We were
weighed down, walking to the tomb.
We knew the way, for we had walked it two
days before.
We had followed Joseph of Arimathea and
his servant
down the hill from Golgatha,
their arms straining with the dead weight
of Jesus’ body.
We saw where they laid him, how they
wrapped him in linen.
We saw their shoulders pushing that stone
in place,
the sound of it grinding shut.
And though our eyes streamed tears
we marked the place,
for we knew we would come back.
And on the first day of
the week,
we came, arms full of aromatic oil and
spices;
cinnamon, cassia, myrrh.
All our resources pooled in a fragrant
offering,
one last service for Jesus.
We walked the dark path,
the sky just beginning to lighten.
What we saw in the
semi-darkness
was not the closed tomb we had expected,
but a gaping hole!
Alarmed, we looked inside,
and saw that Jesus’ body was gone.
Someone had been there before us.
How could this be?
Grave robbers?
Some final act of blasphemy against our
Saviour?
Had Pilate changed his mind,
and was Jesus’ corpse now hanging
somewhere for all to see?
I dropped all I was carrying and ran to
find the other disciples.
Peter and John came racing back.
Entering the tomb they saw for themselves
what I had told them,
Jesus was not there.
I stood with them, our hands on the giant
stone,
confusion written on our faces.
They left, but I remained, gathering up
all those spices,
my tears dropping on the ground.
Would this suffering never end?
I turned and looked again
in the tomb,
but this time, there was not darkness, but
light!
Two angels sitting where Jesus’ body
should be
asked me why I was weeping!
Why was I weeping?
And then another man, the gardener,
suddenly there behind me,
also asking about my tears.
All I wanted was Jesus’ body,
so I could do what I came here for,
mourn properly, anoint him with these
spices in my arms.
“Where is Jesus, tell me if you know!” I
cried.
And then he said my name, and I suddenly
recognized him.
Jesus! Not dead, not cold, not
lifeless, not gone forever!
Jesus, alive, before me, talking, looking
in my eyes!
My heart about stopped as I reached out to
hold him,
to see if he was real, touchable, Jesus in
the flesh.
He talked of My God and Your God,
and suddenly it was real to me.
It was not God far away, not God not
listening,
but God present, God doing impossible
things,
God making morning miracles out of death’s
darkness.
Jesus asked me to go and tell the others.
I threw the spices on the ground,
(no need of them now!) and I started
running,
my feet moving faster than they’ve ever
moved,
beautiful with good news.
I have seen the Lord!
I have seen the Lord!
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