Here's my article for the March magazines:
“When's
Easter this year?” is a question I often get asked (Sunday 27th
March in case you're wondering!). The Archbishop of Canterbury,
Justin Welby, is in talks with the leaders of other churches to try
to fix the date of Easter, but until then it will vary considerably
year after year. This is because Easter is the
original 'moveable feast', with the Council of Nicea in 325AD
deciding that Easter would be celebrated on the first Sunday after
the first full moon occurring on or after 21st March (the
Church's approximation of the vernal equinox). This means that Easter
can be quite disruptive, especially to the school calendar where the
length of the school terms are affected by the date of Easter.
But all this is quite
appropriate because Easter, like the Christian faith, is supposed to
be disruptive. At the beginning of February we celebrate the time
when, as a forty day old baby, Jesus was taken to the Temple in
Jerusalem by his parents and dedicated to God. They were met there
by Simeon who, full of the Holy Spirit, declared that Jesus would
cause the falling and rising of many and would be “a sign that will
be opposed so that the inner thoughts of many will be revealed”
(Luke 2:34-35). Right from the start it was clear that Jesus' work
would be disruptive, most of all by shaking the establishment out of
their cosy religious traditions by exposing their hypocrisy of saying
they believed in God but not letting it affect their lives. Jesus'
message was also disruptive because he said that God loves everyone
and that all are of equal value in his sight.
But Easter is most
disruptive of all as it marks the beginning of a whole new reality.
By rising from the dead Jesus defeated the power of death and opened
the way to everlasting life and so the old order of life and death is
disrupted. No longer can we live with the philosophy of 'eat, drink
and be merry, for tomorrow we die' because our death is not the end.
If death were the end then life itself would be pointless so we might
as well make the most of it, but this too would ultimately be
meaningless. Richard Dawkins says in his book 'River out of Eden: A
Darwinian view of life', "In a universe of electrons and selfish
genes, blind physical forces and genetic replication, some people are
going to get hurt, other people are going to get lucky, and you won't
find any rhyme or reason in it, nor any justice”. But Jesus' death
and resurrection have changed everything and have disrupted our cosy
worldview.
And that is what Lent
is all about – allowing the voice of Jesus to disrupt our
assumptions, our innermost thoughts and our lives, and opening
ourselves to receive God's love so we can be re-shaped to be more
like him. However, this is not a meaningless or self-indulgent
exercise because the choices we make in this life will profoundly
affect what happens to us after death. But Easter reminds us of
Jesus' promise that whoever listens and responds to his voice will
have eternal life.
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