Early Risers: A Sermon for Easter Day

I preached this sermon on Easter Day, April 5, 2026 at St. Anne Episcopal Church, West Chester, OH.

There are certain people who get up long before the rest us. They get up early, so early that it’s still dark outside, and not just because they want to, but because they need to. Because someone, somewhere needs them to. 

These people get up when the moon and the stars and the alarm clock are still the only lights, when the sun is still slumbering below the horizon. And these people stretch their backs and their tired limbs and climb out of bed and clamber down the hallway, maybe for a cup of coffee or a shower to get themselves going. And once they are ready, they pause and blow a kiss to their sleeping loved ones and they venture out to wherever they must go, to do whatever they must do.

I think these people who get up earlier than the rest of us are often motivated by something simple and necessary—some act of care or responsibility. They are the ones preparing the day for others as it begins. They are the pre-dawn saints who kindle the fire or salt the icy roads or chop the onions or sweep the floors or warm up the engines. They are the people whose quiet labors are the foundation upon which the rest of us stand. 

And that is a beautiful thing, though I am sorry to say that I am not one of these people, because if the stars are still visible, I’m sleeping, thank you very much. I am decidedly less centered and priest-like in the earliest hours of the day. 

Nonetheless, there is something precious, something good and holy, about the ones who get up before the rest of us in order to make sure that we will all be ok. That we will have what we need. If you are one of those people, God bless you. I’ll catch you sometime after 9AM. 

I suppose am thinking about such people because we meet two of them in the Easter story today, two pre-dawn saints trudging through the dew of a garden, their eyes wet with tears. It is Mary Magdalene and the other Mary, as Matthew tells it, though there might have been other women, too, depending on the Gospel you read.

And I can’t help but imagining them a little bit before this story begins, rising up while it was still dark, their bodies tense and shivering with grief, gathering up their supplies and venturing out under the glow of the moon. Nobody asked them to do so, but they just knew—they knew someone needed to get up and go, someone needed to care for the body of their beloved teacher, someone needed to bear witness, and so they would have to be the ones. 

Meanwhile the other disciples were likely splayed out in an uneasy, dreamless sleep, their hopes dashed, the future uncertain. As before, in the garden of Gethsemane, perhaps sorrow has made their eyes heavy. But the women…the women get up. 

And on this particular morning what they see, what they discover, is something better than any dream. And it is also something surprising, perhaps, especially for those who are used to getting up earlier than everyone else. 

Because what the women find is that Jesus…blessed Jesus; battered and beaten Jesus; lost to the world Jesus; asleep forever Jesus…Jesus has gotten up before anyone. He is risen, risen indeed, and he was up and out, only God knows when, but it must’ve been so very early, even before these faithful women. 

I don’t know if I’d ever really thought through this part of the story until recently—how early in the morning Jesus must’ve risen from the dead. So early that even these determined companions, coming in the pre-dawn darkness, did not arrive in time to see him rise.

“I know that you are looking for Jesus who was crucified,” the angel says. “He is not here; for he has been raised, as he said. Come, see the place where he lay!”

Yes, come see the place! Come see the linens left behind, come see where he stretched his back and his tired limbs and knew it was time to get up and do what he must do for us. Come see the open doorway to the tomb where he paused, where he blew a kiss to you in the darkness, and then ventured out to do what he must do.

Come see, but know this: he’s already up. He’s already gone to work, gone to Galilee, gone to be the beginning of a new heaven and a new earth, because that is what the world so desperately needed him to be. 

And maybe for the first time in their lives, these women, the ones who got up before everyone else to care for others, knew what it felt like to have someone get up to care for them. 

Friends, Easter is about a miracle—the miracle of one empty tomb, one abandoned resting place. It is the miracle that renews and re-enchants everything that ever was and is and will be. 

We tend to call this miracle resurrection. We call it the destruction of death. We call it the victory of love over fear, or of truth over lies. We call it many things because, 2000 years later, we are still trying to wrap our minds around it. I think the women at the tomb could relate to our bewilderment. 

But if it’s all a bit hard to understand, if it feels strange and remote from the everyday life you know, then maybe just think of it this way: Jesus is the One who has risen before the rest of us He’s up early, kindling the fire of this new day. He up early, brewing up a cup of new life to place into your hands. He’s up early, sweeping clear the pathway to a new world. 

Because if love looks like the ones who get up long before the rest of us, then of course Jesus would be up first. For he has loved us most of all.

And I guess I am thinking about resurrection in this way, on this morning, friends, because the world can feel like a frantic and scary place sometimes: a place where nobody is there to catch us, where nobody has our back. Like those women, we trudge through the day with tears in our eyes, telling ourselves we’ve gotta get it all done, gotta go it alone, gotta save ourselves, save each other, save the world, be the best at everything all the time. It can feel exhausting and so very, very lonely when we sit at the edge of the bed in the glow of that alarm clock.

But on this day, this resurrection day, God wants to show you something else. God wants to show you that you are not, in fact alone. You are not, in fact, responsible for everything all by yourself.

You are held. You are held. You are held by all the love you can see, and all the love you cannot see. And if you are tempted to despair in the pre-dawn darkness, let this Easter morning be your reminder: God has not left you. God is not dead. God is not even asleep. Come, see the place where he lay. He is already up, he is already out there, already waiting for you, waiting to show you that the world is far more full of love than it is of anything else, no matter what others might try to tell you. 

And if you are still uncertain, if you need proof of that this is so….just think again of the ones who get up long before the rest of us. 

Because somewhere among the salted roads and the chopped onions, the swept floors and the warmed engines…between the women at the tomb with tears in their eyes and the God who rose early to wipe them away…some where amidst all of that…even if it’s still dark outside, I think we might just catch a glimpse of heaven. 

What Is Loved, Is Resurrected

I preached this sermon on Easter Day, March 31, 2024, at St. Anne Episcopal Church, West Chester, OH. A version was also featured this day as part of The Episcopal Church’s Sermons that Work.

“While it was still dark, Mary Magdalene came to the tomb and saw that the stone had been removed.”

What is loved, is resurrected. 

This is the proclamation of this singular, eternally true day. This is what we discover on this morning, as the dawn caresses the darkness and wipes away its tears. Just as sunlight reveals itself in the morning sky, so has the Son of God revealed his fullness, so that in the light of this impossible, wondrous moment, we, like Mary Magdalene, might finally behold God’s answer to our broken hearts:

That what is loved, is resurrected.

Because Jesus, who was so deeply loved, who is Love, has been resurrected. Or, more accurately, he IS the resurrection, just as he once told Martha as she grieved over Lazarus. He is Love and he is Resurrection, and now, at last, we see what had previously been hidden: that these two, love and resurrection, are the same thing. We see that love is not a temporary condition, not something that we must live in fear of losing; it is the fundamental premise of existence, it is the Alpha and the Omega. When we love, when we are loved, we are given a taste of eternity. 

And so Jesus, this Love enfleshed, stands before us, bathed in the dew of the garden, his voice as soft as flower petals, his heart as radiant as fire, and he has arrived, not at the end of his journey, but at the new beginning of our journey. At the new beginning of the world—again, as before, in a garden. A beginning that is again, as before, signified by the tenderness of a God who walks among the trees and seeks his children and calls out to them by name. 

But on this day, on the other side of night and on the other side of death, God has a new message to add: not simply that we are loved, for that has always been true…but that what is loved is resurrected. That love is resurrection, and that death is no longer a closed door. It is an empty tomb. 

It was not always evident that this would be so. 

Humanity has traveled a long way to get to this morning. Outward from the original, creative tension between chaos and genesis; outward from the garden of Eden; outward across a thousand wildernesses of yearning and temptation; traveling through the turbulent seas and across the river to the precarious, uncertain peace of our earthly promised lands.

And as we have traveled, humanity, in good times and hard, has always sought the one thing it could never have: a solution to the conflict between our affections and our mortality. In other words, that what we love, dies.

This has been the curse, this has been the bitten, bitter fruit of an inescapable insight: that even if our deep love—for God, for family, for spouse, for neighbor, for earth—somehow manages to endure over time, our bodies and the work of our hands do not. We are burdened with the degeneration of even our noblest efforts, the severing of our most precious bonds. The inescapable presence of death has driven the world mad with grief, desperate with the longing for something other than goodbye.

But today, in the strange dim light of Easter morning, a wondrous thing takes place. And not just the one you are thinking of. 

No, in fact, the first thing is this: that a disciple, Mary Magdalene, who has watched Jesus suffer and die, and who now carries the vast pain and loneliness of all creation in her heart, on a morning in which God is dead and Love is dead…she comes to the tomb. She comes to the grave of all human hope, knowing what has been lost, and she looks into the void where Love used to be…and yet she refuses to yield her love to that void.

Mary refuses, there, despite the literal death of Love itself, to give up the love she carries in her. She keeps that love alive in her broken heart. And so, on behalf of all of us, she comes to bear witness and to tend to God’s body when no one else is able or willing to do so, because she knows that bearing witness and tending to what is broken is what love looks like, both in life and in death. 

And in this moment of miraculous tenderness and strength, she, the stubborn bearer of a Love that was supposed to have been killed, is given to behold a new miracle:

That what is loved, is resurrected. 

Mary Magdalene did not resurrect Jesus, of course—the upwelling, earth-sustaining, heaven-rending power of the living God did that—but it is also true that, even as Jesus lay dead, this very same divine, undying love coursed through her veins and animated her soul and carried her to the tomb that day. 

It was God’s love, it was God’s own heart, in and with and through the heart of Mary Magdalene, who also wept beside the empty tomb, God weeping in her and with her and with us for the senselessness of separation, weeping for that long journey out of Eden, across the wilderness, through the seas, searching for something other than goodbye—a journey that God made, too, right beside us, step by weary step.

And so while Mary did not resurrect Jesus, we can say that she carried that same resurrecting love within herself, that she was an agent of and a participant in its surprising, vivifying force, and that she partook, in that moment, of the very same powerful, stubborn love that will ultimately restore all life back to life. 

And if she does, then so can we. 

What you need to know is this: the Resurrection of Jesus is not just a remote story of a bygone moment when something amazing happened; it is a statement about what is still true for you and for me and for everyone who is still navigating that long and often wearisome journey in search of something other than goodbye. For everyone who struggles to love; for everyone who has loved and lost; for everyone who feels confused about what love even is: Easter Day is the answer. 

What is loved, however imperfectly, for however long, is resurrected. 

This is what the risen body of Christ signifies and enacts: that what is loved is not lost to you, and it will live forever, not only as a memory, but in its fullness, in the flesh, on that day when God becomes all in all, and the whole earth is loved back to life. 

And, as Mary discovered, what you choose to love in this world is imbued with the promise of resurrection simply by the act of loving it. Every time you have gently kissed a soft cheek or held a calloused hand. Every time you have refused to break a bruised reed or trample a fragile spirit. Every time you have preserved the hope of the poor, or sought beauty, or made peace. Every time you have stopped to love something, you have taken part in the ultimate resurrection of the world, for what is loved—by you, by God, and by God working through you—is resurrected. 

Why and how is this so? How can Easter be what it is? 

We cannot explain it. We need not explain it. Because neither can we really explain our compulsion to love, even in the face of loss and uncertainty, and yet we simply do. Love is its own answer to the questions we ask. And resurrection is the same. 

Jesus emerges from the fading night, calling Mary by name, calling you by name, to confirm what you already knew in your bones but dared not trust: that love is worth the cost, it is worth having to say goodbye, because there is indeed, something other than goodbye at the end of the story, there is a place where beginnings and endings meet, where, forever, the dawn will caress the darkness and wipe away its tears and all that has been loved will be alive, and we will call each other by name. 

And in this strange new Easter light, perhaps we will realize that there was, in fact, always something deeper than mere human longing that propelled us across the wilderness and through the sea—that our long history of choosing to seek, to hope, to endure, to dream of something other than goodbye, was never a futile endeavor—it was a fertile one. It was the resurrecting love of God already at work in our mortal bodies, now completed in God’s body.

And like Mary in the garden, beholding the Risen Lord of flesh and flower and flame, perhaps we will discover that we, too, are bearers of that force which is stronger than death; that our choice to love is to take part in the very same mysterious, power that compels life to rise up from the earth.

For what is loved, is resurrected. 

Just like Jesus. 

And, one day, just like us. 

Holy Week at Home #2: Holy Monday

A continuation of my “Holy Week at Home” posts; on Holy Monday the Gospel reading depicts Mary of Bethany anointing Jesus with precious ointment (John 12:1-9).

Spring is a season of guileless generosity. The trees and flowers cry abundant, blossoming tears of gratitude for the gentle return of warmth to the earth. The soft evening air feels gently magnanimous, like new love, or a reconciliation.

On Holy Monday we are told of Jesus’ anointing at Bethany; how Mary, the sister of Martha, pours precious fragrance on his feet and wipes them with her hair. Extravagant and unnecessary, says Judas, who cannot see beyond the imperatives of his limited, grasping imagination.

No, says Jesus, she has done this out of deep wisdom, for my burial approaches.

Extravagance is only harmful when it gathers bounty toward oneself, into the bottomless void of a misunderstood hunger. The extravagance of giving is the only possible satiation.

So, like springtime, like the exuberant wildflowers bending to kiss the dark soil, with the gratitude of one who has perceived the true cost of Love, thus has Mary poured out her gift. Thus has she anointed God with her necessary offering, for his necessary offering which is to come.

Help me now, Lord, in my fear of your Cross, and of my own. Allow me to rest at your feet. Allow me to gather what beauty I can, and then to offer it back; to let the blossoms loose and fall, as they must: an anointing of the earth, a making way, so to bear the fruit not yet tasted.

Poems on the Road

I’m on a night train heading through the Oregon wilderness, and I decided to share a couple poems I jotted down recently. I’ve been reflecting a lot on the spirituality of love and desire this past year, and these are small, imaginative windows into that journey, one from the perspective of Mary Magdalene, and the other from Judas Iscariot. Hope they resonate for you in some way. Peace, friends.

Magdalene

I needed you so much that
I whispered my deepest longings into a jar
And poured its dark sweetness upon your feet
Not that you would grant them, but
That you would absorb them into your self
My desire like sweat on your skin

I wept tears of love so pure and burning
that they felt like grief
Salt water sonnets
Braided through my hair like jewels or
Serpents

And just now
In the garden of re-encounter
Which never looks like the old days
When love was initial:
I saw
Briefly, ever so
The glimmer of my longing, and my tears
Transfigured into something selfless and whole
In you

Do not hold on
You said
Not because I shouldn’t love you
(Impossible)
But because my love
Reached its home in
Your heart
The sweetness and the salt are yours now
Ours now
The world’s now
Now, always
Anointing
Washing
Outpouring
Shameless
Free

 

Judas

You offered me the cup, said it was your blood.
Oh how I hated you, and loved you
For your generosity
When all I wanted was to bite your flesh and make you bleed from my desire.
You called me by name once
And I thought I loved you
Purely, selflessly
But now I know I wanted what i thought you were
What I needed you to be
Most beautiful of men
And when I realized that your inner light was as perfect as your shining face
I hated you, because I could not possess you for myself
Apple, flesh, my joy and sweet poison
They killed you and I thought I’d find relief
From your perfection
But there is no rest apart from you.
My tears are silver discs
And I weep, not for you, Who is peace itself
But for myself, because I realize
We could never have been united
Until I let you be Yourself. And I couldn’t.
My desire was misplaced.
I long for you still.
I will join you.
Beyond death, somehow, find me.