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Sons (and Daughters) of the Resurrection

After Jesus' resurrection, the Father sends his angel messengers only to the women who visit the empty tomb because an Old Testament prophecy is being fulfilled; “The Lord gives the word; the women who bear and publish the news are a great host”. So Jesus cooperates with what he sees his Father doing, showing himself at first only to the women. He and the Father want to demonstrate that there is something more important about Jesus' resurrection than satisfying human social standards of proof. In Jesus' time, the testimony of at least two men was needed to ‘establish’ anything in a Jewish court, and the witness of a woman was worth less than the witness of a man. But when Jesus shows himself to all his disciples he rebukes them for not believing the women! The new Time, ushered in by Jesus' resurrection and his first message to us through Mary, is about all Jesus' disciples - male and female - becoming ‘heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ’. – Johanna Duran-Greve (Germany) & Mirela Andras (Romania)

SCRIPTURE PASSAGE

JOHN (20:1-2a GH[i])

Mary Magdalene arrived at the tomb when the morning was still dark, and she noticed that the stone had been moved away from the tomb. ·So she ran off.

MARK (16:1b,2,4-5)

Mary of James, and Salome ·approached the tomb just as the sun was rising… ·They saw that the stone... had already been rolled away. On entering the tomb they saw a young man seated to their right, clothed in a white robe; and they were overwhelmed with awe.

MATTHEW (28:5-7a)

The angel said to the women, ‘Do not be afraid, for I know YOU are seeking after Jesus, who was crucified. ·He is not here, for he was raised up just as he said… ·Go quickly; tell his disciples.’

MARK (16:8)

Coming out of the tomb, they fled… They said nothing to anyone because they were afraid.

JOHN (20:2b-17)

Mary Magdalene went to Simon Peter and the other disciple whom Jesus was deeply fond of, and she said, ‘They have taken the Lord out of the tomb…’ ·Peter set off with the other disciple and headed for the tomb. ·…The other disciple…came to the tomb first. ·Stooping down, he saw the strewn out linen clothes yet did not go in. Then Simon Peter…arrived. Yet when he went into the tomb, he saw both the strewn out linen clothes ·and the hand cloth that had been over his head…rolled up in a solitary place… ·The other disciple…also went in…, saw and believed… ·Then the disciples went away… ·Mary remained…outside, ...weeping. But…she stooped down into the tomb ·and saw two angels in white… ·They said to her, ‘Dear woman, why are you weeping?’ ‘Because they have taken away my Lord,’ she said, ‘and I don't know where they have placed him.’ ·...On turning towards the things behind her, she saw Jesus standing there, but she did not know it was Jesus. ·‘Dear woman,’ Jesus said, ‘Why are you weeping? Who do you seek?’ Supposing that he was the gardener, she said, ‘Sir, if you have carried him off, tell me where you have placed him and I will take him away.’ ·Jesus said to her, ‘Mary!’ On turning round completely, she said to him…, ‘Teacher!’ ·‘Do not touch me,’ Jesus said, ‘for I have not as yet ascended to the Father. But go to my brothers and sisters[ii] and say to them: I am ascending to my Father and YOUR Father, to my God and YOUR God.’

MARK (16:9b-10a)

After rising up, he appeared first to Mary Magdalene, from whom he had cast out seven demons. ·Going around, that woman reported it to those who had been with him

JOHN (20:18)

She announced to the disciples that she had seen the Lord and that he had said these things.

MARK (16:11)

Yet on hearing that he was alive and had been seen by her, these did not believe it.

LUKE (23:55a; 24:1,3-6)

Some women from Galilee…·approached the tomb... ·On entering, these also found that the body of the Lord Jesus was not there. ·Yet…, lo and behold, two men stood beside them in shining clothes. ·They became frightened…, but these said to them, ‘Why do YOU seek the Living One among the dead? ·He is not here! He was raised up.

MATTHEW (28:8-10a)

They…ran to report it to the disciples; ·yet…, Jesus came to meet them saying, ‘Good morning!’ …The women fell down in worship… ·Jesus said, ‘Do not be afraid! Go; announce it to my brothers and sisters[ii].’

LUKE (24:9-11,13,18)

They too told all these things to the Eleven, and to all the others. ·Besides Mary Magdalene, it was also Joanna, Mary of James and the other women with them who told the apostles these things. ·Yet in the presence of these men, their words seemed like a wild story; so they did not believe the women. ·That very same day, two from among them were making their way to a village called Emmaus… ·One of them…was Cleopas.

MARK (16:12-13)

To these two going into the country he appeared…as they were walking. ·Also these, who came back to bring the news to the rest, these they did not believe either.

LUKE (24:34,36a)

Yet those with the Eleven said, ‘The Lord has truly been raised up, because he has appeared also to Simon.’… ·But as they spoke of these things, Jesus himself stood in their midst…

MARK (16:14)

While reclining at table, he also reproached them for their unbelief and hardheartedness, because they did not believe the ones who had seen him after he had been raised.

MEDITATION

Many people who read the Bible accounts of Jesus' resurrection miss five things. First, only the women see the angels and meet Jesus, even though two men (Peter and John) also visit the tomb. And the women are the ones empowered to give initial eyewitness testimony about Jesus' resurrection and pass on God's messages to the other disciples. Secondly, the first message given by Jesus himself is for all his ‘brothers and sisters’, and is about God being their Father as well as his Father. Thirdly, Jesus' first appearance to ‘the Eleven’ (all men), in Luke's account, occurs immediately after a second male witness to the resurrection, Peter, has been named. Fourthly, Both Mark and Luke report that this primarily male group of disciples did not believe the testimony of either the women or the two returning from Emmaus—even though one of them, Cleopas, was a man. Finally, Mark tells how Jesus rebukes them for their ‘stubborn refusal to believe’ these witnesses (16:14 NIV).

The most likely explanation for their ‘hardheartedness’ is: that these Jewish men had been programmed by their culture to require the testimony of at least ‘two men’ to ‘establish’ anything (Jn.8:17 KJV; Mat.18:16), and that the unnamed person traveling to Emmaus with Cleopas was a woman—either his wife or his sister. Still today, in most cultures, many men are prone to dismiss any unusual testimony by women as ‘a wild story’. Jesus (and the angels) seem to be deliberately challenging such male-oriented social conventions: by waiting to appear to the Eleven till the moment when they finally have a second male witness, and by rebuking them for their failure to believe the testimony of the women. By doing so the following scripture text is also fulfilled: “The Lord gave the command; a great company of women brought the good news” (Ps.68:11 HCSB).[iii]

Earlier, Jesus had taught that the traditional gender hierarchy—of men doing the ‘marrying’ and women being ‘given in marriage’—would one day be abolished for those who are ‘sons of the resurrection’ (Lk.20:34-36). Yet his words to Mary Magdalene suggest that he wasn't talking only about the age to come. For following his resurrection, he represents himself taking a new place alongside all his ‘brothers and sisters’[ii] in relationship to God: as ‘my Father and YOUR Father’, as ‘my God and YOUR God’ (Med.#44). Now he will be more than just our ‘Teacher’, since we too become empowered by the Spirit to walk in a direct relationship with God as our Father just like he did (Med.#24)! For all baptized believers—regardless of gender, ethnicity or social position—become ‘heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ’ after receiving the ‘Spirit of placement as sons’ (Med.#4; Med.#5). And by giving these prophetic words to Mary Magdalene, Jesus anticipates that women prophesying alongside men after Pentecost (Med.#49) will now become the norm and not the exception.

True, we still live in ‘this age’, and the Spirit represents only ‘the deposit on our inheritance’ (Med.#8). So even though we now have ‘one foot’, as it were, in the age to come, we must still respect social conventions in our homes and in our social gatherings. Thus Paul says that a Christian woman must still respect her husband as the head of the family, and that—at least in some cultures—a woman prophesying in church should cover her head. Nevertheless, Christian men must expect God to deliver his Word through women as well as men (1 Cor.11:5; 14:3)[iv], and they must treat women as ‘co-heirs’ in the Father's family (Med.#46).

If you are a woman, Jesus speaks to you as your Eldest Brother, just as he did to Mary, saying: “My Father is your Father! If you have been baptized into my death and resurrection, you stand alongside me, and 'my brothers', as an adult daughter! Your Father knows your name. He acknowledges your emotions. Just as I did not belittle Mary for her tears, your Father will never tell you to calm down and act more rationally. Through me, he has empowered you to speak his words, even to men. So do not be discouraged when some brothers don't take you seriously. Pray instead that they too will receive a greater revelation of the Father, and of the power of my resurrection” (Med.#1).

PRAYING THE WORD

God of our Lord Jesus Christ, glorious Father, enlighten the eyes of my understanding that I may know the exceeding greatness of your power for us, according to the working of your mighty power

which you exercised in the Messiah when you raised him from the dead and seated him at your right hand among the celestial ones, far above every primal chiefdom and authority, not only in this age, but also in that which is to come. You have subjected all things under his feet, and have made him the head over all things to the church, which is his body—the fullness of him who in all things fills all things… And in Christ Jesus you have also raised us together, and seated us together among the celestial ones. (Eph.1:17-23; 2:6)

NOTE

[i] The passage from John 16 is taken from J.K. Mellis, The Good News of the Messiah by the Four Witnesses, pp.275-278,280-281.

[ii] The Greek word, adelphous, here as a plural form, can refer to a mixed gender group of ‘brothers and sisters’.

[iii] In the Hebrew text of Ps.68:11, the witnesses are women. Many translations don't show this, though some indicate it in a footnote.

[iv] In their book, Why Not Women? A Biblical Study of Women in Missions, Ministry and Leadership (YWAM Publishing, 2000), David Hamilton and Loren Cunningham build a compelling biblical case for recognizing this new resurrection reality in the church.