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			 Please read that again. 
 God loves you.
 
 You are loved. You are loved as the child of God that you are.
 
 And that is the good news of Easter.
 
 There is a tendency in the church to make people about numbers.
 There is a tendency in the church to make people an agenda.
 There is a tendency in the church to make people feel as if they are 
			very much so a ‘sinner’ and not so much as a beloved child of God.
 
 This is not to say we aren’t broken. I’ll be the first to tell you 
			that I am broken…but not beyond repair.
 
 Because at the heart of who I am, at the core of my being, is the 
			good and beautiful child of God that I am. God has gifted us with 
			life and life is to be enjoyed not escaped.
 
 
			 
			This is how Jesus saves. Into the bad news and failures of the world 
			Jesus comes. In the person of Jesus we get the greatest affirmation 
			from God that you matter and that all of this life, here and now, 
			matters. If you weren’t worthy of love, if this world wasn’t meant 
			to be enjoyed, and if life was all about escaping the now for some 
			other world, then there would have been no resurrection.
 
 And here’s the deal about the resurrection of Jesus: what matters is 
			not physical proof or a well-articulated explanation of how 
			resurrection works. God is not interested in facts and numbers. 
			Rather, God is eager to see transformation, which is what 
			resurrection is about.
 
 Resurrection is not resuscitation or reanimation.
 
 Resurrection means life eternal.
 
 But life eternal is not like a change of horses where we ride off 
			into a distant sunset on another stallion. Karl Rahner, the great 
			Jesuit theologian, taught that the resurrection means that we become 
			all we could ever have been. All the limits of this life are lifted 
			and we are all we could ever hope and desire to be.
 
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            Friend, God has given us life now. Each day God has gifted us with 
			an opportunity to rise from our slumbers and practice resurrection. 
			Easter then, to quote Thomas Merton, is not a day to be compared to 
			the Fourth of July; although it is in truth the celebration of our 
			freedom to be ourselves. Instead, Easter is the season, all fifty 
			days of it, to celebrate and embrace life now. 
 Let me extend an invitation to you this Easter season. Know that 
			you, “Yes, you!” are invited to First Presbyterian Church because, 
			well, you are full of life and possess the gifts needed to bring 
			transformation to our little corner of the world. Know that you, 
			“Yes, you!” are not merely a number and definitely not an agenda, 
			but instead you are a necessary voice in the Kingdom of God.
 
 The Easter season is about celebrating the very real truth that 
			death is not what awaits us at the end. Nor is Easter about a single 
			conversion so that we may have life after this life. Easter, friend, 
			is about having life now—the life God has longed for you and for us 
			to have.
 
 So, would you consider sharing life with us?
 
 After all, as one theologian has noted, “The crowning evidence that 
			Jesus was alive was not a vacant grave, but a spirit-filled 
			fellowship. Not a rolled-away stone, but a carried-away church.”
 
 This Easter season, come get carried away with us Presbyterians.
 
 God knows the party isn’t the same without you!
 
            First Presbyterian Church of Lincoln301 Pekin St.
 Lincoln,
 732-6141
 
            
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