The Dead Stay Dead, Don’t They?

The Dead Stay Dead, Don’t They?

Growing up in rural Michigan, I was accustomed to seeing roadkill.  In fact, through the years I accidentally contributed to it.  The overgrown ditches along the roads, and the farm fields interspersed with occasional woodlots, produced plenty of critters to meet untimely deaths along the highways.  The most common casualties: opossums, raccoons, squirrels, and the dreaded malodorous skunks. 

In urban Tacoma where we lived for three decades, roadkill was much less common.  Though there was much more traffic, there were far fewer potential victims. 

Now that we live in central Michigan, we are once again surrounded by fields and woods.  Actually, more woods than fields.  Which means that animal corpses litter the freeways that cut through the forested country.  Unfortunately, many of the dead are a larger version of mammal than what I would see as a youth – deer. 

Now obviously, the collision that killed them wasn’t beneficial to the deer.  But neither was it beneficial to the vehicles that hit them!

Around here, this is cause for healthy concern.  And rightfully so!  In just the 9 months we have lived here, at least six people from the two congregations I serve have hit deer.  Each time, it meant thousands of dollars of repairs.  At least once, the deer totaled the vehicle. 

I did a quick online search, and found that in 2022, almost 60,000 vehicle-deer crashes occurred across Michigan.  Obviously, some areas of the state (like where we live) are more conducive to such incidents.  Which is why I have actually been advised by members to pay extra for zero deductible collision insurance since it is almost a given that sooner or later my wife or I will have an unexpected and undesired run-in with a deer around here.

This is certainly a significant reason that deer hunting tags are so readily available and reasonable in this state.  The herd keeps growing, creating an epidemic of deer-vehicle collisions.  Hunting is one of the most effective curbs of the population.  (To put this in perspective, well over a quarter-million deer were harvested in Michigan this last season!)  And it barely seems to have made a dent in the numbers.

In the eleven miles of freeway I travel between my congregations, I am comfortable stating that there is an average of at least one dead deer per mile lying alongside the road.  Now they aren’t along every mile, but some miles have multiple corpses.

Which actually is what sparked the idea for this post.  As I was driving to the Good Friday service at the more northern church I serve, I was once again noting all the deer bodies strewn along the shoulders.  Some of those animals are more recent casualties.  However, I realized that I had seen some of those dead deer already last fall before the snow fell and covered everything.

Those animals were dead in 2023, and they’re still dead!

And so it is with all mortal creatures.  When the body dies, physical life comes to an end.  Eventually death always wins.  And when death wraps its tentacles around something for the final time, it doesn’t let go.

The animals that lose their lives along the highways never find them again.  The bodies so reverently and ceremoniously laid to rest in the cemeteries never wake up.  The dead stay dead.  There is no exception to this rule. 

Except one. 

Observing all those deceased deer on Good Friday, the day that Jesus died and his dead body was laid in a tomb, was striking.  Those deer, like all other creatures that die, remain dead.  Jesus also actually died, but death’s horrific grasp could not hold the Son of God!

When the third morning arrived, Jesus threw off the shackles of death, and emerged from a condition no other person can break, and from a tomb no other corpse could exit.  But then, he wasn’t a corpse anymore.  He was the living, almighty, immortal, and victorious Lord of all, and the Savior of sinners.

And he still is!

Easter is such a joyful morning because the Lord who took on our iniquity and paid for it – horribly but wonderfully – is alive again.  His task is done; full forgiveness is won; salvation for sinners is secured. 

And once – just this once! – the Dead did not stay dead.  The One who was dead is now alive!

But Easter is also joyous for another reason.  The fact that Jesus did not stay dead means that you and I and all believers in Him won’t stay dead either!  Amazing, yes.  But true nonetheless! 

When Jesus returns on the Last Day, death’s bond will finally be fully broken … for all the dead!

The earth will yield the countless bodies deposited in it through the millennia.  The bodies of believers will be joined with their souls and welcomed into God’s presence forever; the bodies and souls of those who rejected the Savior banished from him.

The principle that the dead stay dead holds true.  At least, for everyone besides Jesus.  And at least, for everyone until Jesus returns.  But thanks be to Him, the Living One established a new principle.  Because Jesus did not stay dead, you and I won’t stay dead either. 

Amazing!  Astounding!  Wonderful!  And absolutely true!

The One who was dead is now alive … forever and ever!  And because he lives, we live too.  Not only now, and not only spiritually, but spiritually AND physically forever and ever with Him who defeated death!

How comforting and encouraging to know our future is not death … but life!  And all because of Jesus, our living Lord. 

Happy Easter, everyone!

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

(Acts 2:22-24) – from Peter’s Pentecost sermon
“Fellow Israelites, listen to this: Jesus of Nazareth was a man accredited by God to you by miracles, wonders and signs, which God did among you through him, as you yourselves know.  This man was handed over to you by God’s deliberate plan and foreknowledge; and you, with the help of wicked men, put him to death by nailing him to the cross. 

But God raised him from the dead, freeing him from the agony of death, because it was impossible for death to keep its hold on him. 

(1 Corinthians 15:20-22, 54-56)
But Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep.  For since death came through a man, the resurrection of the dead comes also through a man.  For as in Adam all die, so in Christ all will be made alive.  But each in turn: Christ, the firstfruits; then, when he comes, those who belong to him.

54 When the perishable has been clothed with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality, then the saying that is written will come true: “Death has been swallowed up in victory.” “Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?”  The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.

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