1986
Finding the Miracle of Easter
March 1986


“Finding the Miracle of Easter,” Tambuli, Feb.–Mar. 1986, 6

Finding the Miracle of Easter

Every year at Easter time, millions turn their thoughts to the Holy Land where the Savior spent his life on earth. One year I visited the Holy Land with the desire to discover for myself the miracle of Easter and the Resurrection. I found much that helped, but I learned that I didn’t really have to travel around the world to discover Easter. When I returned, I found what I sought in my own home.

Some archaeologists say the Garden Tomb is a possible burial place of Jesus. Tradition and the Bible seem to agree. When President Harold B. Lee visited the site, he gave what many believe was a spiritual confirmation of this sacred place: “Something seemed to impress us as we stood there,” he said, “that this was the holiest place of all, and we fancied we could have witnessed the dramatic scene that took place there.” (Tambuli, May 1984.)

The Garden Tomb is in a quiet garden away from the noise of the crowded markets and shops in Old Jerusalem. After walking out of the Damascus Gate, a major entrance to the Old City, we crossed the road and walked up a sidewalk to the walled-in garden.

It is a peaceful place. The ancient trees create archways overhead that sway and bow in the afternoon breeze. Flowers of every color line the walkways. A tomb is carved out of the stone hill in one part of the garden. Still visible are the grooves, or trough, where a large stone was once rolled in front of it. This is perhaps one of the loveliest places in Israel.

But as I climbed a hill in back of the garden and looked toward Golgotha or “the place of a skull” (see John 19:17), where Jesus is said to have been crucified, I heard the noises of heavy traffic and the shouts of angry bus drivers, and I smelled vehicle exhaust fumes in the air. The abrupt contrast was disappointing.

I walked back into the garden and sat down on a bench to think. The sun, beginning to set into the western horizon, shined and glistened off the trees and the fallen leaves in the garden.

I began to notice what was happening around me. The leaves that were falling to the ground would decay and become a part of the earth through which new life would emerge next spring. Winter would come, leaving the limbs of the trees dark and bare. But spring would follow, and small buds of leaves would again appear.

I realized that the cycle of life in this garden was an eternal round. The seasons brought changes, but each season was part of a plan of living and dying and living again. And I felt at that moment that I, too, was part of the same plan.

Even though the sun was setting, I knew that the next morning I would see the beginning of a new day: the sun would rise again in the eastern sky, changing the blackness of night into the light of day.

I suddenly realized that whether I was in the Garden Tomb in Israel—or in my own home enjoying the sunset or watching the leaves falling off trees anywhere—the miracle of Easter was going on everywhere around me and within myself every day. The whole earth, indeed, is holy land—a witness of the Resurrection.

As I walked away from the Garden Tomb that evening, I knew—as so many who have visited Israel have come to realize—that the place itself neither provides nor withholds a spiritual experience. Sacred feelings won’t automatically be felt there; in fact, they may come at any place and at any time if we are receptive. For that reason, my family can experience the significance of Easter at home just as deeply as someone who is privileged to spend Easter morning sitting quietly on a bench in that sacred garden.

I don’t need to return to Israel to experience the significance of the event that took place there. The miracles of Easter are evident all around us every day—and most wonderfully, within ourselves.

  • Janene Wolsey Baadsgaard, mother of five children, is a member of a Spanish Fork, Utah, ward.

Photography by Timothy L. Taggart