What is your aim as you preach this Easter? In his book, Sacred Rhetoric (p119-120), Michael Pasquarello makes the following comment about Martin Luther:
Luther’s homiletic aim was to demonstrate, by means of the Gospel, that the resurrection is more than an idle tale or a painted picture that evokes admiration and religious sentiment. . . . He hoped that in telling others the Easter story, the presence of the risen Christ might elicit faith’s true confession: “Christ is my Savior and King.”
Let’s not settle for a complacent approach to sermonic purpose as Easter approaches. Why am I preaching this passage on this date to these people? Because it’s Easter, of course! That’s not enough, what do we aim to achieve?
What should the result be for the non-Christian present? Luther wrote, “Although Christians will identify themselves with Judas, Caiaphas, and Pilate – sinful, condemned actors in the Gospel story – there is another who took the sins of humanity on himself when they were hung around his neck. . . . And today, Easter Sunday, when we see him, they are gone; there is only righteousness and life, the Risen Christ who comes to share his gifts.” (Sermons, 125, cited in Pasquarello, 120)
What should our Easter preaching do for Christians? Again, same book, “Christians are now free to look away from their sins, from evil and death, and to fix their gaze upon Christ, which is the logic or grammar of faith.”
What is your aim as you preach this Easter? Be specific. Target your message. Don’t waste a glorious occasion.