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Sermon for the Resurrection of our Lord – April 5, 2026

Matthew 28:1-10

Dear friends, grace to you and peace from God our Father and our Lord Jesus Christ.

What if I told you that you really, truly do not need to be afraid – and you believed me? How would that change your life? How much more would you let yourself relax? How much better would you sleep at night?

What if I told you that the thing that scares you the most has no ultimate or permanent power over you? How much more room would there be in your heart for peace, for joy?

On this day when we celebrate the resurrection of our Lord, we hear the first two Easter sermons ever given – and both of them tell us to not be afraid.

Mary Magdalene and another woman named Mary – not Jesus’ mother, but likely his aunt, the wife of Joseph’s brother Clopas – these two Marys went to the tomb. Both of these women loved Jesus, and the Friday before they had seen the worst thing they could imagine happening to him, happen. Jesus had been put through a sham trial. He had been mocked, spit on, and beaten to a bloody pulp. He was then nailed to a cross and left to hang on it until he died. After he died, he was taken down from the cross by some of his friends and laid in a tomb. It sure seemed that his life was over, that his ministry was done, that his promises were null and void. Their hopes were dashed. This Lord whom they loved had been publicly humiliated and brutally executed and now he was in a sealed tomb. Talk about a worst-case scenario!

They spent their sabbath day grieving, and then, just as the sun was coming up on Sunday morning, these two Marys went to the tomb. Suddenly there was a great earthquake! An angel of the Lord, whose appearance was like lightning, descended from heaven. This angel rolled the stone away from the entrance to the tomb and sat on it. The Roman guards were so terrified that they were catatonic, paralyzed by fear. The angel spoke to the women, and the first words out of the angel’s mouth were: “Do not be afraid.”

The angel, this messenger from God, then gave the women a reason as to why they didn’t need to be afraid: “I know that you are looking for Jesus who was crucified. He is not here; for he has been raised.” The worst thing they could have imagined happening had happened – but the worst thing wasn’t the last thing. Jesus, who was crucified, had been raised!

The angel then told the two Marys to go quickly to tell the disciples. Off they went! And now, fear had loosened its grip! This very first Easter sermon had landed where it needed to land. They still had fear in their hearts, but now there was something else there too. St. Matthew tells us that they left the empty tomb with fear and great joy!

 And it was with this mix of fear and great joy that they ran smack dab into the risen Jesus himself! “Greetings!” he said. They knelt before the risen Lord and worshipped him.

Then came the second Easter sermon ever given. Now Jesus himself said to them, “Do not be afraid.” They didn’t need to be afraid because he was with them! He had conquered sin and overcome death and was now with them again! His ministry would continue! His promises were vindicated and valid! He would continue to be with them too. He would continue to make himself known to them. They were to go and tell the disciples, and then he would meet them in Galilee.

They’d heard it twice now: “Do not be afraid.” In neither of these Easter sermons were they being told to summon up courage by their own strength or power. They were given reasons – explicit and implicit – for why they didn’t need to be afraid. They didn’t need to be afraid because the worst thing was no longer the last thing. Jesus had been raised, and now he was with them.

I don’t think any of you came here today not realizing what we would be celebrating this morning. I really doubt anyone here was like, “What? Jesus rose? You’ve got to be kidding! I’ve never heard that before!” This is the whole thing about today, right? Even those of you who were dragged here this morning by somebody else weren’t like, “Wait, what? Christ is risen?” I’d be really surprised if there was anyone here this morning who didn’t know what Christians celebrate on Easter Sunday.

But I wouldn’t be surprised at all if there aren’t lots of people – even longtime practicing Christians – who might not fully realize the significance of what we are celebrating. I wouldn’t be surprised if there were many people here today who don’t quite understand what this all means for us. I wouldn’t be surprised if the good news of the resurrection hasn’t yet landed where it needs to land in certain parts of our lives, in certain corners of our hearts.

The resurrection of Jesus means many things, of course. It means the curse of death has been broken. It means our sin – the sin that put Jesus on the cross – has been overcome by Christ’s victory, bringing us forgiveness and the promise of eternal life. It means God’s love and grace has broken out of the tomb we put it in and is now available to all through faith.

It also means that we really, truly do not need to be afraid.

I’m probably the worst person to be giving this particular message today, because I still have a lot of fears. Like many of you, I have many things that I worry about. The world gives us no shortage of things to worry about, that’s for sure! We still live in a fallen world, where much can go wrong. Those worst-case scenarios sometimes do happen.

So I’m preaching to myself as much as I am preaching to you today. And what I want to say, to myself and to you, is that we really, truly do not need to be afraid.

Christ’s resurrection changes everything, because it tells us that those things that scare us the most have no ultimate or permanent power over us. Death itself has been undone, changing the trajectory of our lives. The resurrection of Jesus means that your worst thing will not be your last thing. And so we have nothing to be afraid of.

Don’t take it from me, take it from the angel of the Lord. Take it from Jesus himself. Take it from these first two Easter sermons ever given, both of which begin with the words: “Do not be afraid.”

Christ is risen. (He is risen indeed! Alleluia!)  His ministry of forgiveness and healing continues. His promises are ever true. He continues to make himself known to us through his Word and Sacraments. Jesus has been raised, and he lives forever to bring us God’s love and grace, and to raise us up to new life with him.

May this good news land where it needs to in your life today, that your heart would more and more be filled with the peace of Christ, and your fears would more and more give way to the great joy of Christ’s victory over sin and death, a victory he has promised to share with you.

Thanks be to God. Amen.

Rev. Jeffrey R. Spencer

Oak Harbor Lutheran Church