THE REST OF THE STORY – Easter Sunday: Resurrection of the Lord, Year B

March 31, 2024

Revised Common Lectionary
Acts 10:34-43 or Isaiah 25:6-9
Psalm 118:1-2, 14-24
1 Corinthians 15:1-11 or Acts 10:34-43
John 20:1-18 or Mark 16:1-8

Lectionary for Mass (RC)
Acts 10:34a, 37-43
Psalm 118:1-2, 16-17, 22-23 (24)
Colossians 3:1-4 or 1 Corinthians 5:6b-8
John 20:1-9 or Mark 16:1-7

For more than thirty years, newscaster Paul Harvey hosted a radio feature entitled The Rest of the Story, usually presenting a little-known fact about some well-known person, place or event. Harvey ended each broadcast with his signature tag line, “And now you know . . . the rest of the story.”

Don’t we Christians sometimes come to the Easter celebration feeling that we already know the rest of the Jesus story—that in spite of his brutal execution, Jesus rose from the dead and everything worked out in the end just as he had predicted. As we listen to the words of Scripture, however, it’s clear that the story is far more complicated. For one thing, Gospel accounts indicate that the earliest followers of Jesus weren’t necessarily convinced that things would turn out well nor were they sure what to make of the empty tomb.

In today’s reading from the Gospel of Mark, the women bring spices to anoint the body of Jesus. They were the only ones who had not fled, denied him, or moved on. Everyone else was out of the picture. In their grief, these women who had accompanied Jesus and had been involved in the background of his ministry set out for the tomb to perform an act of love. Even though he had several times predicted that he would be raised on the third day, they were clearly expecting to find the body of Jesus behind a large stone.

When they saw that the stone had already been rolled away, the women entered the tomb and were “alarmed” to see a young man in a white robe sitting there. The young man delivered the message that Jesus had been raised and instructed them to tell Peter and the other disciples “that he is going ahead of you to Galilee; there you will see him, just as he told you” (Mk 16:7). The young man’s message seems not to have reassured the women nor did it help them recall Jesus’s prediction. Mark tells us that instead of bringing good news to the other disciples, “they went out and fled from the tomb, for terror and amazement had seized them; and they said nothing to anyone, for they were afraid” (Mk 16:8).

It was on this note that the original version of Mark’s Gospel ended—the women running away from the tomb and keeping this strange experience to themselves. Far from being overjoyed, they were terrified. The Gospel of Mark that we read in our Bibles today includes two endings that were added later, undoubtedly out of discomfort at this open-ended and rather abrupt conclusion.

What is the rest of the story for us who hear the Gospel on this Easter Day? We know that the early community gradually came to understand the meaning of the empty tomb and began to proclaim the resurrection of Christ. They heard the witness of those who saw him alive, they experienced signs of his presence among them, and they received the Spirit that emboldened them to share the good news with others.

How are we writing the rest of the story in our lives and in the world today? Like those early morning visitors to the tomb, we have heard the news of Christ’s rising, but like them we sometimes find ourselves doubtful, silenced, or even paralyzed by fear. How can the resurrection be true, we ask, when we have witnessed so much death, injustice, and division?

Over the next fifty days of the Easter season, we will reflect on ways in which we experience the continuing presence of the risen One among us—in the people and events of our lives, in the community of faith, in the words of Scripture, in the breaking of bread, in the powerless and the poor, in those who call us to act for justice. Empowered by the Spirit, we can tell others the rest of the story—that Christ has gone ahead to meet us in the Galilees of our world to proclaim even today that death, injustice, and evil will not have the last word.

Christ is risen! Alleluia!

A Hymn for Today: “He Rose”

“He Rose” poignantly expresses how for enslaved African Americans, the resurrection of Jesus was a source of hope, God’s promise that suffering and death would not be the last word. For a more extensive treatment of this spiritual, click here to view an article by Hymn Society member Darnell St. Romain.

Listen here to a recording of “He Rose,” sung at Wesley Methodist Church, John’s Island, South Carolina, from Smithsonian Folkways Recordings.

Refrain
He rose, he rose, he rose from the dead!
He rose, he rose, he rose from the dead!
He rose, he rose, he rose from the dead,
and the Lord will bear my spirit home.

1. They crucified my Savior and nailed him to the tree . . .
2. Then Joseph begged his body and laid it in the tomb . . .
3. Sister Mary she came running, a-looking for my Lord . . .
4. An angel came from heaven and rolled the stone away . . .

Text: Negro spiritual
Tune: ASCENSIUS; Negro spiritual

Image Credit: Easter, Empty Tomb, JESUS MAFA, Cameroon, 1973

“Word and Song: A Lectionary Reflection” is written by the Executive Director of The Hymn Society, Rev. Dr. Mike McMahon. For his full bio, click here and scroll down to the “staff” section.

To receive these weekly reflections by email, please send a message to office@thehymnsociety.org and type “Lectionary” in the subject line.