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Biography
David S.
Handley is Senior Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of
Evanston, Illinois. A dynamic church of 1,800 members, they serve a
variety of needs from a soup kitchen to enormously effective children
and youth ministries. Dave studied at both Trinity and McCormick
Seminaries and began his ministry at Fourth Presbyterian Church of
Chicago. He's a popular speaker and a valuable member of our Minister's
Advisory Board. [Biographical information is correct as of the broadcast
date noted above.]
"The Dawning of A New Life"
I want to talk with you on this
Easter Sunday afternoon about, "When darkness turns to dawning." And I'm
very glad that you are tuning in to this message today, because you may
be surprised to find yourself in Luke's Easter account in the New
Testament. Listen to this:
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On the first day of the week, at early dawn, the women come to the
tomb taking the spices that they had prepared. They found the stone,
rolled away from the tomb. But when they went in, they did not find
the body! While they were perplexed about this, suddenly two men in
dazzling clothes stood beside them. The women were terrified and
bowed their faces to the ground. But the men said to them, "Why do
you look for the living among the dead? He is not here, but has
risen. Remember how he told you, while he was still in Galilee, that
the Son of Man must be handed over to sinners, and be crucified, and
on the third day rise again." Then they remembered his words, and
returning from the tomb, they told all this to the eleven and to all
the rest....But these words seemed to them an idle tale, and they
did not believe them. |
"When darkness turns to dawning." Perhaps
that's the way it will be for you this Easter Sunday. Because that is
very much the way it was for those first witnesses to Christ's
resurrection. Not with a dramatic flash of insight. Not with trumpet and
tympani. But in what we call "stages of faith" -- the slow and gradual
movement from despair to discovery, from a crisis to a conviction that
becomes the rock on which we rebuild our lives.
They rose in darkness, their hearts weighed down with grief and
disillusionment. The One in whom they had placed all their hope had been
mercilessly nailed to a cross like a common criminal. And God had not
intervened. The miracle they had hoped for and prayed for did not come.
They carried in their hands the symbol of their despair -- the spices to
embalm. How could it get any worse than this? Well, it did. They got to
the tomb, just as the first glimmers of dawn pierced the darkness. To
their horror they found the stone rolled away, the body of Jesus gone.
Mary let out her cry of outrage, "They have taken away my Lord..." And
their darkness was complete.
The First Stage of Easter Faith: RECKONING
Now, they could not have known it at the time, but this was the first
and necessary stage of spiritual birth. If anyone would have suggested
that to them, with the kind of simplistic rationalizations we sometimes
get from well-meaning friends, they would have thought it a cruel joke.
But they would come to know it later. I call it the stage of
RECKONING. The bottom drops out from under us, and we grasp for that
proverbial rope we never before noticed was there.
I got a phone call sometime ago from a man who was in just this kind of
darkness. His 20-year career with his company had come to an abrupt
halt, the victim of yet another buy-out and reorganization. On top of
that, his wife had finally had enough, and told him her intention to
leave. He was not a "religious" man, he told me. But for the first time
in his life he felt out of control, with nothing to hold on to. He had
poured his life into this company. His wife had been his primary source
of security and strength. And now he saw his very foundations dissolve
into a great mudslide, and he had come to the painful reckoning that he
had built his house upon sand.
But in that time of reckoning, he had heard the same whispers of the
angels those women heard at the tomb. "Why do you seek the living among
the dead?" Well, of course, he had no inclination whatsoever that this
might be the voice of the Holy Spirit. It just sounded to him like a
cynical, bitter protest. "What's the use? What's it all been for? What
is Life about, anyway?" But he heard it -- the question of reckoning --
the first stage of Easter Faith.
"Why do you seek the Living among the dead?"
The Second Stage of Easter Faith: RUMORS
Well, this "Seeker" was desperate enough to try anything. So he said,
"Sure." And I introduced him to one of our members whom I knew to be a
good listener, a man who had suffered some scars of his own. And so this
Seeker entered into the second stage of faith, which we will call the
RUMOR stage. In the Easter accounts, this stage of faith is
represented by the two mysterious men at the tomb telling these
heart-broken women what would be the most revolutionary rumor that was
ever told: "He is not here...he is risen!" Later those women would
spread that rumor to the men. But the men would not believe them; they
would think it but an idle tale.
So week by week, this Seeker would come to hear "rumors" about Jesus
Christ, as this member of our church would listen to the Seeker's
anguish, and then share some struggles of his own and how he had found
Jesus Christ to hold him up in the midst of it all. Rumors.
The Third Stage of Easter Faith: REMINDER
Now there is locked deep in the human heart this longing, this yearning,
after God. Thomas Merton said it: "All human longing is, at base, a
longing after God." We may not recognize it as such. Almost like one
suffering from amnesia, who has forgotten who he is, and where he has
come from. But nevertheless, there is this deep yearning inside, rather
like a homesickness. But he's forgotten where home is. And then, someone
shows him a picture of his mother. And there is just a glimmer of
recognition, a spark of hope. Little memories begin to surface. And
memory brings hope, and he begins to re-discover who he is, and to whom
he belongs.
Just so is the third stage of faith. We'll call it the stage of
REMINDER. When we open the Bible, and begin to read the life of
Jesus in the Gospels. And we remember his words -- learned long ago,
perhaps. But then it didn't mean anything, because we had no need. But
now they blaze into our consciousness, almost as if he were right here
Himself! And just so, these two mysterious figures at the tomb said to
the women, "Remember how he told you, while he was still in Galilee,
that the Son of Man must be handed over to sinners, and be crucified,
and on the third day rise again?"
And then they remembered His words.
So, week by week this picture was held up to this professedly
non-religious "Seeker" -- the picture of Jesus -- who was at the heart
of his homesickness. This Seeker, who was so desperately needing a Power
beyond his own just to cope with the anguish of his life, now began to
have something like a spiritual memory come to him as he looked at the
picture of Jesus in the Gospels. And finally, the week came when they
were reading the accounts of Jesus' death on the cross. And this man --
hard-bitten, church-proof -- was brought face to face with this
incredible human being who had claimed to be "dying for our sins." And
he found himself thinking, "Either this is the biggest hoax of human
history; or it is the greatest news that the world has ever known!" As
he saw this picture of Jesus on the cross, in his own pain he felt a
strange identification with this man. As he read those haunting words,
"My God, my God, why have you forsaken me," it seemed that this Jesus
was bringing to God all of his own frustrations and hurt and sense of
abandonment. And when this Galilean cried out "Father, into your hands I
commend my Spirit!," it seemed that this Jesus was bringing to God all
the highest hopes and noblest passions of his own heart. And so at last
he came to the fourth stage of faith, the REVELATION, when the
circuit is completed and faith is born.
The Fourth Stage of Easter Faith: REVELATION
The Seeker told his faith companion he felt a little bit like one time
when he had witnessed Yankee Stadium being lit up. Back in the days when
they used to use those large circuit-breaker levers. As a boy, he had
gone with his dad to visit a friend who managed Yankee Stadium. And the
man pointed out to the dark field, and said, "Watch this" as he took
that huge lever with both hands and moved it over to complete the
circuit. The electricity flowed over the bridging circuit and the whole
dark stadium was flooded with light. And this non-religious,
church-proof Seeker said, "Looking back now, it was like I was hanging
on to Jesus' feet, and Jesus threw himself on the cross, took hold of
the hands of God, and completed the circuit. And I was carried right
into the presence of the Almighty!"
Are You on This Journey?
Well, what about you? Have you found yourself in this Easter story yet?
Have you heard the whispers of the angels, "Why? Why do you seek the
'good life' among the dead promises of this world?" Well, look. If
you're in the darkness of that RECKONING time, then listen for
the RUMORS that you surely will hear now from those who claim to
experience His presence. "He is not here. He is risen!" And if you can't
believe these wild and crazy rumors, don't despair. The men on that
first Easter didn't believe them either! They had to do their own
research before they REMEMBERED what he had said. And maybe
you'll have to pick up a Bible and read it for yourself. But sooner or
later, the REVELATION will come. Perhaps more like a dawning
awareness than a flash of insight. Yes! "Christ is risen! He is risen
indeed!" Alleluia!
Interview with David
Handley
Interviewed by David Handley
David Hardin:
Dave, in your fine words you were saying that these are the stages people go
through. I am aware of the fact that there is this "born again" experience which
is a very sudden thing. Do you want to comment on the difference there or what
that is all about?
David Handley: Dave, I believe very much in
being "born again," but I think that happens in process for most of us. People
sometimes ask me what it is like to be a preacher. I usually respond, "Well, it
is a little bit like being a spiritual midwife."
Physical birth happens in process. We are kind of pushed out of the warm, secure
environment of the womb and then into the pressure and pain of the birth canal
and into a new life. I think spiritual birth happens very much the same way.
James Fowler wrote the book, Stages of Faith. It is the psychology of human
development over the life cycle of a person's life, but I think that any given
moment of a person's life, we also go through these times in stages of faith.
Hardin: I guess what I am hearing is that it
is okay either way.
Handley: Absolutely.
Hardin: That is the point.
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