The War against Death
1 Corinthians 15:54-56 “Death has been
swallowed up in victory.” 55 “Where, O death, is your
victory? Where, O death, is your sting?” 56 The sting of
death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. 57 But
thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
Some
of our 3rd grade boys know that I’m as geeky as they are. They’ve
seen the various Marvel superhero movies. They asked me to talk about Avengers: Endgame which opens April 26.
It is the most anticipated film of the year. Fans – our 3rd grade boys
included – have been waiting a year since the events of Avengers: Infinity War.
If
you haven’t seen Infinity War yet,
here is my spoiler warning – at the end of the movie, half of the superheroes disappear
into dust.
In
Infinity War, Thanos, the mad tyrant,
is wearing the Infinity Gauntlet. He snaps his fingers and half the people in
the entire universe disintegrate into dust. Superheroes like Black Panther,
Spider-Man, Doctor Strange, Winter Soldier, Peter Quill, Groot and Drax, and
others turn into dust. … They are all gone.
End Game is all about the remaining superheroes like Captain
America, Iron Man, Thor, Hulk, Captain Marvel and Ant-Man going to war against
Thanos. They team up to try to reverse the death of their friends. They are
attempting to bring about a resurrection.
Easter
is all about Jesus going to war against the mad tyrant of Death. He didn’t team
up with anyone. It was him and him alone. It was a lonely battle. At the end of
Good Friday, it appeared as if Death had won. Humanity had to wait until the
third day to learn that Death had been reversed and Jesus was victorious.
Death
is not a made-up comic book villain that can wipe out half the life on the
earth. Death is a real tyrant that has claimed all but a handful of people over
several millennia.
Although
it is hard for us to imagine, there was a time when there was no Death. God had
created everything in the universe with only his Word. He then created Adam out
of dust and his wife, Eve, from Adam’s rib. God breathed life into the crown of
his creation. There was no Death yet, for God looked at his creation and
declared everything “very good” (Genesis 1:31).
Some
time after the universe was born in perfection, Death was born out of its
imperfection. Even though we won’t find a birth certificate for Death, we know
the exact moment it was conceived. “When the woman saw the fruit of the tree
was good for food and pleasing to the eye … she took some and ate it. She also
gave some to her husband, who was with her, and he ate it” (Genesis 3:6,7).
Death drew its first breath when the living God pronounced its birth when he
told Adam and Eve, “Dust you are and to dust you will return” (Genesis 3:19).
From
that moment on, Death had the power to disintegrate people into dust.
Death’s
first victims were whatever pets God killed to clothe his children with their
pelts (Genesis 3:21).
Death
did not stop with animals. Its first human trophy was Abel.
Death
was not satisfied with one kill. It hungered for more. In the flood, Death came
to all the living except for eight people and the land animals God had spared
in the ark.
Death
rained down on the wicked of Sodom and Gomorrah.
Death
played with the plagues. It enjoyed the loud wailing from every Egyptian home with
the plague on the firstborn. It relished the waters of the Red Sea washing over
the drowned Egyptian horses and charioteers.
Death
is no restrictor of persons, age, nationalities, positions or faiths. Death
came to the home of the baby boys in Nazareth, John the Baptist in prison, King
Ahab on the battlefield, the Israelites in the desert and the Canaanites in Jericho.
Death
is very creative in how it captures its victims. It turned a woman into salt.
It killed a giant with a stone between the eyes. It opened the earth to swallow
rebels. It claimed those who were killed by a judge swinging a donkey’s
jawbone.
Death
does not snap its fingers and have half the world’s population disappear in a
moment. It is much more subtle. It will take one here through cancer or a group
of people with an accident or a multitude in a war.
Death
is competent and capable. It is efficient and effective. It will eventually
come to all creation.
Death’s
record is impressive. It is not flawless, though.
While
all humans drowned in the worldwide deluge, Noah and his family were kept safe
and dry inside the ark.
Shadrach,
Meshach and Abednego escaped from the fiery furnace without even the smell of
smoke on them.
Jonah
escaped the depths of the sea with the small of fish vomit on him.
Death
reached for them but could not claim them.
Enoch
didn’t die but walked with God.
Elijah
didn’t die but was carried to heaven in a fiery chariot.
Death
reached for them but had its hand slapped away.
Death
captured Lazarus, Jairus’ daughter and the widow of Nain’s son. When Jesus
showed up at their funerals, Death was forced to release them from its dark
prison.
When
Jesus yielded his spirit to Death on the cross, the earth shook and the rocks split.
Many saints who were asleep in their tombs awoke and walked into the Holy City
to be reunited with their families.
But
Death was patient. Eventually, it reclaimed all those who had escaped its
clutches the first time.
Death
was waiting to claim its greatest Victim – Jesus Christ, the Lord of life.
Death
and the Lord of life had met numerous times before. It was the Lord who closed
Noah and his family into the ark to escape Death’s watery tomb (Genesis 7:16).
It was the Lord who was in the fiery furnace with the three men protecting them
from Death’s fiery touch (Daniel 3:25). It was the Lord who provided a great
fish to swallow Jonah to emerge from the depths of Death’s Sheol (grave) (Jonah
1:17).
The
Lord walked with Enoch (Genesis 5:24) and sent the fiery chariot to bring
Elisha to heaven (2 Kings 2:11).
The
Lord Jesus came to Lazarus’ tomb (John 11:38), Jairus’ daughter’s bed (Mark
5:40) and the widow of Nain’s son’s coffin (Luke 7:14).
The
Lord of life was very familiar with Death. But as God, he could not be touched
by Death. That all changed when the Lord of life took on human life and breath
at his birth as a man. Now, for the first time in human history, Death could
take down God!
Death
tried to seize Jesus as an infant. King Herod had the baby boys of Bethlehem
slaughtered. But the Lord escaped to Egypt.
Death
tried to capture Jesus in his hometown of Nazareth. A Nazarene crowd tried
throwing Jesus over a cliff. But the Lord walked right through the crowd.
Death
tried to sneak up on Jesus with the evil intent of the Jewish religious
leaders. The Pharisees and chief priests considered Jesus a threat, so they secretly
planned to kill him. But Jesus walked among them safely because the religious leaders
were afraid of the crowds.
Death
tried and tried and tried. But it wasn’t until the Lord of life himself decided
it was time to die that he allowed Death to claim its greatest prize. Death,
along with its allies of Satan and his demons, rejoiced when the Roman soldiers
killed Jesus with extreme efficiency.
On
the afternoon of Good Friday, Death claimed its greatest Victim! It had won!
The Lord of life was dead! God was buried in the tomb!
At
least, that’s what Death thought.
The
holy writers are very clear that Death did not kill Jesus. Jesus allowed
himself to die.
Matthew
reports that Jesus “gave up his spirit” (Matthew 27:50). It wasn’t taken from
him.
Luke
reports that Jesus said, “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit” before he
breathed his last (Luke 23:46). Death did not grab Jesus’ spirit. He willingly
gave it to his Father.
John
reports that when sin was paid for and Satan’s head was crushed, Jesus said, “It
is finished” (John 19:30). Death did not finish off Jesus. Jesus finished
everything he was born to do. Then he allowed himself to die.
Death
didn’t quite get it. It thought it had won. The devil and his demons threw a victory
party in hell. Death was the celebrated guest of honor. Then an unwelcome intruder
broke in. Jesus kicked down hell’s gate. He ended the party. He preached to the
spirits in prison (1 Peter 3:19). He made a public spectacle out of all of
them. They all thought they had triumphed over Jesus at the cross. Jesus
preached that he had triumphed over them by the cross (Colossians 2:15).
He
was not a dead Jesus. He was not a damned Jesus. He was a living Jesus! He
extended his hands to show them the wounds of his love. He showed them his pierced
side to show them death had lost. He showed them his torn back and his scarred
head to show them the marks of victory.
Satan
knew. His head had been crushed. The serpent was defanged. The roaring lion was
silenced. The red dragon was defeated by the slain Lamb.
Sin
knew. It had lost its sting. The power of the law was trumped by the power of
the gospel.
Death
knew. Death had been swallowed up in victory. Death was no longer a one-way
ticket to hell. It was turned into a sleep for Christians to wake into the
pleasures of heaven.
All
of hell knew. Now, the world needed to know. Jesus let all the world know when
he burst from his three-day prison on Easter dawn.
Death
still fights us. Death claimed Grandpa with a heart attack. But Grandpa is alive
in heaven with Jesus. Death claimed your child through an accident. But your
baptized child is alive with the Lord, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to
such as these. Death will claim everyone of us at some point. How comforting it
is for us to know that “precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of one
of his saints” (Psalm 116:15).
We
will have to wait and see in Endgame
how the Avengers defeat Thanos and reverse death. We don’t have to wait,
though, with Jesus’ reversal of death. That happened two thousand years ago at
the first Easter.
Death
once taunted all of humanity. Now we taunt death with these words: “Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?” (1
Corinthians 15:55).
“Death has been swallowed up in victory” (1 Corinthians
15:54).
To those who are afraid of the enemy of Death, we remind
them of the One who defeated Death by dying. He claimed victory over Death by
rising from the dead. Now we comfort Christians while reminding Death: “Christ
is risen! He is risen indeed!”
Thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our
Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.
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