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| Copyright © 2002 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| Ken Wade |
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P.O.
Box 53055 |
| March 30/31, 2002 |
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Folded Graveclothes
CONNIE: Hello, I'm Connie Jeffery. LONNIE: And I'm Lonnie Melashenko. CONNIE: Lonnie, today as most of the Christian world celebrates the resurrection of Jesus, you've titled your sermon "Folded Graveclothes." Is that the aspect of the Easter story that impacts you most deeply? The fact that Jesus rose from the dead and left His graveclothes neatly folded there in the tomb? LONNIE: Well, Connie, as I'll share a bit later, the
very first time I visited Jerusalem, I was deeply, deeply moved by the
experience of going into the tomb at Gordon's Calvary and contemplating
the meaning of what happened that first Easter morning. CONNIE: Yes, I did Lonnie, and there's really nothing that makes that experience easy. I still have moments of profound sadness especially when I go and visit dad's grave and I sense my loss almost like it happened yesterday. But the thought of Jesus rising from the dead, and the promise that is inherent in the resurrection gives me a wonderful hope--an assurance that I will see Dad again. LONNIE: There is a lot of comfort in the resurrection
story--especially for those of us who have lost a loved one. And you know,
it's been a pretty hard year for us here at Voice of Prophecy. We've lost
several people who were near and dear to us--your father George Vandeman,
HMS Richards Jr., and also a man who worked behind the scenes at our studios
for many years--Eddy Pullen. Then there's LaVerne Tucker from The Quiet
Hour, Phillip Ramsey, who worked with you upstairs, and others. LONNIE: Ken and Connie, in recent months both of you have experienced deep personal loss. Connie with your dad, Ken my dear buddy and your brother Herold. Of course your own dad a few years ago, and your grandchild Jeffrey. Tell us a little about what the hope of the resurrection means in the light of loss and death. KEN: Well, Lonnie without the hope of resurrection I would be of all persons most miserable. I think that I have a wonderful hope that affects me in many ways, but it affects me emotionally that I have this hope. It helps too stabilize me emotionally, and also I believe that it helps me healthwise. LONNIE: Explain a little about that. KEN: Well, positive thoughts, positive people, I believe live longer. We can interview some doctor, but I think the people that habitually think positively and have happy thoughts are people that have an advantage. I think they have more endorphins. LONNIE: Hmmm KEN: And they live longer. That's the Richards theory. LONNIE: Not just a theological perspective. There's practical and tangible KEN: Oh, absolutely. Sure, you know that people that go to church on average, at least in this country live longer than those who don't and I think that's part of the picture. They pray, they have trust in God, they have hope, and they have more positive things to think about. So, sure, it affects the health. LONNIE: Connie, I remember the day that we laid your dad to sleep. How, just before we said the final benediction the sun seemed to split the clouds and in that blazing glory lit up that mountain beside his resting place. It was absolutely stunning to see a photograph that someone happened to take. You've been to that site, both on sunshiny days and you go there to spend some time on cloudy days. It's not a secret that you're of a different generation than Ken comes from. Tell us about what does the resurrection now mean to you. Does it mean anything different than before you lost your dad? CONNIE: Oh, absolutely, Lonnie and I think when you talk about that picture, someone did snap that picture and I look at it and see that mountain ablaze with color. Before dad passed away, I had no idea. The resurrection was one of the doctrines that I believed in. It was something that as a Seventh-day Adventist Christian, I looked forward to Jesus coming and I could extend words of comfort to people that were grieving and say "We're going to see your loved one again." Not until I experienced it myself, I think about the resurrection every day of my life now. I didn't think about it before. It is like Ken said, a blessed hope. I think that people that have that hope will live longer and are going to be happier people. Yes, we grieve the loss of our loved ones. I miss Dad on a daily basis, but I also think of the resurrection. When I go and visit his grave, which I've been doing a lot lately, I think that's part of the grieving process, I think of that day when he will wake up in that beautiful spot and Jesus will come again. It will be a wonderful, incredible reunion and I'm just so happy that I have that hope. LONNIE: I find my own emotions overwhelmed here, but do you ever pause to think about people who don't have that hope? Think about where will they be? CONNIE: Ken said it earlier, he would be a miserable person. Didn't you? KEN: Absolutely. I was talking to a religion professor at a graduate school right here in Southern California awhile back and we got to talking about human existence after death and I asked him very directly, "Do you believe that you personally are going to be around after you die?" He said "Well, for me death if just like stepping out into the darkness and taking your chances." But Lonnie, we've got something better than that. When I'm about to die, read to me from Romans 8. LONNIE: Who shall separate us from the love of Christ. I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, neither anything else in all creation will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord CONNIE: What a precious, precious promise. Just like the resurrection. LONNIE: Thank you Ken and Connie for being willing to share on that very personal level what the resurrection story means to you. Seeing beyond the grave and seeing even beyond Jesus earthly ministry. That's what helps us make sense out of life because Jesus came once to give his life in sacrifice, but He's coming back to give His eternal life to all who will receive him. MUSIC 1:"When He Comes Again", Glad, from The Symphony Project CD CONNIE: "When He comes again." It's the hope
of all who put their trust in Jesus. That was Glad singing "When
He Comes Again." SERMON: Folded Graveclothes LONNIE: I remember it clearly. The first time I stood
in line to take my turn—alone—and step inside the tomb. Over in Jerusalem.
In a Garden. I'll never forget it as long as I live. There's no way you
can look into that empty tomb and remain the same. Jeannie and I were awestruck to go to the Holy Land our very first time exactly 20 years ago. Thrilled to see Egypt, land of the Pharaohs. The pyramids! The Sphinx. The Cairo Museum. King Tut. But that wasn't what I found most profoundly impressive. It was something else—with far deeper, cosmic significance. No, it wasn't the "tug" on my heartstrings in old Nazareth, where Jesus spent his boyhood years. I'll never forget that. But no, it wasn't that. Nor the unforgettable Sabbath spent in the Shepherd's Fields, sheep baa-ing in the background. It was like a dream, singing Christmas carols-- "O Little Town of Bethlehem," and "Away in A Manger"-- in Bethlehem. But that wasn't the most memorable. Nor even the real,
authentic storm on the Sea of Galilee. Where Jesus stood and calmed the
wind and the rain and the sea, with "Peace! Be Still!" Actually
it happened to us, too! The sea suddenly became calm as glass, with a
gorgeous rainbow. True story. No. The most profound climax to my Holy Land pilgrimage was actually a lot simpler. Quieter. It involved ... well, nothing! That's right. Emptiness. A void. Let me explain. It all began by retracing the steps of Jesus on that fateful Easter Passion Week. First, walking down the steep little hill of the Mt. of Olives, then slipping inside a private garden in Gethsemane. A garden where 2,000-year-old olive trees still keep their silent vigil today, as when they wept heavy dew drops as the Savior of the world on that Thursday paschal night fell to the ground. He clutched the cold ground and sweat drops of blood as if to keep Himself from being drawn further from His Father. Staggering further inside the Garden, he cried out, "O My Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me. Nevertheless not My will, but Thine be done." Salvation trembled in the balance as Jesus went to the depths of eternal punishment to pay the supreme price of sin--separation from His Father. I wept in that Garden. Wept as I followed our guide at a distance as we re-traced Jesus' steps along the Via Dolorosa, the Way of the Cross. Down under the city we climbed—suddenly we were in Pilate's Judgment Hall. The very pavement where Roman soldiers gambled and rolled the dice as they cast lots for His seamless garment. Then finally. . . Golgotha. Calvary. Suddenly I was
standing there. The place of the skull. Ah! This was the place. I can
hardly tell the story. I was there. . . [Sing: On a hill far away. Stood
an old rugged cross....] Finally. My moment of truth. THE place. And behold there was a great earthquake: for the angel of the Lord descended from heaven, and came and rolled back the stone and sat upon it. Then the angel said: Son of God, come forth. Thy Father calls thee. Nothing in all history ever matched what happened then. Just as He had promised, Jesus could and did walk right
through death! But listen. There's more. Doctor Luke points out in His
Gospel something very significant. An interesting detail. John mentions
it, too. The "folded graves clothes." Peter...ran unto the sepulchre; and stooping down, he beheld the linen clothes laid by themselves, and departed, wondering in himself at that which was come to pass." The disciple John tells it this way (JOHN 20:5, 7): He and Peter raced for the tomb after Mary Magdalene. John says we ran, both together: ... And ...stooping down, and looking
in, saw the linen clothes lying... Folded grave clothes. Profound insight. As I stood there
inside that empty tomb looking at the empty ledge where the linen grave
clothes had lain, I experienced personally the Easter story anew. They're
not there. He's gone. The tomb is empty. And the light dawned for me,
too. Because listen! I. The world emerged from the darkness of sin! The Easter
Story is the pivotal hinge of the Drama of the Ages and the entire story
of redemption. Sadly, some this Easter will focus on chocolate Easter eggs and bunny rabbits rather than the resurrection. What about you? This Easter, will you take a peek again inside that empty tomb with Peter and John. See the neatly folded graveclothes there on the ledge? The good news is this: through those folded graves clothes we Christians SHARE in Christ's resurrection victory! Today! Paul says in Romans 6--- we, too, are literally raised with Christ. That's right! We've won, too! Like the little boy at the Super Bowl, when the TV cameras zoomed in on live television, he was there with the 49er fans. Jumping up and down, this little kid was shouting: "We've won! We've won!" \ He wasn't a member of the team. Probably didn't even live in San Francisco. Yet 49er fans know when the 49ers win the Super Bowl we too can rejoice in a victory with which we associate ourselves! It's OUR victory, too. Paul says this Easter we can live in joy and triumph, too. We can shout, "We've won! " over the victory accomplished by the Super Bowl Star of superstars, Jesus Christ, King of Kings and Lord of Lords on Calvary 2000 years ago. The question today is, "have YOU made this victory YOUR victory?" Have you claimed it? And joined in the festivities? Put it on as your personal souvenir tee-shirt — or life jacket would be a better term. I remember reading about two friends whose boat upset in a treacherous river. There were two life jackets. But only one of them had his jacket on. Now, when they both overturned and were thrown into the swirling, sucking, whirlpools, the life jacket instantly brought one of those men to the surface. But his friend never came up. Christ's death and resurrection, those "folded
graveclothes," are like a life jacket. But friend, listen to me:
Christ's death and resurrection, like that life jacket, WON'T SAVE YOU
unless by faith you put Him on! Unless you personally invite Jesus to
apply His saving rescue, His victory to your life. I am come that you might have life, and that you might have it more abundantly. This Easter weekend Jesus wants to reach out to you right now while you are listening to this broadcast. He wants to change your life forever. Not just forgive your sins. He wants to make the story of Easter come alive as Springtime by renewing your whole life. Renewing your nature. The real message of Easter and resurrection is that Jesus Christ came not only to die for us and erase our past and forgive us. The Good News of the Gospel is He rose and lives victorious TODAY so that He today, RIGHT NOW can EMPOWER us by His Holy Spirit. And change us so radically old things pass away and all things become new. 2 Cor 5:17, Paul says, we literally become "a new creation." The rest of the story, as our friend Paul Harvey would say, is "Christ the Lord is risen TODAY—in my life!" Hallelujah! Can you sing it? From experience? Then let this be our constant theme,
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