I Am Sending You
“Then Jesus said to them again, ‘May you have peace. As the Father has sent Me, I also am
sending you.’” John 20:21
Can you imagine the fear, the despondency and lack of hope
that Jesus’ followers felt following his crucifixion? They had been “all in”.
Many had left their livelihood three years before to follow this wandering
teacher. Over their internship they slowly understood that Jesus was the
promised Messiah, the one who would deliver Israel and set up the kingdom of
God.
If we can stop for a moment; consider this. We human beings
only understand the world around us through one faculty; our malleable and
fallible brains. And our brains receive information through our senses,
filtered through culture, teaching and experience. In other words, just because
we think something is true, we ought to be open to the possibility we may be
mistaken.
The disciples were not mistaken about Jesus’ identity, but
they did get the nature of his kingdom wrong. That is quite natural. The only
kingdoms they knew were what they had experienced, what their brains had
observed and heard about. So, certainly the kingdom of God would be similar to
what they knew. Yes, a good God would rule, but, the only way they understood
“rule” is by authority and force. They were soon to be surprised.
Jesus’ death did not square with what they “knew”. We can
understand their reasoning. “If Jesus is ushering in the rule of God, then he
will defeat our enemies, show his power, and ascend a throne that none can
overthrow.” Seeing him suffer at the hands of both religious and political
rulers, they must have fallen deeply in despair. In some ways, Peter’s
exclamation, “I never knew him”, may have held some truth.
But Sunday morning Mary Magdalene ran to Simon Peter and John
with mind-boggling news. The stone to Jesus’ tomb was rolled away and she
worried, “They have taken the Lord out of the grave. We do not know where
they have put Him.”
Peter and John run to the grave and see it just as Mary said.
They saw the linen cloths Jesus had been wrapped in, but the white cloth that
had wrapped his head was rolled up and lying by itself. Even then, they did not
understand that Jesus had risen from the dead. (Remember, all they have are
their limited brains to make sense of it all.)
The two disciples went back to their
homes. That’s an amazing thought. Jesus is alive, but they are still slowly
taking it all in. They simply go back home. But Mary stayed by the grave,
weeping. And it is there that Jesus appears to her. He instructs her to tell
his brothers: “I will go up to My Father and your Father, and to My God and
your God!” She hurries away to tell the disciples what she has seen and heard.
(A quick aside. Recently a
well-known evangelical leader had unkind things to say about a female Bible
teacher. Those in the audience applauded his snide remark. He is among some who
think women have no right to the pulpit or teaching ministries. I wonder if he
would have listened to Mary.)
Later that evening, as the disciples
are gathered behind locked doors because they are afraid, Jesus appears to
them. His first words are, “Peace to you.” The disciples immediately react with
joy as Jesus shows them his wounded hands and side.
And once more he offers them peace,
saying, “As the Father has sent me, so I am sending you.”
That phrase should make us stop, be
quiet, and consider: How did the Father send Jesus?
Remember, the disciples had the
kingdom of God all wrong. Jesus’ resurrection shows he has indeed won the
victory. But sin and death were defeated, not by force, not by armies, not by
hard-fisted legal enforcement, but by suffering and death. The kingdom of God
has not changed. We are sent to be men and women who are willing to give
ourselves on behalf of others, not tell others how to behave.
The Father sent Jesus to the less
fortunate. He went to the poor, the sick, the blind and the “sinners”. He did not
condescend, as if they needed to prove themselves before He brought healing and
forgiveness. Let us go in the same way, we are all on a level playing field.
The Father sent Jesus to those who
could not give back. Who could offer Jesus anything that he did not already
possess? He gave hope to the hopeless. He healed, even when some did not return
to say, “Thank you.” Let us go in the same way, not looking for people to
behave just because we have given. Let us simply give.
The Father sent Jesus to go out of
his way for others. Remember the woman at the well? She was a Samaritan. Jesus
had to take a less traveled route to meet with a single woman in need. Why do
we expect people to come to a church building once a week, where they feel out
of place? Let us go out of our way to share the Good News of God’s kingdom of
mercy and love right where people are.
God is not afraid of humanity. Are
we fully aware of that? The most degraded heart does not scare God or keep him
away. God loves humanity so much He became one of us! So, why in the world
would we ever avoid someone who seems different than us? Why would we not
embrace the homeless, the hungry, the addict, the rebel. God embraced them
already when Jesus took on the same human flesh and blood.
When Roman Catholics celebrate the
Mass in Latin today, the last words the priest or deacon speak are “Ite
missa est.” Translated, it means: “Go, the [congregation] is sent.” The
people are told, in so many words, “You’ve worshiped, celebrated Christ in
Communion and heard the Word, now go forth as His ambassadors in all the earth;
be that bread that is broken for a hungry world.”
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