Journal Article - A very Different Easter
A Very Different Easter
Last Friday our Minister, Nick had an article about Easter in the midst of the pandemic
published in the Journal. The article was titled:-
A Very Different Easter - But the crucial message remains

His message.......
Should we cancel Easter because of the pandemic? What are you planning to do this Easter Sunday?
Last year my family and I began Easter day with a sunrise celebration on Cow Hill. We thought it was quite an original idea to take hot drinks and meet up with friends, but when we got there, we found that people from across Tyneside had thought exactly the same thing.
So we all joined together sharing food and exchanging the traditional Easter day greeting and response of ‘Christ is Risen!’ – ‘He is risen indeed!’
I remembered that beautiful morning this week, as we’ve had to cancel plans to repeat it this Sunday. Like so much of normal life, Easter is going to be very different this year. No Easter egg hunts in the park with friends, no visits to the grandparents for chocolate eggs, no belting out of joyful hymns at church. Many people are isolated, frightened, unemployed, exhausted, ill, or bereaved in the face of this terrible pandemic.
Should we just add Easter to the list of cancelled events this year?
Of course, we should follow government instructions on containing the virus by not meeting together. But the Easter story – that Jesus Christ died for our sins and rose again in Palestine 2,000 years ago – is in some ways more relevant than ever.
Firstly, it tells us that God is in control and brings good out of evil. We like to think we’re in charge of our lives. We fill up our calendars for months in advance with plans for meetings, holidays, and social activities, all seamlessly synched across multiple devices. Yet, as the government struggled to contain the spread of the virus by imposing new restrictions, all our carefully-crafted plans were ripped up and our lives turned upside down in ways that were previously almost unimaginable.
The Easter story in the Bible depicts the government, the military, and the religious authorities plotting and scheming to kill Jesus. They thought they were in control; yet on Easter morning he broke out of the grave, and their plans came to nothing.
We’re not in control of the world, nor are we subject to blind fate and random luck. Easter reminds us that, in the words of the old song, ‘He’s got the whole world in his hands’. Furthermore, Easter tells us that we are loved and that we matter. ‘Self-isolation’ and ‘social distancing’ may be sound medical advice, but can exact a heavy personal toll.
I spoke to an older person this week, living by herself and without internet access, who was desperately lonely and worried.
The Easter message is that everyone is important and loved by God.
‘For God so loved the world’, writes Saint John in the Bible, ‘that he gave his only son, that all who believe in him shall not die but have everlasting life.’
Finally, Easter is about hope. We give each other chocolate eggs because they represent new life. We are wondering whether life will ever be the same again. Many of us will get sick, and some of us will die. But
Jesus’s resurrection is the ultimate symbol of hope. Death is not the final word in our lives.
This isn’t just personal comfort:
Easter is the promise of a whole new world. The Rev Martin Luther King Jr, who made a historic visit to Newcastle University in 1967 to receive an honorary degree, found in the Easter story a source of encouragement for
the civil rights movement.
“Good Friday may reign for a day, but ultimately it must give way to the triumphant beat of the Easter
drums,” he wrote. “So… we can walk and never get weary, because we know that there will be a great celebration in the promised land of freedom and justice.”
How are we going to work for a kinder and fairer society, after the pandemic?
Easter’s message of hope and new life speaks to us all, whether we are religious or not, and is worth celebrating in these dark times. People across our region will be meeting up in livestream church services this Sunday morning. Why not
join them?
Just keep a safe social distance and, hopefully, I’ll see you on Cow Hill, Easter morning, 2021.
■ Nick Megoran is Professor of
Political Geography at Newcastle
University and Minister of Wallsend
Baptist Church





