Some stories have nice, tidy endings. This is not one of those. In the Easter story, the ending is more of a beginning, and the middle chapters are still being written. Throughout this season, Christ reminds us and reveals to us that the resurrection is our birthing and our eternity, it is who we are – a people reconciled and restored to new life, a people ever rising.
This is the story we are invited to enter.
This is not an event we recall, but a way of life we are called to live. As a body of believers with questions and doubts, ideas and opinions, hope and confidence – as Beloved Community – we are called by God to continue this story in our common life. In so doing, we become signs and instruments for others to know Christ’s extraordinary love for us. The way we live our lives, individually and as a community, can express our inward understandings of life and death, of love, and of our faith in God for the rising.
No matter how hard the falls, no matter how imperfect our lives, no one is beyond the reach of God’s grace and love. We live, always, in the promise of rising with Christ. How we live, in community with others, is intended to be life-giving, life-restoring.
Grace Episcopal Church is a sign of God’s love established more than 150 years ago – possibly the oldest, continuously open church in Allentown. We are a community of passionate people, striving to live out our faith in an ever-changing downtown, an ever-changing world. Our life together, and our life in service of God’s mission, are nurtured and nourished by the presence of Jesus Christ among us. We break bread together and practice loving one another. We practice rising to new life with Christ.
It is here – in our relationships, in the church, and out into the streets – that we are called to bear witness to the risen Christ’s love for all. Here, all are welcome. Come as you are, with all your precious gifts, all your scars and wounds and vulnerabilities. Come to love and be loved. Come, rise up, and experience the living story of God’s grace.
The Rev. Twila Smith – Easter 2016