Easter Sunday
March 31, 2013
Acts 10:34, 37-43; Psalm
118; Colossians 3:1-4; John 20:1-9
To
appreciate the full import of the first Easter morning for the disciples, we
have to recreate their emotions as they deal with the catastrophe of the
Passion of Jesus. They were not expecting his execution and they were in shock
to realize their dream ended badly. To place ourselves in their mindset, it may
be helpful for us to remember how we felt in the hours after the attack on the
U.S. on September 11, 2001. Everything came to a standstill. Air and rail
traffic was halted, workers returned home to their families, grief counselors
began to emerge into the public, sports activities were cancelled to allow
everyone to grieve and comprehend the extent of the tragedy. We began to ask
questions, “How did this happen to us and why?” We ask ourselves these probing
questions whenever we have a tragedy, such as the deadly shooting of young
children in Newtown, Connecticut last fall. Nothing prepares us for untimely
tragedy.
The
circumstances of the disciples differ from 911 in many ways, but especially in
that Jesus gathered with his friends for the Passover meal that celebrates
God’s steadfastness and his deliverance from evil and oppression. This was to
be a joyous moment. The disciples had their whole lives wrapped up in the being
of Jesus and he was unjustly tried and horrendously executed. The good man who
taught well, healed compassionately, revealed many miraculous signs of God’s
love, and fulfilled Scripture was now dead and buried. All indications pointed
to Jesus as the Messiah who would bring about a new kingdom, but his fast-paced
death proved to the disciples that he was just an ordinary man. With the dead
Jesus, their hopes and dreams were buried deep into the earth. Was everything
he taught and stood for all wrong?
Poor
Mary Magdalene. As a respectful act, she went to his tomb early in the morning
to properly dress his dead body and she ran away to tell Peter and the other
disciple whom Jesus loved the terrible news she uncovered. She did not go into
the tomb, but she knew the body of Jesus was removed. Her tearful, howling run
through Jerusalem must have been agonizing as she went in search of Peter. All the
familiar places were merely a blur to her as she hastened on her way just
needing to tell someone of her awful discovery. As a final desecrating insult, she
knew someone disrespected his dead body.
Magdalene
must have awakened Peter to tell him the news. He must have consoled her, given
her something to drink, and waited as she caught her breath so she could calmly
relay her observations to him. Peter probably didn’t even have his morning
coffee, but he knew innately that something beyond his understanding occurred. With
the beloved disciple, they raced across the city as their minds searched for
explanations for what had happened. What would they do when they arrived? They
were winded, out of breath, emotionally confused, and they hadn’t thought that
far ahead, but they had to go see their friend’s tomb for themselves. The tomb
was empty.
The
beloved disciple graciously permitted Peter to enter the tomb first and Peter’s
senses told him that the familiar actions of Jesus were still at work. His
burial cloths were neatly arranged, just as Jesus would have folded them as he
woke up and readied for the day. If robbers had come in, they would not have
neatly laid the cloths out with great care, but this was the customary action
of Jesus. Peter’s mind still was unsettled as he began to grapple with the
confusing events, but then the beloved disciple entered and he knew for sure
that Jesus removed those cloths and laid them aside. He believed that Jesus was
no longer dead, even though he did not understand the Scripture that Jesus had
to rise from the dead.
It
might serve us well to take some time during Easter week to settle ourselves
down and reflect upon our what our senses tell us since they are the place
where we encounter the risen Jesus. Peter and the beloved disciples used their
senses to provide them with data to piece together what happened with their
friend. Their senses fed both their heart and mind and then their imagination
united them to give meaning to their experience. From all they knew of Jesus,
what he taught, how he lived, what he valued and chose, they rightly concluded
that God raised Jesus from the dead. Later on Jesus confirmed their right
belief when he appeared to them on that first Easter evening. He didn’t wait
long to join his friends again.
We
delight our children with partially hidden colored eggs and sweet pastel colored
chocolates. We want them to enjoy the sensory feel of Easter so they can sense
again the newness of springtime life, but we need to feel these senses as adults
just the same. As we counter our many blessings against the way we get battered
down by life’s tragedies and we witness disappointments and heartaches, we need
to think of what is above, not what is on earth. We need to keep our
perspective on our life in the risen Lord. We can allow him to share his emotions
of joy and victory of the resurrection. He comes to console and care for us so
that we know deep down that everything will be all right and that all is gift
for us to share. He returns to tell us that he is happy to be with us again
because his love won’t let anything separate him from us. He wants us to praise
God because he has bridged the divide between humanity and God. God must
certainly be rejoicing in heaven over us.
Permit
your senses to be heightened so you experience the joy because you are important
enough to the Lord that he returns personally for you, personally because of
you. His love is always personal. Feel his happiness that he wants to be part
of every moment of your day. He has come back for you. Alleluia! He is Risen.
Alleulia.
Themes for this Week’s Masses
First
Reading: We follow the Acts of the Apostles in the
Easter octave. Peter stands up on Pentecost to proclaim to Jews in Jerusalem
that Jesus of Nazareth who they put to death has been vindicated by God and
raised to new life. When the Jews realize the significance of their actions,
they petition Peter to be baptized in the name of Jesus. Peter and John heal
the crippled man at "the Beautiful Gate" at the temple. All who
witnessed it recognized that the man used to be the crippled beggar. Peter and
John preach to the Jews gathered at Solomon's portico and tell them all that
the prophets and scripture say about Jesus. The priests, temple guards, and the
Sadducees confront Peter and John and hold them in custody. The religious
authorities question their teaching and healing power. The Sanhedrin dismissed
them with instructions not to speak or teach at all in the name of Jesus.
Peter, John, and the healed man persevere in their boldness. The Sanhedrin wait
to see if this is of God or of another source of power.
Gospel: In
Matthew, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary meet Jesus on the way and he exhorts
them not to be afraid. The chief priests hire soldiers to say, "the
disciples came and stole the body of Jesus." In John, Magdalene weeps
outside the tomb and thinks Jesus is the gardener, until he speaks to her
familiarly. In Luke, two disciples heading towards Emmaus meet Jesus along the
way and he opens the scripture for them. As they recount their story to the
Eleven, Jesus appears before them, beckons them not to be afraid, and eats with
them. In John, six disciples are with Peter as they fish at the Sea of
Tiberius. After a frustrating night of fishing, Jesus instructs them to cast
their nets wide and they catch 153 large fish. The beloved disciple recognized
the man on the beach as the Lord and they rush to meet him. In Mark, Jesus
appears to Mary Magdalene who told the Eleven about him. Two other disciples on
the road returned to speak of their encounter, and then Jesus appears to them
while they were at table.
Saints of the Week
No saints are
remembered during the Easter octave.
This Week in
Jesuit History
·
March 31,
1548: Fr.
Anthony Corduba, rector of the College of Salamanca, begged Ignatius to admit
him into the Society so as to escape the cardinalate which Charles V intended
to procure for him.
·
Apr 1, 1941. The death of Hippolyte
Delehaye in Brussels. He was an eminent hagiographer and in charge of the
Bollandists from 1912 to 1941.
·
Apr 2, 1767. Charles III ordered the
arrest of all the Jesuits in Spain and the confiscation of all their property.
·
Apr 3, 1583. The death of Jeronimo
Nadal, one of the original companions of Ignatius who later entrusted him with
publishing and distributing the Jesuit Constitutions to the various regions of
the early Society.
·
Apr 4, 1534. Peter Faber (Pierre Favre)
ordained a deacon in Paris.
·
Apr 5, 1635. The death of Louis
Lallemant, writer and spiritual teacher.
·
Apr 6, 1850. The first edition of La
Civilta Cattolica appeared. It was the first journal of the restored Society.
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