Alleluia. Christ is Risen.
The Lord is risen indeed. Alleluia.
+In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
There is an icon which sits on my desk, right where I see it every time I look up from my paperwork or computer screen. On the left is Mary Magdalene, taking the classical pose of a teacher (left palm up, right index finger pointing). On the right are the eleven remaining apostles, after Judas had left their number, all gesturing in a way that indicates that they are being taught. This might just be projection on my part, but to me the faces of the apostles all look a bit sheepish. And the Magdalene’s expression seems to me as if she’s thinking “now c’mon you dolts. I told you so!”
That icon was one of the few things already in my office when I arrived. I don’t know to whom it originally belonged, but there’s good reason that I kept it and that I keep it in such a prominent place. As a man in a traditionally masculine role with a fair amount of authority (both objectively because of my ordination and subjectively because of what people might project, rightly or wrongly, onto me because of the clerical collar or the deep voice or the slightly greying beard or whatever), I need to listen to and take seriously what I need to hear from those seen for whatever reason as less authoritative–laypeople, the young and the elderly, and especially women.
I share all of this to explain how important it is that Jesus, before he appeared to his chosen band, decided that the moment he miraculously overcame death went to Mary Magdalene and revealed himself to her first. There has been a great deal of ink spilled in the last few decades to explain that Mary Magdalene was neither the prostitute whom Jesus forgave in Luke 7 nor the woman who anointed Jesus’ feet in John 12, that this is all an invention of Pope Gregory I in the late sixth century. I don’t know whether or not Mary Magdalene was the remarkably inappropriately behaved woman of those stories or not (neither can be proved from scripture) but I’m more than a little curious about why so many have spent so much time distancing the woman who was the apostle to the apostles had to be recast as something other than a sinner who needed saving or an innapropriately emotional woman whose excesses Jesus needed to justify to Judas. Maybe Mary Magdalene was neither the “sinful woman” nor the overly emotional woman who wiped our Lord’s feet with her tears and hair (that remains an open question) but the insistence that she could not have been either of these women strikes me as a “solution looking for a problem.”
I guess I like to think that the woman depicted in my icon lecturing the apostles loved Jesus so much because her sins were so great, because my own sins are great, and she didn’t have the benefit of being able to hide from them to the same degree that those eleven guys did, that I do. Because the news of Our Lord rising from the dead didn’t need to be glossed as far as she would have been concerned. Somebody whom she loved more than anything, because he loved her in spite of everything, was alive. There was no need for figuring out the metaphysics of it; she was ready to see him, and so she did.
So, going back to how I have a y-chromosome and all that accompanies that and I have an indelible indentation in my skull from where my bishop laid his hands on me more than a decade-and-a-half-ago, I want to see Jesus just like somebody who needs a lot more grace than I think I do can see him. And I want to be just as excited to tell others how he changed my life. I want people with all the privilege I have to be able to see in the same way that the Magdalene saw how the Resurrection means everything!
I’ll not belabor the point, because we have a brunch and an egg hunt and all sorts of obligations for those attending neither (I know), but there’s nothing in the world more important than the fact that Christ Jesus was dead as a door-nail and then he was alive again, not in some metaphorical sense, but literally. If that weren’t an honest-to-God fact you all might as well be on the golf course this morning, and I might as well be teaching high school Latin (that used to be my favorite threat before most high school Latin classes went the way of all things, so help me think of a new one…). Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, today, and for ever lives. It doesn’t matter if you’re an “unruly woman” like Mary Magdalene or a rather boring middle-aged dude. It doesn’t matter if you’re a pillar of the community or a nobody. It doesn’t matter if you’re black or white or something else, or rich or poor or something in between, or straight or gay or something in between, or conservative or liberal or something in between, or convinced or questioning or something in between. None of that really matters in the final analysis. The only thing that really matters is that Jesus Christ was dead and now he is alive. And he would come to us, as he came to the Magdalene, if only our love were so sincere. May God give us that love, over which even the gates of hell cannot prevail.
+In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.