the people in charge. The religious leaders can’t be wrong. The government knows what it’s doing. The soldiers are just following orders. And nobody says, “But this is wrong. Enough!” It’s easy to see how that can happen. We naturally trust that those in charge must know what they’re doing. It sure feels wrong to arrest an innocent man, accuse him of treason with no evidence, and execute him in the most brutal way imaginable. But nobody said, “This is wrong. Enough!” When you live in a culture that glorifies death, and spends all its money on the military, this is what you get. Death rules. Death wins. Death has the last word.
And then we come to today. Act three in our three-day triduum. And—it turns out—death and violence and cruelty do not have the last word! The resurrection of Jesus decisively cries out ENOUGH! In rising from the dead Jesus has overcome death, has destroyed death, has declared that death does not have the last word. The resurrection of Jesus from the dead is God standing atop all creation and screaming ENOUGH!
Easter is a declaration of war . . . on death. Killing innocent civilians can no longer be just “collateral damage.” Destroying entire neighborhoods is not “mowing the lawn.” Invading countries just because you can is not the way of Jesus. Easter is subversive, and it stands against the culture of death. Jesus has destroyed death.
And Easter says, ENOUGH!
When bombs are aimed at a school filled with children, and a second bomb is dropped on their parents who come to rescue them, Easter says ENOUGH! When leaders smile as they brag about epic lethality against civilians, Easter says ENOUGH. When countries intentionally starve citizens, or cut off electricity to hospitals, or drop bombs on apartment buildings, Easter says ENOUGH! Easter is a declaration of war on death. And you cannot embrace the power of the resurrection while glorifying death and destruction.
The Lord is risen indeed, and that changes everything. Everything. You and I can choose daily whether we follow the resurrection way of life, or follow the way of death. In rising from the grave, Jesus shows us that God chooses life. Death does not have the last word. Death has been defeated. The Church stands with God and says ENOUGH! Let us also choose life. Because the Lord is risen. The Lord is risen indeed. Alleluia!
Amen