What springs to
mind when you hear the word empty? It’s not one of our favourite words is
it? The definition in the dictionary we
have in the house goes like this; “void, containing nothing; devoid of, vacant,
unoccupied; unloaded, destitute, desolate; meaningless, unsubstantial, shadowy;
senseless, inane; without intelligence, ignorant; hungry, unsatisfied.”
If that were not bad enough it goes on
to give some ways in which the word is used, in expressions such as empty-handed, which reminds us of
someone with nothing to call their own, or, what is worse, empty-headed. I guess we’ve
all had to deal with people we could apply that to! Even worse would be to describe somebody as empty-hearted.
As we look at the world around us we
see spiritual emptiness. It is clear
that many people have a void at the centre of their life which they vainly try
to satisfy with the material things that they can buy in the shops they visit. Indeed the whole process of materialism seems
to depend on such an ‘emptiness’. Many
people who are part of that approach to life often look at Christians and think
that we must be empty-headed to believe in an unseen God and live for a
crucified Saviour.
But as Christians we have to own up to
the fact that our faith is based on something empty! Right at the heart of the Christian faith
there is something wonderfully empty. It
is the grave of the Lord Jesus Christ!
If it were still occupied, Christianity would be truly empty. It would be futile. As we celebrate another Easter Day, we
rejoice that the fact that the grave is empty means that Christians, of all
people, have a ‘fullness’ that the world will never give us.
The emptiness of the tomb of the Lord
Jesus is one of the indisputable facts of history. Unlike Mohammed, or any other great religious
figure, there is no corpse and no occupied tomb to visit. Though men for twenty centuries have advanced
other explanations for the emptiness of the tomb, the only one that really
stands up to investigation is that the resurrection of Jesus Christ really
happened. Scared, cowardly disciples,
absent at the cross and dejected for the next two days, are transformed into
fearless preachers of the resurrection, willing to be martyred rather than deny
that it happened. The Apostle Paul
staked his life upon the fact and was willing to refer people who doubted it to
over 500 people who had met the risen Jesus, in his writings (1 Corinthians
15:6). Have you examined the evidence
for this great event?