Firstly,
we are a joy of Easter Christians. On
the Cross, Jesus took the sins of all who genuinely seek forgiveness. I don’t
know about you, but the thought of having my sins taken away is a relief beyond
measure; it’s better than a dream. Before I knew the Lord Jesus, I thought
often of my sins before I knew myself to be forgiven. I thought of my anger and
lust, the way I kill people with my tongue, and the thousand and one ways in
which I am a bad person. I thought of the balance of my good and bad, and tried
to do as much good as I could to outweigh the bad. I tried hard; I tried
harder; I tried too hard. I became obsessive because of the nagging doubt,
“What if my sins outweighed my good deeds?” Worse, “What if I did not know of
badnesses and so whatever I did that was good, it was still less than the
total of my badness?” Worse still, “What if just one of my bad acts was so
tremendously awful in God’s eyes that whatever I did afterwards, I could not
compensate for it—one bad action, one single but really bad act could determine
my eternal destiny for ever?” But the sins of a Christian are forgiven entirely
because they give their life to the Lord Jesus. Their sins are gone. If they
sincerely desire to stop sinning and want to serve the Lord, then Jesus
forgives them and assures their eternal destination. Thereafter, a Christian
has a vast, overflowing joy because their inglorious past is no more than the
past. It may be a litter of puppies, a murder of crows, a pack of hounds, but in
response to our entering new life as Jesus forgives our sins we become a joy of Easter Christians.
Second,
we are a transformation of Easter Christians.
The person who has been forgiven to the uttermost will differ from people who do
not know themselves forgiven. Before we gave ourselves to the Lord Jesus,
before we were forgiven, there existed a profound barrier between us and God in
consequence of our unforgiven sins. But in proportion that we know ourselves to
be forgiven we can move forward in faith. We come into relationship with God and
our prayers can be answered — and the first prayer of every genuine Christian
is always to know more of God for, once tasted, we will always want more and
more and more of him. Knowing God changes a person because to know God is to be
filled by God. Our future so differs from our past that we become an entirely
new creation; in fact, it’s safer to say our old self has died and we’ve been born
a second time. So it may be a parliament of rooks, a wake of buzzards, a charm
of goldfinches, but as the power of Easter helps a person change to become like
the Lord Jesus, we are a transformation
of Easter Christians.
And
thirdly, we are a holiness of Easter
Christians. One of the reasons for being a Christian is to have God forgive our
sins. This forgiveness removes the barrier between us and God. We draw so close
to God that we actually know him. We grow to become first-hand disciples, responding
to God through informed choice rather than being told second, third, or fourth-hand
about God. This is far removed from following the rules of a past disciple, believer,
or prophet. Because we can follow God first-hand, he learn how to follow him in
ways that are customised and true. Easter Christians ask God to fill us with himself,
which means in effect he fills us with his Holy Spirit. With God himself inside
our souls we grow ever closer to God and he participates in every decision we
ever make. We grow to become the people that God calls us to be. We become
Christlike. So, it may be an obeisance of servants, a murmuration of starlings,
a surfeit of skunks, but as the risen Christ comes to live in each of us, we
become a holiness of Easter
Christians.
It’s
Easter and so a time to celebrate the wonderful, mighty resurrection of our
Lord Jesus. Therefore, as joyful, transformed and holy Christians, we wish you
every blessing in our Lord Jesus as we approach the profound, wonder-filled and
love-laden resurrection our Lord Jesus.
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