The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1961, Side 36

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1961, Side 36
34 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Summer 1961 "Audi, la, 9 am auth if.au alwatf" An editorial in New-Church Messenger of Cincinnati, Ohio, the official organ of The General Convention of the New Jerusalem in the United States of America, which is now in its 181st year of publication. The editor, by whom this editorial is written, is BJORN JOHANNSON, son of Johann Johannson of Akra and Hensel, North Dakota. —Ed. The above words with which the Gospel of Matthew closes is the core of the Easter message. For the disciples of the Lord, Calvary spelled defeat, frustration, hopelessness. Without their leader they were lost, and the dreams they had built around Him seemed but a delusion. Then as this frightened group gathered behind barred doors (John 20:19-23), the Lord stood in the midst of them and said, “Peace be unto you.” Slowly the realization dawned upon them that their Lord is with them, that all empires cannot kill Him. He assigned to them the biggest task that any group has ever been called upon to perform: to go throughout the world to proclaim the kingdom. And thev did not refuse the commission. Fear and frustration gave way to courage and confidence. Now they knew that the Lord was with them. He breathed upon them and said, “Receive ye the Holy Ghost.” As the Holy Spirit He would ever be with them to sustain, guide and protect them. “And, lo, I am with you alway”, is the heart of the Easter message today, and it is as charged with peace and as- surance for the Christian of this cen- tury as it was for the disciples. Today’s world is a frightened world, even a cynical and pessimistic world. To many the dream of the good life seems a delusion, a mere product of wishful thinking. The Messiah of the modern man, Science, upon which so many hopes have been built, now threatens to become a Frankenstein monster who is prepared to rend his creator. Such a world cannot know jjeace. Not until it hears the gentle voice of the Glorified Humanity, the Risen Christ, saying, “And, lo, I am with you alway”. It is significant that when the Lord appeared unto his diciples, His first words were, “Peace be unto you.” Twice He uttered these words. The emphasis on peace, so deeply associated with that other great Holy Day, Christmas, is generally not prominent in the observance of Easter. Easter is thought of mainly as symbolizing the triumph of truth over falsity, of good over evil, of life over death. But in all these the promise of peace is implicit. For whatever makes for discord and war is destructive of life, and is out of harmony with the purpose of God. The promise of the Risen Christ to be ever with His children is a promise of peace. The Christian of this age surely longs for a sense of the Lord’s abiding presence. He sees powerful forces ar- rayed against Christianity: Atheistic Communism, the reviving missionary zeal of Islam, the acids of modernism, the constantly growing power of a materialistically oriented secularism. At times he may despair. If so it is because he does not recognize the Risen Christ Who stands beside him. This happened even to those devoted followers who were with Him on earth. Mary Magdalene grieving at the tomb did not know Him when first He spoke to her. The Lord walked with two of His followers from Emmaus, but so

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