In the making of his monumental documentary on the Civil War, filmmaker Ken Burns relates a story surrounding the production's handling of the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln. As the editing crew put together the sound track to the portion of the film that described the events leading up to that fateful night in Ford's Theater, just as John Wilkes Booth was about to fire that fatal shot, Burns had the tape stopped. For several moments, the production team sat there, contemplating this moment before the course of history would be changed on the evening of Good Friday, April 14, 1865.
We sat there, tears streaming down, realizing that for a while, we could sit there and hold this moment; we could keep it from happening," Burns said. The moment couldn't last forever; work needed to resume. So, Burns said, "we went back to work, and we killed Lincoln, and we went on."
We are in the midst of Easter Weekend. Yesterday was Good Friday, the day of our Lord's death. Tomorrow is Sunday, Easter Sunday, the day of resurrection. It is easy to move from one day to the next. This side of history, we know that, as difficult and disheartening as Good Friday might have been, Sunday was a comin', and so was hope and resurrection.