Never Give Up, Never Surrender!
Acts 10:34-43
10:34 Then Peter began to speak to them: "I truly understand that God shows no partiality,
10:35 but in every people anyone who fears him and practices righteousness is acceptable to him.
10:36 You know the message he sent to the people of Israel, preaching peace by Jesus Christ--he is Lord of all.
10:37 That message spread throughout Judea, beginning in Galilee after the baptism that John announced:
10:38 how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and with power; how he went about doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil, for God was with him.
10:39 We are witnesses to all that he did both in Judea and in Jerusalem. They put him to death by hanging him on a tree,
10:40 but God raised him on the third day and allowed him to appear,
10:41 not to all the people but to us who were chosen by God as witnesses and who ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead.
10:42 He commanded us to preach to the people and to testify that he is the one ordained by God as judge of the living and the dead.
10:43 All the prophets testify about him that everyone who believes in him receives forgiveness of sins through his name."
You might recognize the title of this Easter sermon. It is the “rallying cry” of the protagonist of the 1999 sci-fi spoof, Galaxy Quest. Thinking about what to say about Easter 2026, as we Christians celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ, it is what came to mind—the statement, not the film, although it is a “fun favorite” of mine. What can a retired preacher say about Easter that hasn’t been said a thousand times, already? This is the challenge, isn’t it? Or IS it? There was a time in my ministry when I just decided to “tell the story” of that first Easter and let it stand on its own, and there is certainly logical support for this approach. The story has power, regardless of what one “believes” about the resurrection. Are there different beliefs about it? There certainly are.
There are those who suggest that the “need” for Jesus to have been physically resurrected is overstated, and that his life, teachings, and his willingness to submit himself to the authorities and the cross are “enough.” They further suggest that the “resurrection” is a spiritual state that evolved because the efficacy of Jesus’ teaching and example “would not die.” Proof of this is that we Christians are still here. The faith is still vital and growing, in some parts of the world, and the church—in its MANY forms—is still here. These facts may be the very thing that disputes the “spiritual” or “virtual” resurrection concept, however. Would the eleven surviving weenies who ran and hid after Jesus was crucified have summoned the courage to visit the heavily-guarded tomb, after the brave women went first, and excitedly gave the disciples their eye-witness account of the Risen Christ? Would they have continued, then, to witness, preach, and spread the faith germinated by Jesus throughout the known world, even in the face of oppression and threat of violence? Historically, we know that each of them eventually died a martyr’s death. Would they have had the courage to face death, unless something had turned them significantly from their initial fear that “we may be next” after Jesus was brutally killed? The best argument for the miracle of the resurrection of Jesus Christ is the bravery of the men AND the women, going forward, who would sacrifice everything to spread the Gospel message. The fear that gripped them was blown away by the same force that “ejected” the stone from the garden tomb—the total resurrection of their Lord.
I say “total” in that the story of the resurrection is more than a body being “raised” from a dead state. Modern medical science can perform this “miracle” and does so regularly. Yes, I know that it usually doesn’t happen after three days, but my point is that what God is up to in the resurrection is far more than just a divine form of CPR. Our theology says that Jesus was raised “incorruptible.” He died a physical being, but was raised as a “hybrid” of both physical and eternal, no longer to be tempted by sin, no longer to be threatened again by death, and no longer to be infected by any passing disease. Paul calls him the “Second Adam,” the “firstborn of the dead.” The Jesus that the disciples will eventually see just float off toward Heaven in the clouds, is the same Jesus whom Thomas got to physically touch, and who ate fish with them on the shore of Galilee. The epistle writer of I John 3:2 wrote: Dear friends, we are God’s children, and it hasn’t yet appeared what we will be. We know that when he appears we will be like him, because we’ll see him as he is. The writer is obviously referring to the Risen Christ, who they believed to be the “prototype” of what the redeemed will be “like” ourselves in eternity. The resurrection is the crowning “achievement” of the Christ event—the “firstborn” of the human/spiritual being of what God’s people “will be.” Even as the Christ Event “saved” humanity from our own selfishness, short-sightedness, and sin, so the Risen Christ leads us into eternity with the hope of an “incorruptible” life. This is the ultimate promise of Easter, but again, it’s not what came to mind, as I pondered today’s text.
The “Never give up, never surrender” line from the movie came to be for two reasons. The first has to do with the early church, part of the story of which Peter is demonstrating in the text from Acts. Though their encounters with the Risen Christ energized Peter and the disciples to get about the mission Jesus had given them—to “go into all the world to preach the gospel, baptizing in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit”—they faced fierce opposition, and as mentioned earlier, even eventual martyrdom in the name of Jesus. And yet, they forged ahead. Their motto easily could have been, “Never give up, never surrender!” One need only to read the accounts throughout the book of Acts, and to read the chronicles of the Apostle Paul to see this spirit driving the ministry and outreach of the early church, not as a “battle cry,” but as a benevolent call to spread the love and grace of God in Jesus Christ. This they did, and down through the centuries, women and men of great courage continued the quest. We are still here as people of faith because they DID never give up, nor surrender to fear or crippling doubts. This history, too, is what our Easter celebrations are all about!
But there is another reason for my momentary preoccupation with this rallying cry, and it has to do with God. You see, humanity has not made it easy on God to forgive and redeem us. As a species, we regularly resist God’s actions to reconcile with us, and to facilitate our reconciling with each other. While I believe the redeeming action of God was “set loose” on the world through the Christ Event, even manifesting God’s “saving” love through the other major religious traditions with which we share this planet, we continue to fight for the “high ground” and oppose those who don’t believe exactly as WE believe, and this extends even to the factions within the Christian faith. I recently heard a story about a United Methodist colleague who followed a much more “conservative” pastor into a church, and was told after a few weeks of ministering to this new congregation that they were “praying for his salvation,” for he didn’t preach like he was “saved.” How hard that must have been to hear, especially as a dedicated Christian pastor with a vital testimony, but apparently not one that matched up with these people. (I am aware that I have colleagues who have “prayed for my salvation” over the years because I believe in loving, cooperative interfaith relationships, and in full inclusion of our LGBTQ+ siblings into the life and ministry of the Christian church.) I’m quite sure Christ himself grieves when yet another church schism or “disaffiliation” tears asunder God’s people who have been REDEEMED by Christ. As I might anthropomorphize God, superimposing my own feelings on the Divine, I could imagine God getting angry with God’s people, mirroring the “Noah’s Ark” Bible myth that postulates this very thing, leading to a water-born mass extinction. However, it is clear this is NOT the nature of God, The God of Easter has made it clear that God will NOT GIVE UP on humanity, and will NEVER SURRENDER the human race, nor any other part of the creation, to the base instincts, or the devil’s deception that might destroy us.
We are living in precarious times. As I write this, we are at war with one of the ancient cultures of the Middle East, warring against them alongside the people God first called “Israel.” And to what end? In our own nation, we are a deeply divided people, with political and socially motivated violence against others becoming far too common. Our economic disparity is freshly asserting itself as a factor that further separates us into the “haves” and “have nots,” in this country, negating the high ideals upon which the nation was founded. Everywhere I look, I’m seeing signs of the degeneration being accelerated by these ungodly events, attitudes, and mindsets. The sadness I feel when important moral aims like inclusiveness, anti-racist policies, and empowering women in business and leadership are being dispatched as “woke,” a denigrating term being coined by some who choose to roll back the clock to the 1950s, when white people “reigned supreme.” Precarious times, indeed. However, the hope of Easter is that God is not giving up on us, and neither is God waving the white flag (and yes, don’t miss my double meaning in this phrase!). The reach and power of the Christ Event will not be denied; God will not surrender to our human desire to “run the show,” especially when the show we want to run leaves so many rejected, disenfranchised, and marginalized. The hope of Easter is that, as the old hymn says, “God’s TRUTH is marching on.” The Risen Christ is still among us and the Spirit of Jesus is not without her prodigious power to resurrect, redeem, and heal!
Friends, Christ is RISEN! He is RISEN INDEED. Never give up, never surrender!” As Rob Bell says in his best-selling book, LOVE WINS! Amen.




