“The world breaks everyone and afterward many are [beautiful] in the broken places.”
In A Farewell to Arms, this sentence reads that some are “strong” in the broken places. But I have substituted the word “beautiful” for Hemingway’s own choice, because today we are talking about the resurrection.
Resurrection is the climax of the story of grace. But before explaining how this is so, let’s look at Matthew’s account of Jesus’ resurrection.
In the predawn light of the third day, the two Marys—Mary Magdalene and the other Mary—crept through the fading shadows to see Jesus’ tomb. An angel was loitering at the scene, perched on the stone that he had rolled away from the entrance.
He said, “You are looking for Jesus who was crucified. He is not here; for he has been raised.” (Matthew 28: 5b-6) It was a lot for those two to take in. It’s a lot for me to take in, to be honest.
The angel is saying something like this: If you’re looking for Jesus’ battered corpse, you’re just not going to find it. It’s not here. It’s not anywhere. His corpse hasn’t been moved. It’s been transformed. Jesus isn’t a corpse anymore.
You can catch up with him in Galilee, but don’t go looking for the pre-crucifixion Jesus, either. Once you lay your eyes on him, you can see for yourself. Nails leave a mark, after all. Just like everything else. What Jesus endured made him who he is. But none of that disfigures him. Grace has been at work. God has mended him.
The wounds of the cross are woven together with all that unique stuff that makes Jesus, well, Jesus: the tender moments on his mother’s knee, candlelit dinner with Mary Magdalene, fishing with Peter and Andrew, embracing a startled leper.
Grace has done its finest, most surprising work yet. Grace has mended the fragile body of Jesus.
In her recent book Hallelujah Anyway, Anne Lamott briefly compared grace to the Japanese art form Kintsugi. I think it’s an especially apt illustration for the resurrection.
Kintsugi is the art of repairing broken pottery. Artisans mend the chips and cracks of bowls and saucers, pitchers and jars using lacquer mixed with gold dust.
Initially you might assume that the artists are trying to disguise the damage to a piece of pottery by covering it with gold leaf. But these artists aren’t trying to hide anything. They realize that the gold-infused lacquer will effectively draw the eye to the very places where the object has been cracked.
They intend to highlight the broken places. Beauty emerges from the distinctive broken places of each individual object.
Here in the West we’ve received the Greek notion of beauty. We prize flawless harmony and proportion. Flaws diminish the value of a work of art.
Not so for the Japanese.
Wear and cracks and breaks tell the story of each unique thing’s life. Beauty is not found in something’s original, pristine condition. An object’s value lies in the life it has lived. And living always comes with some wear and no small amount of damage.
Rather than hide the broken places from us, the Japanese artists want us to recognize that we are looking at a broken object that has been mended. Mending a fragile thing reveals the deep love that its owner has for the object. It is held too dear to discard, no matter how much damage it has endured.
As I said earlier, resurrection is the climax of the story of grace. In the end, grace mends fragile things.
In the beginning, grace brings into being a universe of tender, fragile things.

Grace abides with these delicate, vulnerable creatures as they grow and mature. As they pass from youthful powers to fading sight, hairy ears, and turkey necks. As they stumble and gasp for breath and howl from the pain of wounded flesh and shattered hearts.
God never intended for the fragile things of this world to retain the pristine condition of a newborn. The living God means for us to live. And living inevitably brings with it wear and breakage.
And so grace reaches its climax by mending fragile, beloved things. That’s what we mean by resurrection.
In the resurrection, God mends the shattered Jesus. And in Jesus’ resurrection, we see the promise of our own.
Now, of course, the resurrection points to life after this life. When we breathe our last, our life—our whole life—will continue on the far shore of eternity. Mended.
But that mending gets its start already right here on planet earth. Sometimes it happens in three days. Sometimes it happens in three hours or three weeks or three decades.
Christ mends the wounds inflicted on us by strangers and lovers, by family and friends, even the blunt force trauma we’ve managed to give ourselves.
None of this is magic. The really big mending projects take a lot of time and no small amount of cooperation by us. And if the truth be told, a lot of our most important mending will continue when we pass from this life to the next.
And so, in the meantime, Jesus would very much like it if we could give ourselves and each other a break. We are all terribly fragile and already more than a little damaged.
God loves each of us too much to even think about discarding us. In the resurrection, we see that God eventually mends fragile things like you and me. And the result is breathtakingly beautiful.
Thank you Bishop. I have been feeling that this world was beyond repair as each day’s headlines confront me with the brokenness in which we live. I told someone a few days ago I felt like humpty dumpty and couldn’t be put back together again. But we are Easter people, and our hope is resurrected in Christ. As we are mended by God’s grace, we share that love in the world and watch God make this broken thing a beautiful thing. I needed to be reminded. Blessings on your Easter, and thank you again.
It does my heart good to know that this post was helpful tou. I find myself reeling from headlines, too. These are trying times. We all do better when we lean on each other as reminders and examples. Blessed Good Friday and Happy Easter!
A most painful event occurred in our parish this past week. Your post has brought com fort and hope to many who are suffering.
Mary Ann, it grieves me to hear that you all have gone through a painful time. I am glad for the comfort and hope that this post has brought. My prayers are with you.
“You cannot go where I am going”
I am fascinated that in a discussion of brokenness the suggestion is made that we give a break to ourselves and to each other?
…we could give ourselves and each other a break.
I could not even restate it correctly or accurately? I guess that is the point of my point 🙂 The solution to arresting brokenness is to not further break things ? In nature things get broken intentionally and unintentionally but the end result is the same? Things get broken. Fissures, fractures, tectonic plates and broken places exist. I consider the green leaf. It cannot be preserved as life leaves it. The brown leaf has brokenness as part of its decomposition process. Dust to dust, ashes to ashes, earth to earth.
As much as I would Iike to not inflict harm, hurt and perpetrate brokenness upon even those I profess to love, I am not capable of loving perfectly no matter how hard I try? I see the point of giving myself that ‘break’ and giving others a ‘break’ too?
I saw something close to a perfect love in a video of a race, where when a Down’s syndrome child saw her father cheering her on from the side of the road she broke straight away to give him a hug. I take note of the observation of the Greek notion of beauty to reexamine my viewpoint and understand the depth of your opening sentence.
I need more time to consider and reflect.
I am going to extend that break to myself and then refract to others, the light of understanding I just see that I do not possess?
There is comfort in knowing that the disciples, close as they were, didn’t get it either? Fight or flight may be a primordial instinct? As was pointed out in yesterday’s message in the conversation between the two thieves, and I paraphrase here: you just don’t get it do you? The two Mary’s didn’t understand. Those who heard it shared to them didn’t understand. Thomas who saw and touched Jesus didn’t understand.
It will be amazing grace indeed that carries me from the the third to the fourth table of the Jabari window? I know some of what I don’t know, but I certainly don’t understand what I don’t know that I don’t know? The space between the two windows is definitely one of my broken places.
“What Jesus endured made him who he is. But none of that disfigures him.” Nor does it alter his identity as God’s beloved Son with whom He is well pleased. And the same is true for each of us. What we endure binds us to Jesus, to God, ever confirming our identity as beloveds. I believe it’s our brokenness that allows to serve other shattered beings because through it we gain the empathy and vulnerability necessary to act in love.
Thank you for your reflections. They are a gift.
“I believe it’s our brokenness that allows to serve other shattered beings because through it we gain the empathy and vulnerability necessary to act in love” Well said! Thank you for those good words.
Beautiful. Thank you for reminding me I am broken; thus, all the more beautiful. I too, contemplated the Marys this morning.
Thanks for reading and blessed Easter! I enjoyed dropping by your blog this morning and look forward to seeing your posts in the days ahead.
There is a crack in everything, it’s how the light gets in.-Leonard Cohen. I have always thought it is how God’s light gets out as well. Thank you for your posts they give me food for thought and prayer.
True that! Thanks for reading and thinking along with me, Christine
Reblogged this on Saved by Grace and commented:
Great article…
Thanks for sharing this post on your blog! I’ve enjoyed looking at your posts and look forward to hearing what you have to say in the days ahead.