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			 Fascinating, isn’t it? So many of mankind’s best 
			stories involve tales of supreme sacrifice. And when they happen to 
			be true stories they evoke a powerful response in us. A soldier on 
			the battlefield dies while saving his brothers. A teacher throws his 
			body between his students and a hail of bullets fired by a crazed 
			gunman. A firefighter rushes into an inferno to save a single life 
			even when she knows she’ll never make it out alive. We love heroes. 
			 
			And well we should since we are confronted, even assaulted, every 
			day with real stories of tragedy, disaster, and humanly-perpetrated 
			evil. Look around – death is everywhere. In the news. In the movies 
			we watch. In the games we play. And, sadly, it even invades our 
			‘safe’ places. Death is greedy. It never seems to get its fill. 
			Death never takes a holiday. Accidents, illnesses, overdoses, 
			mass-murders and natural catastrophes consume lives without so much 
			as a pause. Death is unbiased. It doesn’t care if you are rich or 
			poor or what shade of pigment your skin reflects. Death refuses to 
			respect borders. No wall ever built can stop it. It doesn’t take 
			much imagination to personify death. It is a monster. It’s real. And 
			it’s coming for us. 
			
			  
			Any wonder, then, that we should invent hero stories? Who will 
			defend us? Who will shield us? Who will save us from the monster? 
			Enter the hero to take up the sword and slay the dragon. We need 
			heroes. But when it comes to facing the monster of death itself, 
			every hero eventually falls. Nobody wins a chess match with death. 
			At least no ordinary human can. So we create heroes that are “super” 
			(more than) human. Even ancient stories are told of gods and 
			god-human hybrids that die and then return to life. DC Comics wasn’t 
			the first one to kill off Superman only to bring him back to life a 
			while later.  
            [to top of second column]  | 
            
             
            
			  Oops. I did it again, didn’t I? Sorry if I 
			spoiled it, but yes, in the 2017’s Justice League the whole world is 
			again in danger and a team of heroes come to the conclusion that 
			they can’t defeat the enemy without Superman. So they use a magic 
			“box” (aka alien technology) to reanimate him. The day is saved when 
			death loses its grip on earth’s favorite adopted son. 
			 
			I’m not trying to sound like a crotchety old movie critic. I enjoy a 
			good superhero flick as much as the next guy. But these stories are 
			just shadows of a greater story. It goes something like this: Death 
			has terrorized humanity from Adam to now. God sent His Son to live a 
			human life. We, all of us who don’t like God running our lives, 
			ensured that He died an exceedingly painful human death. But just 
			when it looked like death was even stronger than the Son of God, He 
			came back! He arose and proved He is greater! And He has shown us 
			the way that we, too, can share His victory over the grave. Jesus 
			said, 
  
				
					| “For my Father’s will 
					is that everyone who looks to the Son and believes in him 
					shall have eternal life, and I will raise them up at the 
					last day.” 
					John 6:40  | 
				 
			 
			As I said a few paragraphs ago, the best hero 
			stories are the true ones. The rest may make for good drama, good 
			television, or (with enough CGI and special effects) adapt well for 
			film, but there is only one Hero who truly defeated death. Christ is 
			risen! He is risen, indeed!   |