“Woman, why are you weeping?” Jesus asked Mary
Magdalene as she sat grieving and puzzling over her Master’s missing body.
The worst had happened. The ultimate tragedy of her
beloved Messiah’s crucifixion had been cruelly compounded by the removal of his
unanointed corpse from the tomb. Not only had the former prostitute been
separated from her Teacher by a murderous death, now she had also been denied
the comforting dignity of ministering to his remains using the spices and
ointments she and the other women had so lovingly prepared.
“I don’t know where they have laid him,” she told
this stranger through her tears, this intruder whom she assumed was the keeper
of the garden where the sepulcher was situated. Mary’s emotions were crushing
and debilitating. All she could think of was: “Where is he? Where is the One
who saved me from my evil past, who understood and forgave me, who looked
beyond my sullied life and loved me? I don’t care if he’s dead…I just want to
be with him one last time.”
“Mary,” the stranger said.
And with that comforting syllable all of the woman’s
grief and agony began to evaporate. Beyond her wildest fantasies, the voice she
heard breathed her dead hopes to life again. For there he was. There he stood.
Her Master was no longer dead. He was alive again, just as he’d promised.
“Why are you weeping?” If Jesus asked you or me that
question, how would we answer?
Death? Disease? Insecurity? Laboring in vain?
Unanswered prayers or desires? Violence or fears? Boredom or loneliness? Felt
absence of God—distance brought about by guilt?
Weeping prevails when hope is missing. Anticipation
of a brighter tomorrow is what holds off the flood of tears pent up within our
struggling souls. And the divine promise of the ultimate bright tomorrow is the
very capstone that hold the strong arch of the Christian faith together—that assures
us it will never collapse in ruins around us
“I will create a new heavens and a new earth,” God
promises in at least four major passages throughout the pages of sacred
Scripture. Two in the Old Testament and two in the New. The Old Testament
prophecy of Isaiah was written to Jews who were about to be overthrown by the
armies of Babylon and enter into a bleak and desperate time of captivity and
exile away from their beloved land. Much of the message God had assigned Isaiah
to proclaim was one of woe and doom and impending judgment on those who had
forsaken their God and His laws.
But in the midst of those oracles of woe were
seasoned in some refreshing promises of revival, restoration, re-patriation and
a brand new creation, foretelling not only the end of the Jews earthly exile in
Babylon, but the saving mission of the world-encompassing Savior: the
long-awaited Messiah, Jesus Christ.
In the coming of Messiah, the centuries-long hope of
all the patriarchs of the faith would find ultimate fruition—the ultimate
payment for our sins, the guarantee of eternal peace with our Creator, the new
hearts that would embrace Him and His laws with unending delight, the return to
the Paradise of God that our first parents lost because of their original
disobedience.
In chapter 65, Isaiah summarizes the future utopia
that God has planned for all who embrace His Son by faith and enter into His
new covenant. It is a world free of weeping.
It is a garden where tears are a thing of the past.
A place of unending joy where Jesus is never missing. Are you ready to enter
this haven of rest?
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