April 1st
2018. Easter Sunday
GOSPEL John 20, 1-9
Translated from a homily by Don Fabio
Rosini, broadcast on Vatican Radio
Don Fabio’s
reflection follows the Gospel reading . . .
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Reflection)
GOSPEL John 20, 1-9
It was
very early on the first day of the week and still dark, when Mary of Magdala
came to the tomb. She saw that the stone had been moved away from the tomb and
came running to Simon Peter and the other disciple, the one Jesus loved. ‘They
have taken the Lord out of the tomb’ she said ‘and we don’t know where they
have put him.’
So Peter
set out with the other disciple to go to the tomb. They ran together, but the
other disciple, running faster than Peter, reached the tomb first; he bent down
and saw the linen cloths lying on the ground, but did not go in. Simon Peter
who was following now came up, went right into the tomb, saw the linen cloths
on the ground, and also the cloth that had been over his head; this was not
with the linen cloths but rolled up in a place by itself. Then the other
disciple who had reached the tomb first also went in; he saw and he believed.
Till this moment they had failed to understand the teaching of Scripture, that
he must rise from the dead.
The Gospel of the Lord: Praise to you Lord
Jesus Christ
Kieran’s summary . . . When Peter and John arrive at the empty
tomb, they discover that they had not understood what was contained in the
Scriptures. Easter involves the unexpected and imponderable action of God. The
Lord’s salvation is always surprising! Moses seemed to be leading the people to
a dead end, but then the Red Sea parted and the people of Israel were saved.
Who would have thought that the road to freedom was through the sea! In his
dark night of faith, Abraham was asked to sacrifice that which was most
precious to him, and then he discovered that God does not take but only gives. In
order to experience Easter, let us free ourselves from our stagnant modes of
thinking! God moves the rocks and brings life from death! He opens roadways to
freedom in the sea and creates life from nothingness! In order to experience Easter, let us abandon ourselves to the Lord and
be led by him along pathways that are completely unexpected and are not our own.
This Sunday, we proclaim the joyous resurrection of Jesus, which is not a
preconceived scheme, or a spiritual technique, but an act of abandonment. It involves handing
ourselves over to him and allowing him to lead us to a fuller life, a life that
no one will ever be able to take from us.
God’s solutions are always surprising. The people
of Israel escape from Egypt right through the middle of the Red Sea. Abraham
receives the promise of the Lord during the night of faith in which he was
asked to sacrifice his only son.
On this joyous feast of Easter we listen to the
narrative regarding the discovery of the empty tomb. This is described in both
the Gospel of the Easter Vigil and that of the Sunday Mass. The stone has been
moved and Jesus’ body is no longer there. Peter and John race to the tomb. John
arrives first but awaits Peter before entering. There is much symbolism in
these different speeds of running and the respectful waiting by John. Peter
goes inside and sees the cloths, but the body is certainly not there. Then John
enters, “sees and believes”. They had not yet understood the Scripture that he
must rise from the dead. Easter is something imponderable, the surprising
action of God. It is the aspect of reality that we never calculated. It is the
escape route, the solution that we never considered. That which we never
understood, the sacred Scriptures, were the deposit in which all of these
promises were contained. They tell us that God is surprising, that he is not
like us, that his solutions are not the ones that we think us. The escape route
for the people of Israel in the great story of the Jewish Passover was through
the sea! Who would have ever suspected it! Moses appeared to be leading the
people to a dead end, but the sea opened and they had the incredible experience
of passing through it. The water that was their salvation was also the
instrument by which the oppression of the Egyptians was destroyed. In a similar
way, during the night of faith of Abraham, the Lord asked for the very thing
that Abraham was most attached to. It was necessary for Abraham to discover
that God does not ask; God gives. That which appears death becomes life; that
which appears the end becomes the beginning.
Salvation always involves the unexpected action of
God
The first three readings from the Vigil recount the
great works of the Lord. In the first reading God creates from nothing. He puts
life where there is no life. These are things that we are asked to understand, but
we are unable to understand this creation from absolutely nothing. We do not
comprehend a faith that is actually gaining everything at the very moment when
it appears to be losing everything. We do not understand the solution of God
which is always in the place where no one would think of looking. The successful
escape of the Exodus did not depend on the speed of the people but on the power
of God.
Let us free ourselves from our stagnant ways of
thinking! The Lord opens roadways in the sea and brings life from nothing!
Our sin leads to destruction, but the Lord places
himself there, in the midst of our confused and contradictory pathways. He
accepts our sin, takes it upon himself, and transforms it into unexpected salvation.
In the night of Easter we sing the proclamation which has the famous patristic
phrase “O felix culpa!” - the happy fault that merited such a great Saviour. Because
of the Lord, the sin is no longer closed up in itself but open to the saving
action of God. The death that we inflict on Jesus is resolved in the response
of the Father, the resurrection, the beginning of something that we will never
fully understand. Let us free ourselves from our preconceived modes of
thinking! God moves the stones and makes the dead rise! He opens roadways in
the sea and brings life forth from nothingness.
In order to experience the Easter of the Lord, we
do not need any special techniques or mental schemes. All we need to do is
abandon ourselves to him and allow him to lead us on his unexpected pathway to
life.
It is one thing to be fixated with our own
capacities and limits, and to think that life depends on what we make of it; it
is something completely different to abandon ourselves to the Lord and be led
by him along pathways that are completely unexpected and are not our own. I
will never know how the Lord intends to lead me, how he intends me to progress,
but the important thing is that he is calling me to let myself be led by him.
This Sunday, we proclaim the joyous resurrection of Jesus, which is not a
preconceived scheme, or a spiritual technique, but an act of abandonment. It
involves handing ourselves over to him and allowing him to lead us to a fuller
life, a life that no one will ever be able to take from us. When someone experiences
the Easter of the Lord, he will never forget it again. When our pain or our
oppression has been illuminated by the power and providence of the paternity of
the Lord, then it will remain with us forever. The Christian celebrates Easter over
and over again because the seas part in front of us over and over again, the
tomb opens in front of us many times, and that which seemed the end becomes a
new beginning.
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