Intro
Could there be a more glorious day than this?  For this day, the day of Jesus’ 
resurrection, will shine forever in its glory and supreme importance.  Indeed, 
this day, the day of Jesus’ resurrection, is by far the most glorious day of 
all time.  Why?  Because Christ is risen!  He is risen, indeed!  Alleluia!

Earlier, during the Lenten season, we have been looking for Christ’s glory 
hidden in the cross.  And now on this day, that glory of the cross, that glory 
on and in the cross, reaches its incomparable peak!

But notice yet again what we have noticed all through Lent.  Every step of the 
way in Lent there was glory, but it was a hidden glory.  And even today--this 
most glorious day of all time--the glory of Christ is still hidden. 

Main Body
Did you notice that in St. Matthew’s report?  Who appears as glorious?  It’s 
not Jesus.  No, it’s the angel!  The angel descended from heaven, pried open 
the tomb, and sat on the stone that covered its opening.  The angel’s 
appearance was like lightning.  His appearance was so glorious that those tough 
soldiers who knew how to stare death in the face were no match for the angel.  
Stunned and terrified, they fell to the ground like dead men.

When the women arrive at the tomb, the soldiers had recovered and were gone.  
But the angel, so glorious in appearance, is still there.  He speaks to the 
women, who expect to find the dead body of Jesus.  For they had awakened early 
Sunday morning to anoint Jesus, to finish the funeral rites that were left 
unfinished on Good Friday.

Yet, to their amazement, the women see an open tomb, for the stone had been 
rolled aside.  They see only an angel, who frightens them by his glorious 
appearance.

The angel’s message, however, is far more glorious than his appearance.  “Come 
and see,” the angel tells them.  “See, Jesus is not here in the house of the 
dead.  He has risen, just as He said He would do.  Go and tell the disciples.  
He will see them in Galilee.”

But isn’t that all a bit disappointing?  Don’t we want to see Jesus, on this 
most glorious day, looking even more glorious than the angel?  Don’t we want to 
see Him robed in splendor, with His face shining like the sun, and His garments 
white as the light?  Don’t we want to see Him looking the way He will look on 
the Last Day?  Shouldn’t our sight of Him on this most glorious day match the 
glory of the event?

Our flesh says, “Yes!”  For our flesh wants to walk by sight.  But our faith 
says, “No.”  Imagine if Jesus did appear in all His glory.  If the angel’s 
appearance caused the soldiers to fall down as dead men and filled the hearts 
of the women with fear, what, then, would have happened if Jesus blazed forth 
in all His resurrection glory?

Jesus did not want to intimidate the women, or us, by His appearing that day.  
For He has not come to terrify, but to comfort and console.  There will be a 
day for His appearance in majesty and glory.  That day will be the Last 
Day--not Easter, not today.

So even on Easter Sunday, Jesus hides His glory.  He meets the women in the 
same humble form that they knew and recognized during the preceding three 
years.  Oh, how different the women reacted to Jesus’ appearance than to the 
angel’s.  They have no fear or dread.  They do not flee in fright.  Instead, 
they run to Jesus--not from Him!  They fall down before Him in worship.

Filled with a joy the women cannot disguise, they hold Jesus by His feet.  How 
they must have drenched the ground with their tears of gladness!  For Christ is 
risen!  He is risen, indeed!  Alleluia!

Indeed, Jesus has not come to terrify, but to comfort.  For He has finished His 
work of Good Friday.  He has forgiven your sin and washed it away in His blood. 
 And now is the day to proclaim the glory of that victory!

Yet, Jesus hides His glory in His words.  In two short sentences, He sums up 
the entire glory of Lent, the entire glory of Easter, and the entire glory of 
the Gospel.  He tells the women, “Don’t be afraid.  Go and tell my brothers to 
leave for Galilee, and they will see me there.”  So don’t be afraid!

Fallen with Adam and Eve in the garden, our sin separated us from God.  Death 
was our lot in this life, and hell our future in the next.  But Jesus died and 
has risen.  He did exactly what He said He would do and what was prophesied of 
Him already in the Garden of Eden.  He went into battle for us on the cross.  
And He won.

Easter Sunday is the proof of Christ’s victory.  Jesus paid for our sin.  So 
don’t be afraid.  Jesus has conquered hell!  So don’t be afraid.  Jesus has 
triumphed over the grave!  So don’t be afraid.

But how can I know that Jesus did everything He did for me?  Could Jesus have 
chosen to save others but not me?  Listen to Jesus’ words to the women: “Go and 
tell my brothers!”  What an incredible statement!  He calls the disciples His 
brothers!

But didn’t they fall asleep in the Garden of Gethsemane after Jesus asked them 
that to watch and pray?  Didn’t they run away at the first sign of trouble, 
when the soldiers came to arrest Jesus?  Didn’t they all behave like Peter, who 
denied Jesus with oaths and curses when he was accused of being a disciple?  
Those disciples don’t deserve to be called His brothers!  And that’s exactly 
the point.  That’s exactly the glory of Easter.  The disciples don’t deserve 
it--and neither do we!  Yet, through faith, that is what we are to 
Jesus--brothers!

For Jesus has taken our sins and buried them in the grave.  In Romans, chapter 
6, the Apostle Paul says that our sins are buried in Jesus’ grave when we are 
baptized into Him.  He wrote:
Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were 
baptized into His death?  Therefore, we were buried with Him through baptism 
into death, so that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of 
the Father, we too can walk in newness of life.  For if we have been united 
with Him in the likeness of His death, we will also be united with Him in the 
likeness of His resurrection. (Romans 6:3-5)
Since our sins are now buried in the grave, Jesus has no reason not to call us 
“brothers.”

When Jesus calls you a “brother,” that’s another way for Him to say, “Don’t be 
afraid!”  You are by faith and through your baptism a dear, precious, beloved 
child of God.

Behold, the glory of Easter!  Jesus died.  Now He has risen and will never die 
again!  You are redeemed!  Your sin is gone!  Hell is conquered!  The grave is 
destroyed!

Yet, see how gentle Jesus is with us, how kind and considerate.  Does He shine 
forth in all His resurrection glory, which would only seize us with terror and 
send us running away from Him?  No, in His love and mercy, He still hides His 
glory.  He hides it in His proclaimed Word and Sacraments.  That’s where we 
find His glory.

Did you notice how our Gospel reading highlighted that fact?  Jesus promised 
that He would rise.  And He tells the women to report that to the disciples.  
Yet, Jesus doesn’t immediately show Himself to His disciples.  He wants them to 
depend on--and believe in--the proclaimed Word.  He highlights that again when 
He tells the women to add this detail: He will see the disciples in Galilee.

Again, Jesus wants them to learn the lesson well, to rely on His Word.  For 
soon His visible presence will be gone when He ascends into heaven on the 40th 
day.  But His real-and-enduring presence will go on.  Jesus will be with His 
own until the end of time, just as He promised, in His Word and Sacraments 
(Matthew 28:19-20).

So, then, do you want to find the glory of Easter?  If so, you’ve come to the 
right place!  For here--where Jesus’ Word is proclaimed and His Sacraments are 
celebrated--here, you will find His glory.

Conclusion
To you--no less than to the disciples--Jesus says:
Don’t be afraid.  I am not coming to you this moment in majesty and might, 
which would only terrify.  I am coming to you with a hidden power and glory in 
my Word.  That Word announces and declares that your sin is forgiven.  So don’t 
be afraid.  That Word is being proclaimed, right now, in this sermon.  So don’t 
be afraid.  That Word will make mere bread and wine my body and blood for the 
forgiveness of your sins.  So don’t be afraid.

Jesus says:
Yes, tomorrow you will still have problems and temptations.  Yet, don’t be 
afraid.  For, I have died, but now I am alive.  I will not leave you or abandon 
you.  I know the grave lies ahead of you.  But don’t be afraid.  For I 
conquered death in my death.  And because I live, you also will live.  I have 
defeated the last enemy, death, and the grave is now but a portal to life 
eternal.

Indeed, Christ is risen!  He is risen, indeed!  Alleluia!


 --
 Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and spirit.

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