The Resurrection of Our Lord: Vigil
of Easter
April 4, 2026
Text: Mark
16:1-8
Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen, indeed! Alleluia!
This is the night... Of death succumbing to resurrection and
life. The great passing through
the valley of the shadow, then, coming up and out. The drowning and death of Old Adam. The emerging and arising of the new man, the New
Creation in Christ. Darkness to light. Repentance and faith. Mortification of the flesh. Growth in the Spirit’s fruits. Out with the old and dying and dead. In the with the new and living and
eternal. In foreshadowing, and
accomplished fact. In delivery of the
gifts, and following in His train. This
is the night.
This is the night... Creation
out of nothing. God’s almighty Let
there be! And so, there is. Formed and filled. And it is good. In fact, very good. And man and woman. Male and female. Fashioned in God’s own image and
likeness. Tending the Garden. Stewarding creation. Having dominion over fish and birds and
livestock and every creeping thing that creeps upon the earth. Be fruitful and multiply and fill the
earth and subdue it. This is the
night.
But we know what happened. The beguiling serpent. The woman deceived. The man, silent, when he should have spoken. Taking and eating what God had
forbidden. Not good. Not good. A Promise, yes. The woman’s Seed, crushed, but crushing the
serpent’s head. Yet, before you know it,
a brother’s blood crying from the ground.
Adam’s seed, corrupt... all.
And so, a Flood. Of worldwide
proportions. The death of all the
living. Except one man and his family. Our father, Noah. His sons.
Their wives. Saved in an
ark. Eight souls in all. And pairs of animals in which is the breath
of life. A starting over. A reset for the God who is grieved, and death
for humanity, hellbent on self-destruction.
But delivery through water, to life, for the one who is righteous by
faith in the LORD, his God. And another
Promise. The bow in the clouds. God points His weapon away from
earth. Never again shall there be a
Flood to destroy the world. God’s solemn
oath. This is the night.
Israel, trapped, with their backs
against the sea. Before them, slavery
and certain death. Behind them, a watery
grave. But there is the pillar of fire,
God’s Glory. And there is the rod, and
the Word of God. Lift up your
staff. Stretch out your hand over the
sea and divide it. A strong east
wind. The Read Sea parts. Israel crosses through the water on dry
ground. But Egypt pursues. The hoards of Pharaoh, with chariot and
horse. Moses, stretch out your hand again. And the waters of the sea come crashing
down. Water destroys the enemies
of God. Water saves the children
of God. “I will sing to the LORD, for
he has triumphed gloriously; the horse and his rider he has thrown into the sea”
(Ex. 15:1; ESV). The passing through. The coming up, and out. To freedom.
To life. And communion with
God. This is the night.
Baptism by water. And Baptism by fire. Three faithful men who will not bow
the knee. Who will not prostrate
themselves before a pagan idol. They
will pay the price. And they are
willing. Shadrach, Meshach, and
Abednego. Nebuchadnezzar’s fury. A fiery furnace seven times hotter. God will deliver us, O king, from your
hand. But even if not, we will not bow
down. And so, bound. Cast down.
In smoke and flame. Even the
executioners are killed. But now, the
men are unbound, and unhurt, walking around in the midst of the
fire. And who is that with them? We only cast three. That fourth One appears like a son of the
gods! He is, as it happens, the
Angel of the LORD. Which is to say,
not a son of the gods, but the Son of God!
God will deliver us, O king, from your hand. And He does. That is precisely what this God
does for those who belong to Him.
And so, passing through. And
coming up, and out. To freedom
and life. This is the night.
The Vigil of Easter, from ancient
times, was a night of Baptisms and Confirmations (we don’t have any ready to go
this year, but it’s always fun when we do).
The passing through water.
The death and defeat of God’s enemies (and yours!). The devil.
Old Adam in you. Your sin. Your guilt.
The coming up, and out of the blest baptismal water. Forgiven.
Born anew. Washed clean. Clothed with Christ, and His righteousness. A New Creation. To live by faith. Image restored. Likeness reclaimed. And then, the blessing of the Spirit, as the
faith is confessed. On pain of death (we
ask even our children... are you willing to die, rather than fall away
from this faith?). A Baptism of
fire. Because, do what they might,
the world and its prince cannot kill us.
Our God will deliver us from their wicked hands. And He does. Always. Even if it be through suffering and
martyrdom.
Because, this is the night. Dissipating into Day. What do the women find, as that Day
dawns? The stone rolled back. No Jesus in the tomb, but a young man,
dressed all in white, seated on the right side, like he is waiting for
them. “Do not be alarmed,” the
angel says. “You seek Jesus of
Nazareth, who was crucified. He has
risen; he is not here. See the place
where they laid him” (Mark 16:6). It
is the first Easter sermon. And the women
are the first to hear it. They are not
to keep it bottled up, this news, as though it is a secret to themselves. Go, tell His disciples. And especially Peter. He’ll meet you in Galilee. You’ll see Him for yourselves!
And they flee in fear. Trembling and astonishment. Because the night is over. Everything has changed. Jesus took hold of the night by its ears
and leapt with it into the abyss.
It is the death of the darkness forever.
But, for Jesus... He was just passing through. Through the night. Through death. And now, He has come up, and out!
In this moment, all the women have
is the preaching of it, still reverberating in their ears, and in their
hearts. But the angel promised that
soon, they would see Him.
And that is us, tonight. This is the night when we hear
the preaching. The Good News that Christ
Jesus is risen from the dead. Not the
sense or sight of it. Just a sermon. Reverberating in our ears, and in our
hearts. But also, a Promise. We will see Him soon. And, indeed, we will. The Risen One is coming. This is the night, but soon, the
Day. It is, with us, as with
all the saints of old. We’re passing
through. Then up, and out. With Jesus.
With our Lord. It is the grand
old story. It is our story. And here is the climax, the earthshaking
culmination of all that came before... the sum and substance of our eternal
future: Christ is risen! He is
risen, indeed! Alleluia! Up and out, and into
resurrection life. In the Name of the
Father, and of the Son X, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.