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"Why the location of your grave matters"
Rev. Stephen Lewis
Genesis 49:29-50:14
 

Introduction
Major League Baseball fans – are you depressed with how your baseball team did last season? Are you perhaps thinking that you might die before they ever make it into the playoffs? Are you wondering whether you will be buried before your team ever appears in the World Series? I have good news for you. The league just recently finalized a licensing agreement with a casket-making firm so that if you or your loved one were to die, you can now order a casket with your baseball team’s official logo printed right on the top of the pinewood box. You can go to your grave as a die-hard San Diego Padres fan, with the insignia to prove it. We clearly have become a nation that doesn’t have a clue when it comes to death and dying, when it comes to caskets and burials and graveside services. We don’t know what it’s all about. We think it’s a time to once again declare our loyalty to the Seattle Mariners or something like that. What is burial all about? Why is it not the custom in the so-called Christian West to do like they do in India and burn the corpse on a pyre? Why do we bury a body in the ground? Is it merely about sanitation? Or is there a theology of burial?

One of the most extraordinary scenes from Church History is what took place in England in the early 1400s. John Wycliffe had been dead for over 40 years. He had lived and died well – he was preaching the gospel in church when he collapsed and was carried out a side door. Wycliffe had spent his life preaching the gospel to the peasants of England, and then translating the Bible into their language. He was a Martin Luther character a hundred years before Luther was even born. As a professor at Oxford, John Wycliffe taught that the Scripture, not the church or the Pope, was the final authority for our lives. He taught that forgiveness of sins had to do with Jesus, not with buying a piece of paper granting you an indulgence. And so in the early 1400s, more than 40 years after his death, Wycliffe’s teachings were still sticking in the craw of the church hierarchy, and they decided to do something about it. At the Council of Constance, they condemned Wycliffe as a heretic, gave orders to suppress all the Lollard priests who were going about the countryside preaching Christ as Wycliffe had taught them, and then they did one more thing: they ordered that Wycliffe’s bones be dug up from his grave in the churchyard.

Determined that their generation and every generation thereafter would know that Wycliffe was a dangerous heretic, determined that he not be allowed to Rest in Peace, they dug up his bones, burned them in a fire outside, and then unceremoniously dumped his ashes into the River called Swift. One church historian puts it this way, “They burnt his bones to ashes and cast them into Swift, a neighboring brook running hard by. Thus this brook hath conveyed his ashes into Avon, Avon into Severn, Severn into the narrow seas, they into the main ocean. And thus the ashes of Wycliffe are the emblem of his doctrine, which now is dispersed the world over.” Where is Wycliffe buried? Everywhere. Where are today’s Wycliffe Bible Translators translating the Scripture into the language of the common people? Everywhere. The enemies of Wycliffe thought that they were removing his bones from holy ground when they dug up his remains in the churchyard. But is there any place on this earth that does not belong to Christ?

Genesis 49 and 50 force us to wrestle with a question: where should we be buried? To Jacob, that was not merely a practical question; it was a theological question. It mattered to Jacob. It mattered a great deal. Why does the location of your grave matter?

I. The Location of Your Grave Matters because We Belong to Another Country.

He belonged in Israel. And he wanted his sons and their sons and daughters to realize this – Egypt is not our home; bury me in the grave of my fathers, in the land the Lord our God has promised us. We belong there, not here. Where do we belong? The question still remains. Am I saying that you need to seek out your ancestral land and make sure you are buried next to your great-grandmother?

Jacob was not being sentimental. He wasn’t merely pining away for the land of Canaan, thinking that it would be so heart-warming to be buried up north. How can a burial be heart-warming anyway? This wasn’t about being sweet and romantic – I think it would be sweet to be buried right next to my wife Leah. No, Jacob was never all that crazy about Leah. Joseph would not have troubled the court of Pharaoh, all the sons of Jacob would not have made the long journey north (escorted by an entourage of Egyptian soldiers) merely for sentimental reasons. This wasn’t a stroll down memory lane for them. This was something else. It mattered to Jacob that he be buried with his fathers in the land God had promised them. Why?

Jacob believed in the future resurrection. He believed that his story was not over yet. Bury me with my fathers, because in my flesh will I see God. A day of resurrection is coming. Jacob knew that he belonged in Israel, not in Egypt. He’s telling his sons, “Don’t get to thinking that just because there’s food for you right now in Egypt, that Egypt is somehow your Savior. No, you have an inheritance outside of Egypt. You belong somewhere else. You are not to find your identity here. Find your identity, locate yourself, in the promises of God!”

So where do we belong? Do we belong in Egypt or in Israel? Saint Augustine popularized two names that are useful when thinking about the difference between Egypt and Israel. Augustine wrote a book contrasting the City of God and the City of Man. These two cities – corrupt Babylon on the one hand, and holy Jerusalem on the other hand – are always competing for our allegiance. The City of God and the City of Man – you can’t find them on a map: Now entering the City of Man, population 5 billion. The two cities are, in this age, always present with us. In the city of Salem, both the City of God and the City of Man are growing side by side, sometimes in apparent peace, but ultimately on opposite paths – one leading to eternal life and the other to eternal destruction. The City of God and the City of Man can be found at your workplace. They are in your own home. We are in a struggle: am I living for the glory of God, are His purposes my purposes, is His Word my agenda, are His priorities my priorities, or am I living for the glory of Man, are my dreams and objectives limited to this material world, am I consumed with seeking my own interests, am I under the delusion that I can make this world a better place for humanity without worshiping the God of the Scriptures?

The City of God versus the City of Man – in Jacob’s day, you could point to the map and locate the two cities. He knew where he had to be buried: bury me with my fathers. Don’t bury me in Egypt. But today, where are we to be buried? The Apostle Paul in 2 Corinthians chapter 5 tells us that to be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord. Jesus – he is our location. When you are away from the body, you are home with the Lord, immediately. Jesus is the fulfillment of the Promised Land. We need not be buried in Israel; we need not be buried in Abraham’s tomb to be included in Abraham’s bosom when we die. For believers who die in the Lord are present with the Lord immediately after death – I tell you the truth, Jesus tells the thief on the cross, this day you will be with me in Paradise. Location matters: you are to be buried in this location: in Christ. There wasn’t a square inch of the earth where they could have scattered Wycliffe’s ashes and not have had him in the same location: in Christ. Are you buried in Christ, are you buried in the City of God, or are you merely buried in the City of Man?

More than once, Jacob repeats that he wants to be buried “with my fathers.” The location of your burial is about community. You lived your life in a community, with other people, and so now in death, you are also in a community – bury me with my fathers. Yes, you are immediately in heaven with the Lord – that is the true location of your spirit after death. But even your body has a future, and so Jacob gives instructions to his children.

II. Since We Do Not Belong in Egypt, Since We Do Not Belong to the City of Man, Why Do We Bury Dead Bodies at All?

 Why not take a much more casual view of the human corpse? Why not have your body cremated and then have some company turn your ashes into a piece of art? You can do that, you know! You can end up on your grandchildren’s mantle, not in an urn, but as a very nice crystal sculpture. I don’t know; it might even be cheaper than buying a cemetery plot. Why do we bury the dead? Is it merely tradition? In verse 5 we learn that Jacob actually was involved in digging his part of the grave in the burial cave of his fathers. What do you think he was thinking as he stood there, shovel in hand, near the buried bodies of his ancestors? A friend of mine was telling me this week of how he drove two full days, non-stop, to make it to the bedside of his grandfather, arriving there just hours before his grandfather died. He was buried in a remote country town, where things aren’t quite as commercialized as they are here, so that he actually was invited to participate in the digging of his grandfather’s grave! Can you imagine that? Our modern society has removed us from anything that is unpleasant – we rarely witness the slaughtering of the animals which we eat, and we rarely participate in the details of a burial; our fragile hearts keep a safe distance from anything having to do with death.

Why go to the trouble of digging a grave, six feet down? If this world is not our home, if we are going to be given new, glorified bodies, why put any care into this body when it dies? If the City of Man is physical and the City of God is spiritual, why not dispose of the body in the nearest landfill? Joseph could have saved the Egyptians a lot of trouble – don’t bother embalming him for the next 40 days; I’m sure you can all find better things to do; pay attention to the living, not to the dead. If the dead human body is truly worthless, then Joseph could have preached that message to all of Egypt: don’t you see? The body is unimportant! But he didn’t preach that. There is something about humans, and I mean every human – we are created in the image of God; even our physical bodies are stamped with His image, and so we bury.

Burial is a good symbol. It sends a message to those who are still living: this corpse, which appears to have no future, actually does have a future, because God is the God of the living, not the dead. When you bury a loved one, you are making a statement about the Resurrection, about the life that is to come. You are saying that there is continuity between this life and the next, between this dead and decaying body of the present and the living and glorified body of the future. It was outside of Lazarus’ tomb that Jesus declared to Martha, “I am the Resurrection and the Life; he who believes in me will live, even though he dies.”

This world is not our home. This body is a temporary tent that we occupy for a brief season of time. But it is not as if our future home is somehow non-physical. This world is not our home, but the new heavens and the new earth, the world that is to come -- it is our eternal home, forever with the Lord in the heavenly Jerusalem, the City of God. And so if the future is the new heavens and the new earth, your body will be raised and glorified so that it might live in that new environment. By the simple act of burial, you are saying that you actually believe in all this supernatural, miraculous stuff. When we bury a believer, we are saying that Creation is good. When God created the earth and all living things in six days, he looked at it and said that it was good. So we treat it as good. Fallen now, but still God’s good creation. Physical matter is not evil; it was God’s good invention. And when we care for a dead body, we are agreeing that physical stuff is good. The spirit of your loved one has left the body, but the Spirit of God is still here, and there is coming a day when these dry bones will rise up and live!

Thankfully, the Scripture gives us great leeway when it comes to burial customs. Joseph was comfortable letting the Egyptians embalm his father’s body, even though that was not the Jewish custom. Nowhere in the Scripture will you receive an airtight argument against cremation. What is clear is that your body has a future, and when possible, the believer is to be buried with the community of faith, that is, with Christ, with the Lord. Rachel was buried by the side of the road. This was the cause of great grief to Jacob. Of course the location of her grave spells no problems for Rachel in the afterlife. That’s not the point. The fact that Wycliffe’s bones were cremated presents no problem for God who knows how to resurrect a body even when its molecules have been radically changed and scattered. But burial with the community of faith is still a good symbol – it sends a message: we live and worship and play together in this life; at death our souls are immediately together with all the saints, with the Lord; and at death our bodies are also placed together as we await that great and glorious day of Resurrection.

III. Since We Do Not Belong in Egypt, Why Do We Grieve and Mourn When a Loved One Dies?

Some cultures have wakes which last for days, so that when your buddy dies, you end up having a party in his honor that stretches out the rest of the week – a lot of laughing, a lot of joy, sharing stories. I like the sound of that. There is a time to laugh. There’s also a time to cry. Romanticists try to airbrush death; they are in denial. Death, they tell us, is just another stage on the journey; we fear it because we fear the unknown. But according to the Scriptures, death is the result of sin; death is what happened because of our rebellion against God; death is an enemy that would conquer each one of us, were it not for the God of the Resurrection. In the day that you eat of that fruit, Adam and Eve, you will surely die. And so they did enter into death and eventually the earth from which Adam was created, consumed his mortal body – for dust you are and to dust you shall return. Death is an enemy that eats us up.

And so we mourn and weep and cry. Sometimes we cry a lot. We are mourning the loss of our friend. We are mourning the pain of separation. We are mourning the entire Fall of humanity into sin and death, disease and violence, all the things which assault human dignity and attack the image of God, and disrupt our fellowship with one another. We mourn the fact that though we were created for glory, we have sunk into this vulnerable condition, where we get sick, lose our mental capacities, and die. We weep at this humiliating display of human weakness. How long, O Lord? How long until you deliver us from these bodies of death and clothe us in eternal glory? Good grief can give us a greater hunger for heaven than we’ve ever had before. Grief can fix our gaze on Christ and whet our appetite for the world that is to come.

We were created to rule over the earth, but the earth ends up ruling over us, as we are placed six feet under. Who will rule over the earth and not let the earth rule over him? Who will conquer death and usher us into eternal life? A descendant of this same Jacob – Jesus himself, who was taken to Egypt as a boy and then was called out of Egypt back north to his people. In verse 3 we read that the Egyptians not only embalmed Jacob’s body, but they also mourned him for 70 days! This was not the ordinary custom for an ordinary peasant citizen of Egypt. This was what the Egyptians did if one of their pharaohs were to die. In his death, Jacob is given the royal treatment! Do you see why Joseph of Arimathea went to the trouble and expense of giving Jesus a real burial? In death, you are treated like a king, even if you are buried in a pine box, for you belong to King Jesus. You are part of his family. Your destiny is tied to his. Jacob’s nation of Israel was to be the new humanity, given the promised land, called to rule over the land and not let the land rule over them. Jesus is the true Israel, the truly New Man who now rules over death, having risen from the dead on the third day. The earth could not rule over its Creator, and the grave gave him up. “Jesus lives, and so shall I, death thy sting is gone forever.”

IV. Finally, Since We Do Not Belong to Egypt, Since We Do Not Belong to the City of Man, How Do We Make Sure We Get Out of Here?  How Do We Get Out of the City of Man and into the City of God?  How Do We Get Out of Egypt and into the Promised Land?

You need an Exodus. That’s what Genesis 50 is. Right before the book of beginnings ends, and the book called Exodus begins, a small-scale Exodus is recorded for us. The Genesis 50 Exodus was an Exodus led by Joseph. He is the champion, securing permission from Pharaoh and safe travel into the land of promise. Four hundred years later, Pharaoh’s army will not be escorting the Israelites to protect them; this time the Egyptian armies will be pursuing the people of God to destroy them. In that Exodus, Moses is the champion, not Joseph. Here in verse 5, Joseph asks Pharaoh, “Now let me go up and bury my father; then I will return.” 400 years later, Moses will stand before Pharaoh and say, “Let my people go.”

So who will lead you on your Exodus? You somehow need to make it to the City of God, out of the City of Destruction. You know that you do not belong to this world’s system. You sense that its educational system is flawed, that its governments are corrupt, that there is so much that you would wish to leave behind for a better land. But where is your Joseph to lead you out of Egypt? Where is Moses when you need him? Who will stand up to Pharaoh as he invents yet another excuse to keep you entangled in the things of this world which is passing away?

You are brought across the Jordan River, not by Joseph, not by Joshua and the Israelites who have escaped the death of the firstborn in Egypt. You are brought over Jordan by Christ, the Firstborn, the eternally begotten Son of God, who died for us. His death, not Jacob’s, is the death that ushers us into the land of promise, bringing us home at last. Father Jacob’s burial was what brought his children back to the promised land, but in Christ’s death and resurrection you have been set free from the City of Destruction and have been given safe passage to the heavenly Jerusalem.

Joseph said, “Let me go up and bury my father.” Moses said to Pharaoh, “Let my people go.” But Jesus, having risen from the dead, stood on the mountain and addressed his disciples. This risen Jesus did not have to ask Pharaoh or any earthly power for permission. He doesn’t ask Caesar, “Let my people go.” Instead, Jesus stands there on the mountain and says, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit …” Go into all the earth, for whether you are in Israel or Egypt or England or Oregon, your Exodus is in and through Christ. Place your faith in him.

Amen.

Rev. Stephen Lewis
Pastor
Evergreen Presbyterian Church
Salem, OR

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