THE EVER PRESENT
CHRIST
by Earl Mott
According to the description in chapter 20 of John's gospel,
Mary Magdalene, the cleansed and purified sinner, came
very early in the morning after the crucifixion of Jesus
to the sepulchre where His body had been laid. She found
the huge stone rolled away from the entrance and the body
gone. At that time it seemed to her that all was lost,
all comfort was gone, the career of Christ Jesus was finished.
Verse 2 takes up the story. It is poignant and heart rending
because most of us "have been there." We have
all been through bitter times when the light of Christ
has seemed dim, when even our dearest friends are powerless
to help. Let us read that verse: "Then she runneth,
and cometh to Simon Peter, and to the other disciple whom
Jesus loved, and saith unto them, They have taken away
the Lord out of the sepulchre, and we know not where they
have laid him." For a brief time in Mary Magdalene's
experience, a time of desperate need, a heartbreaking
interval, all evidence of the Christ was gone, gone from
her life, gone from the world. What a sense of desolation
was hers! What a hopeless world without the presence of
the Christ! Her tears scald our own eyes – we have
all been there, when the Christ seems to have gone and
only grief and pain remain.
As we look around our world today, just beneath the surface
of the "business as usual" and the frantic activity,
we often sense the same despair. All our material advances,
our swift transportation, our grand accomplishments, our
human cleverness, do not fill the void within us, because
"they have taken away my Lord, and we know not where
they have laid him. The modern computerized theology,
smooth and polished as a diamond, cannot fill or even
touch our deep need. When we ask for the Bread of Life
that theology gives us a stone. In many of its temples
the Christ still hangs on the cross. That theology knows
not where they have laid Him because to it only the material
has reality and the spiritual is hazy and unreal.
Verses 10 and 11 show the helplessness of the merely human,
its inadequacy to give help and comfort when desperately
needed. Christ Jesus had disappeared, and verse 10 tells
us starkly and simply, "Then the disciples went away
again unto their own homes." No comfort for the heart
broken Magdalene from that source. They gave up. They
knew not where the Christ had gone. They left the weeping
Mary and went home.
Mary Magdalene did not give up and go home, because she
knew all too well there was no earthly place to find comfort.
Just like the despairing ones of today she clung to the
Christ. Verse 11 tells us, "But Mary stood without
at the sepulchre weeping; and as she wept, she stooped
down, and looked into the sepulchre." At that point
she hoped against hope that the body of Jesus would be
still lying there. She would not give up her search. She
would not go home. In the face of human reason and logic,
she persisted. She looked once again into the tomb.
Her persistence was rewarded. Where Jesus had lain she
saw two of God's angels. They spoke to her as they speak
to us in our grief, "Why weepest thou?" Her
answer revealed the source of her grief and despair, and
the source of much of the world's grief and sorrow to
this day – human ignorance of the deathless Christ
and of life eternal. Her forlorn answer was this, "Because
they have taken away my Lord, and I know not where they
have laid him.”
But all the time the Christ was right beside her, even
as the Christ is always beside you and me when we need
reassurance, alive, ready and waiting to comfort with
the truth of life everlasting. Christ Jesus spoke one
word, “Mary". What a world of comfort in that
one word! It said to her, "I am here beside you,
Mary. Don't be sad or despairing. I am here. I am unharmed.
The scourging, the mockery, the cross, the tomb, have
not destroyed the Christ. The ignorance and sin of man,
all the opposition of the carnal mind, cannot harm or
kill the Christ. I am here, Mary, and all that would oppose
me is powerless. Death has no dominion.”
When you and I know more of God and His eternal Christ
we will see that human grief and sorrow and despair have
their basis in ignorance – ignorance of God, ignorance
of His Christ, ignorance of man made in God's likeness.
Like Mary Magdalene we will rise some day to a better
understanding of life as Jesus proved it. The Christ,
the Truth of God and man, waits unchanging, waiting to
be understood. The holy Bible holds out the key to that
Christly understanding which conquers ignorance and sin
and death. It is the Truth that makes free, the most precious
gift that God can give.
Let us, you and I, put first things first and refuse to
be diverted. Let us not give a disproportionate attention
to worldly things, but instead strive persistently, as
did Mary Magdalene, to find the Christ. That is the only
practical thing to do. All earthly things will eventually
vanish, however desirable they may seem. They are often
Satan's tools, mere baubles to divert us from a single
minded search for Christ.
The Bible sets the priorities for men and for nations
in these verses – "This is life eternal, that
they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ
whom thou hast sent." And, "Let us lay aside
every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us
... looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our
faith…”
Like Mary Magdalene let us persist through pain and sorrow,
through grief and death, until we find Christ and Christ
finds us. Then our earthly sins and griefs and sorrows
will disappear in the brightness of His coming as the
shadows disappear in the presence of the sunlight. Let
us accept that wonderful gift from God, Who gave His only
begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not
perish, but have everlasting life.