Easter Saturday : The In-Between
I have been reflecting this weekend on why we create space for
Good Friday and Easter Sunday in our calendars and our minds but skip over
Saturday. What I have come to realize is that we as people are so locked into
our own experiences and our perceptions of what is happening around us that we
remember the visible Gospel work of Christ and not the invisible.
Christ lived a visible life. He spoke in streets, from boats, on mountainsides, and in
temples. He did miracles in private and public, depending on the need. He
healed a man's servant from afar and healed a few men's friend from paralysis
in front of a full room.
Christ died a visible death. He was hung out and hung up to die,
strapped and nailed down to a cross raised on a rocky hilltop, bleeding and
vulnerable for all to see. While much of His pain is unknowable and unseen, His
death and anguish were cruel and yet necessarily public.
Christ rose a visible
resurrection! The entry was open, the stone moved, the
wrappings empty, and the guards stunned. He appeared first to Mary, then to the
men on the road, then to the twelve. Thomas, who doubted much like I do, both
saw and felt the holes of his Savior's substitutionary sacrifice. Christ
visibly ascended Home, shining with the love and light of His and Our Father as
He physically reclaimed His heavenly throne.
But what about the time
between, "It is Finished! Father, into Your hands I commit my
spirit", and the resurrection? What about the lingering stench of apparent
defeat and death? Did His spirit stay in the shell of the body until Sunday
morning? As we do not believe the Spirit lingers in our own bodies after death,
then certainly we can state that our Lord's did not linger in his mortality. If
as the Nicene Creed says our Lord descended into Hell itself, why do we not
pause to think about what He was going through there? He took the weight of the
world's wrongs on His soul when He died, and how does that weight suddenly
disappear when mortal consciousness fails, but spiritual life remains? Just what
happened to Jesus Friday evening through Sunday morning?
Christ worked invisible work. My point is that though we could not see
the work being done, the spirit of our Lord Jesus was as eternally living and
active during temporal death as his word, and the other two members of the
Godhead. While His body was in the tomb, His soul was living an eternal weight
of turmoil to free us. Eternity was our punishment, and so in three short days,
eternity for us He bore. He not only took our grievous problem to the cross, He
paid for our physical and full spiritual punishment as well.
Oh Christian, remember today
the invisible scenes of
the Gospel story.
The world once lived in the
tension of the in-between, in the three-day-exhale of a dead Savior before the sudden
breathe of Eternal Life with the Father for us and our Precious Co-heir
forever. Linger a while in Saturday, in the thought of a spiritually redeeming
yet physically lifeless corpse in a tomb, in just how much was needed to save
your eternal soul from it's eternal and fully earned punishment, and in the
tension of the in-between. For as we linger for but a day, our salvation is for
an eternity. As we reflect on our brokenness on Him for a moment, our healing
in Him is forever. As we dwell on the severity of our need for Grace, Grace
becomes all the more beautiful and amazing.
Hallelujah, He broke the
tension! Hallelujah, the soul of our Savior returned to it's shell and He being
one in body and spirit walked out of His, and our, tomb once and for all.
Hallelujah, He is working invisibly even now to bring us back to Him, and when
He returns, remember the immortal truth that every
eye shall see Him- Our King, Our Savior, Our Good Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.
Application-- On this day roughly 2,000 years ago, Christ was doing the dirtiest, darkest, most unseen, and most mysterious work, to save us. If you today feel like your Savior is dead and gone from your life, remember that unseen work he did for you on Easter Saturday. Just because you can't see, feel, or know in the moment does not mean that Christ isn't hard at work for you even still. Wait but a little while longer, and see as He reveals the glorious work He has been doing all for you all along. As Romans 8:28 promises, He is working all things together for the good of those who love Him. We may not see the good now, but there will come a day when the unknown sacrifices of Our Lord manifest as known blessings for our souls. We will see Sunday morning.
Application-- On this day roughly 2,000 years ago, Christ was doing the dirtiest, darkest, most unseen, and most mysterious work, to save us. If you today feel like your Savior is dead and gone from your life, remember that unseen work he did for you on Easter Saturday. Just because you can't see, feel, or know in the moment does not mean that Christ isn't hard at work for you even still. Wait but a little while longer, and see as He reveals the glorious work He has been doing all for you all along. As Romans 8:28 promises, He is working all things together for the good of those who love Him. We may not see the good now, but there will come a day when the unknown sacrifices of Our Lord manifest as known blessings for our souls. We will see Sunday morning.
(Easter Season 2017)
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