This year has featured two
unusual alignments between the Christian calendar and the secular calendar. The
first was the coming together of Valentine’s Day and Ash Wednesday on February
14 (click here for a reflection). The second is the coming together of April
Fool’s Day and Easter Sunday on April 1. This will, no doubt, be great fodder
for critics of faith in general and Christianity in particular. “April Fool’s,
this stuff isn’t for real!” Of course, the Christian can easily retort to the
atheist, “April’s Fool’s, this stuff is for
real!” These sorts of jokes and jabs aside, what insight can be gleaned by
bringing together a whimsical, secular, holiday, with the most important feast
day of the Christian year? Let’s first touch base on the meaning of each
observance on its own merits.
April Fool’s Day is an annual invitation to joke, prank,
and pull one over on someone. Unusual newspaper articles, frightening friends
with shocking, but old-fashioned fake news, and so on, often characterize the
largely innocent quality of this holiday. Of course, it’s not really a holiday.
No one gets April Fool’s Day off. Wait! I just received notice that as of 2018
April Fool’s Day will be a federal holiday in the United States and Canada.
Yeah. Long weekend! Party time. Celebration. Oh wait…April Fools! This
observance, while seemingly silly and light-hearted, has not gone without its
controversies. Critics of April’s Fools, and specifically of the sometime
elaborate hoaxes that individuals or organizations put on, decry the waste of
resources and the confusion that ensues from such pranks.
Easter Sunday is the most important day of the Christian
calendar. It is sometimes also referred to as Resurrection Sunday. Both names
are proper, the first by long custom (ancient connotations aside) and the
second being the event the holiday celebrates. Easter Sunday is a national
holiday in many countries with a Christian cultural heritage. For many, Easter
is more about family and candy that it is about the resurrection of a 1st
century Jewish Messiah. For the Christian, Easter is the high point of the
Christian story and speaks of Christ’s victory over the difficulties and
mysterious of sin and death. Christ’s resurrection validates His status as the
long expected one and validates His teachings as worthy of reception. Christ is
the example of what will take place to all who put their trust in Him.
What happens when you put these together? You get the
dangerous invitation to Easter as merely a sentimental occasion with pretty flowers,
fine hats, and in a few places, fuller churches. Pretty flowers, fine hats, and
fuller church are all fine and well. But, if Christians merely gather to smile
and nod at a story they believe to be some sweet sentimental yarn of a nice man
overcoming bad things so that we can be non-dangerously nice to each other,
then we will have missed the message of Easter (for more on that click here)
and settled for foolishness. The joke will be on us. We will have pranked
ourselves. Because Easter rolls away the stone and shows us that the worst of
misguided humanity, in its doing the worst, to a singular shinning life, does
not have the last word. This is not foolishness. This is astonishing and for
over twenty centuries has turned the wisdom of the worldly wise into spiritual
tomfoolery. Don’t be fooled. Christ is Risen!
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