RELATED LINKS                           FOCUS
                  ON FILM 
               The
            Passion of the Christ             
              CELTIC EASTER 
              by Mary C. Earle             
              AT
                  TIMES OF WAR 
              The Miracles Within 
    God Turns Anxiety to Faith; Anger to Hope; Fear to Love 
    by Lowell E. Grisham             STEPPING
              STONES 
              The
          Journey of Faith                
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          Easter:  
    The Deepest Mystery, the Highest Hope             by
              The Rev. Dr. Douglass Bailey             
     
      In that wonderful Academy Award-winning film Shakespeare in Love,
      there is a funny and recurring line from one of the characters. He seems to
      be responsible
      for producing the play that Will Shakespeare is struggling to write. At numerous
      points in the story, people demand of the producer how the play will unfold
      and end. His consistent reply, with a hilariously funny gesture, is, "I
      don't know. It's a mystery!"             Therein
                is a great line for Easter. And, it's a good line for the story
                of your life and mine. How will it unfold? How will it end? Will
                there be a new beginning? "I don't know. It's a mystery!"             Good
                Friday declares that Jesus died, brutally and lonely. The Gospel
                writers seem preoccupied with his crucifixion. Events surrounding
                Jesus' trial and execution constitute almost 60 percent of the
                Gospel story. The record is clear. We profess it in our creeds.
                Jesus died. And one day or night, so will we.              Then,
                in the words of that great African-American poem by James Weldon
                Johnson, "Then comes that great gittin' up mornin'." Then
                comes Easter. He is alive again. "Alleluia! He is risen!" Whereas
                the details of Christ's death are vivid and descriptive, the
                details of his Easter are shadowed, sketchy, limited. "It's
                a mystery." But, it's the deepest and most true of all mysteries.             On
                this we bet our lives: "Christ has died. Christ is risen.
                Christ will come again, within our life. In Christ, we are risen." Yes,
                it's a deep but glorious mystery. And, our highest hope! "Let
                us keep the Feast. Alleluia!"              
 
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