(Homily For Easter Sunday Year A)
Today we
celebrate the great mystery of our redemption, and it launches us into another
liturgical season. In the new calendar, Easter season is a journey of 50 days
in which we are invited to reflect upon the post-resurrectional appearances of
the Risen Lord, the consequences of Easter event in the life of the Church, the
gift of the Holy Spirit and the promise of eternal life. The season does not
run forty days to Ascension, but now fifty days to Pentecost. This could be linked to the fifty days in
which the Israelites enjoyed the fruits of the land. Similarly, the church this
season reflects in these fifty days on the fruits of Christ’s Resurrection.
As I have opined in my previous reflections, the Event of the Resurrection is foundational to our Christian faith,
for its realism gives credence to our faith. As a matter of fact, only in
the New Testament we encounter about 213 references on the death and Resurrection
of Christ. In fact, in Pauline letters alone we have about 81 references; this
in no small way reveals the importance of this event in the life of the Church.
In the first
reading Peter preached to Cornelius and to his entire household, that “God raised
him on the third day”. While in the second reading St. Paul opines that the
Resurrection of Christ and the consciousness of this mystery is the foundation
of Christian ethics, for this he invites us to seek and look for the things
that are above. In the Gospel, St. John seems to center the whole story on the
empty tomb, because it resonates the faith of the “beloved disciple” on the
Resurrection, but the credibility of the event is founded more on the
apparitions.
In the
first reading (At. 10:34.37-43) we can see that the Easter appearances are revelatory
encounters which founded the Church and launched the Christian Mission. Our
Easter faith and the credibility of the Resurrection depend majorly on the
testimonies of the first witnesses. Indeed, the credibility of the realism of the Resurrection is by no means an
irrational leap of faith. In this passage, we heard about the formidable
discourse of St. Peter, where he situated the realism of the Death and
Resurrection of Christ at the centre of his preaching. The apostles too
declared themselves witnesses of the Resurrection: “Chosen witnesses”. They are
indeed witnesses, who ate and drank with Jesus after his Resurrection. They had
a first hand and direct experience of the Risen Lord. More than that, the apostles are witnesses with their life,
for the Resurrection completely changed and radically transformed them.
They really demonstrated the reality and the efficacy of Christ’s Resurrection
with their life, for later, they all paid with their blood and martyrdom.
The Gospel
of today (Jn. 20:1-9) invites us to
join our voices together to that of Mary Magdalene in shouting “Christ my hope
is risen”. Upon encountering the Angel, three tasks were given to the women:
●To believe in what Jesus has already said concerning his death; ●To share the
message to the apostles and to others; ●And to rejoice (chairete), for the Resurrection is a message of great Joy. We have to affirm with vigour and
conviction our faith in the Risen Lord. That Jesus Christ is truly risen is a given fact, a historical fact, indeed
the realism of this event cannot be jettisoned. Concerning the realism of
the Resurrection, the Gospel makes reference to the apparitions of the Risen
Lord to the women, and to the apostles, and as St. Paul would testify, that
Jesus appeared to more than 500 disciples gathered together, some of whom were
still alive when Paul was writing (cf.
1Cor.15:16). So, the empty tomb alone does not exhaust the question of the
credibility of the Resurrection. It remains a pointer, and even more, a reason
of our hope and joy. When they could see Him and find His body, Jesus was alive
and victorious.
Besides, in
the gospel of John we have two accounts or stories on the Resurrection. The
first in the twentieth chapter, while the second in the twenty-first chapter.
In the second account, John shows us that
the Risen Lord encounters us in our moments of fragility and in the futility of
our everyday life (Jn. 21:1-14).The
disciples laboured all through the night, but they didn’t catch any fish, when
they were already disappointed and weary. They saw a man standing at the bank.
He spoke to them in a lovely manner and invited them to go once more to cast
the net. “They cast the net and could not get it in again because it was so
full of fish” (Jn. 21:6), then the
disciples recognized that “it was the Lord” (Jn. 21:7). The Risen Lord
can turn our helplessness and hopelessness into an avenue of and for blessing
and favour.
In the
Second reading we have two alternative readings (Col. 3:1-4 or 1Cor. 5:6-8) and both of them accentuate the ethical implications of the Resurrection. This is
evident in the imperatives: “seek” the things that are above, “set” your mind
on them. Drawing the issue further, in the words of St. Paul, we too are
spiritually risen with Christ and in Christ, we are buried with him and risen
with him (Eph. 2:6; Col. 2:12). With
and through our baptism we are made partakers of the gifts of Resurrection: ●We
have passed from death of sin to the life of grace. ●We have passed from the
condition of death through our original sin, to the condition of being alive in
Christ and for Christ. It is upon this
consciousness that St. Paul invites us to walk in the newness of life, to which
the Risen Christ has put us (1Cor.5:6-8).
We are called now to “look up” to the Risen Christ and to where he has ascended
to, at the right hand of the Father. That
is our goal! Let us take to heart the words of St. Peter thus “For you know
that the price of your ransom from the futile way of life handed down from your
ancestors was paid, not in anything perishable like silver and gold, but in the
precious blood as of a blameless and spotless lamb, Christ” (1Pt. 1:18-19).
The passage
from the epistle letters points out few
existential indications on how to render the Resurrection of Christ evident in
our life and actions. In the words of St. Paul “Brothers, if you are
risen…” (Col. 3:1-4). Indeed, we are
risen effectively with Christ in Baptism, we
are risen anytime we turn from our sinful ways to the life of grace in God,
through the sacrament of reconciliation. Brethren, let us pray and ask God
the grace to live and to walk in the “newness of life” following the example of
the Risen Christ. For through his Resurrection Christ renews, recreates and
restores creation to Himself.
As a matter
of fact, our reflection on Christ’s Resurrection cannot but draw us closer to the
total self-emptying of Jesus and as such an entrance into Kenosis, to the extent that he was subjected to all sorts of evil. On the cross all sorts of evil befell on
Jesus. How did Jesus die on the
cross? He died with the profession of the great Hope: “Father, into your
hands I commend my spirit”. Even in the
midst of all these evils Jesus did his profession of hope. Little wonder,
on Good Friday the Holy Mother Church proclaims the Cross “sign of hope”. Here
Jesus transformed the cross to an icon of love and hope. The Resurrection of Jesus is the response of the Father to the hope of
Jesus. For St. Paul, Jesus does not only teach us hope, he is our Hope (cf. 1Tm. 1:1). On the other hand, the silence of the Father reveals that the
paternity of God is not a paternalistic paternity. Little wonder, his
absence during the crucifixion was apparent. Why was it unshakeable the hope of Jesus? Indeed, because it was founded on the
communion with the Father. At the basis of the communion in question, there is
the Holy Spirit “Vinculum comunionis.”
Jesus dies abandoning himself to the Father who brings the dead to life and
calls into existence what does not yet exist (Rm. 4:17).
Dear
brethren in the Resurrected Lord, even in the present economic, moral,
political and religious crisis we may be experiencing, together with St. Paul
it is my utmost desire to reawaken in you the knowledge of the nature of the
hope founded on the God of hope (cf. Rm.
15:13). On discovering this, St. Paul averred: “Our hope will not
disappoint us, because the love of God has been poured into our hearts by the
Holy Spirit which has been given to us” (Rm.
5:5). Therefore, “we should always have our answers ready for those who ask
us the reason for the hope that we have” (1Pt.
3:15). Our Hope is Jesus and the Resurrection is the reason for that hope.
Yes, Christ among us, is our hope of glory (Col.
1:27).
In
which ever situation we may find ourselves, I repeat we should not give in to sadness
and desperation, as the Resurrection is
the response of the Father to the cry of Jesus on the cross. The Resurrection is an act of God,
indeed God raised Him from the dead (cf. Acts. 2:24; Rm. 10:9; 1Cor. 6:14).
Similarly, in the Resurrection of Christ we find the answer to all our
questions for meaning. We only have to allow ourselves to be drawn and
attracted by Him, as St. John affirmed “They will look to the one whom they
have pierced” (Jn. 19:37). Let us
look up to Him. The love of the Risen Lord does not leave us indifferent, He
Himself confirmed it when He said “when i am lifted up from the earth i shall
draw all people to myself” (Jn. 12:32).
Let us allow ourselves to be drawn and attracted by the spectacle of the Cross
and the Resurrection.
Beloved
in Christ, let us rejoice for Jesus has giving and consumed himself in love and
out of love for humanity. He is the Love of the Trinitarian God manifested to
us. Therefore, in the Easter season irrespective of the ravaging pandemic and
the consequent panic, let us not give room to sadness and depression. Let us rejoice for the Faithful God has
risen His Faithful Son from death. Jesus Christ the Crucified-Risen has
healed our infirmity of sin. He lowered Himself so that we might rise; he lowered
Himself for our salvation. The Resurrection of Our Lord Jesus Christ is an
event beaming and anchored on hope. In fact, it is ad rem to affirm that the life of Jesus is a life anchored on hope. His was a life lived in a total
abandonment in the hands of the Father. More than anything else, the cross is the icon par excellence of Jesus’ hope, and indeed from his cross we
learn how and what it entails to hope. The
Resurrection should reaffirm our faith and reanimate our hope in Jesus. The
Resurrection is indeed an affirmation that the Cross is only a provisional
collocation according to Don Tonino
Bello, which means is not a permanent place. Even the common cross that the
entire humanity is carrying at this period in her history and your own personal
cross is provisional. Jesus through His Resurrection is emptying any form of
tomb in our lives, in order to set us free from bondage. As the Father listened
to his voice and answered him with the Resurrection, may the Risen-Lord hear
the cries and lamentations of the entire humanity and raise us from the
death-tomb experience of violence, hatred, war and lack of respect for the
dignity of human life. May He restore and reanimate our hope. Amen! Lord in
your Resurrection is our hope. A wish of
a Continuous Resurrection!! Happy Easter to you all!!!
(Fr. Vitus M. C.
Unegbu, SC)
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