The day after Christmas is always a rough one for me. While
the tree and decorations may still be up, it just feels different. The day I’d been looking forward to for weeks has now
come and gone. It’s a melancholy day, full of the memories of the day we just
celebrated but with the tinge of sadness that comes with something being over.
The day after Easter is not the same at all. I went back to
work, and besides the “How was your Easter?” conversations and a few flickering
thoughts of the past weekend, it was a Monday like any other.
It shouldn’t have been though. Easter, the resurrection of Jesus, should be the biggest deal of all. We celebrate Easter
not just because the actual physical resurrection of Jesus coming back from the
dead happened once and is something to be celebrated, but because it’s the one-time
thing that should affect everything we do.
The world tells us to live to the full because we only live
once. Have fun, throw caution to the wind, don’t be bothered about how your
actions will affect your future. But as Christians we know that’s not the case—not
only do our actions today affect our earthly tomorrow, but our ultimate
tomorrow as well.
Therein lays the beauty of Easter when we allow it to become
something we experience every day: the promise of Jesus’ resurrection is that
it can reorient everything in our lives.
Easter every day means giving up the things that are no
longer good for us.
Easter every day means letting go of the idea that what we
do doesn’t affect our future.
Easter every day means leaving behind what is easy for what
is best.
When they saw him for the first time after his death, Jesus’
disciples were full of joy and amazement that
he was alive and standing before them. It’s the same joy and amazement we’re
privileged to have all the time, because we know that Jesus is alive and active
and transforming us. Easter every day reorients all of our desires so that they
fall in line with our ultimate desire following Jesus more closely. It’s not an
instantaneous change, but a slow, gradual conforming of our lives to be more
like Christ’s.
There shouldn’t be a “day after Easter letdown” nor should
the day after be just another day, because the importance of Easter should be
woven through the fabric of our everyday lives.
[Brianna DeWitt attends Encounter Church and lives, works, and writes in Grand Rapids, MI. You can see more of her musings on her personal blog at http://awritespot.wordpress.com and on Twitter at @bwitt722.]