The Stone Rolled Away: Easter and the God Who Reverses Injustice
Matthew 28:1-10 • 1 Corinthians 15:3-8
The resurrection as God's reversal of unjust death, the stone rolled away from systems of oppression, and the politics of new creation
Missional-Theological
The mission of God in the world
God Reversed an Unjust Execution
Oscar Romero's Last Mass
On March 24, 1980, Archbishop Oscar Romero was assassinated while celebrating the Eucharist in San Salvador — shot through the heart by a government-backed death squad. The day before, he had said: "If they kill me, I shall arise in the Salvadoran people." He was echoing Easter. The powers killed him. But his witness rose. His words rose. The movement for justice in El Salvador rose. The empire always underestimates the resurrection.
Source: Archbishop Oscar Romero, March 23-24, 1980
Rolling the Stone from Every Tomb
The Politics of New Creation
Applications
- 1See the resurrection as political. God reversed an unjust execution. That means every unjust system is on notice.
- 2Roll a stone this week. Confront one system of death — volunteer, advocate, speak up, show up. The resurrection is a mandate.
- 3Build new creation community. Share a meal with someone different from you. Welcome the stranger. Practice the politics of Jesus.
- 4Hold together the personal and the political. The resurrection changes your heart AND your engagement with the world. Both. Always both.
Prayer Suggestions
- God of justice and resurrection — You reversed the empire's verdict. You rolled the stone placed by the powerful. You raised the one they killed. Do it again.
- Open every tomb that power has sealed. The tombs of poverty, racism, violence, and ecological destruction. Roll the stones.
- Give us the courage of the women at the tomb: to see the resurrection and then go and tell. Make us messengers of new creation.
- Christ is risen. The old world is passing away. The new creation has begun. And we are Your people, commissioned to participate. In Jesus' name. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
Dead Man Walking (1995)
In Dead Man Walking, Sister Helen Prejean accompanies a condemned man to his execution — refusing to abandon him even as the state prepares to kill him. She is present at the death. And then she continues her work — fighting against the death penalty, rolling the stone from the tomb of state violence. The resurrection does not end at the empty tomb. It continues wherever people confront systems of death with the power of life. Sister Helen is an Easter person — rolling stones that the empire keeps putting back.
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
The empire said: guilty. God said: innocent. The empire said: dead. God said: alive. The resurrection is God's reversal of every unjust verdict.
Every tomb that power builds, God opens. Whatever system has sealed you in darkness, the stone is being rolled away.
The guards — agents of empire — shook and became like dead men. That is what happens when the tomb opens. Power trembles when justice rises.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How does liberation theology interpret the resurrection?
Liberation theology reads the resurrection as God's definitive reversal of unjust death. Jesus was executed by the state, and God reversed the verdict. This makes Easter inherently political — a declaration that the powers of this world do not have the last word and that every system of death is on notice.
What is the "politics of new creation"?
The "politics of new creation" means that the resurrection inaugurates a new social order, not just individual salvation. The risen Christ is Lord over all spheres of life — including economics, politics, and criminal justice. The church is called to be a community where the new creation is already visible: sharing resources, welcoming strangers, making peace, confronting injustice.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the easter / resurrection sunday sermon.