Easter Sunday
[In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.]. What does Easter mean to you? You have come here to Mass, so it clearly has some religious importance for you. Perhaps it is also a day with extra time spent with extended family, and maybe a better meal than usual. But I dare guess that Easter does not have the same potency for us as it did for our Lord’s first disciples.
Part of the waning of the extraordinary nature of Easter is due to a lack of appreciation of the seriousness of sin. Whether it directly affects us or not, we all live in an environment that supposes that everyone is basically good, and everyone generally goes to heaven. The first disciples did not suffer that opinion; their experience told them the exact opposite.
The disciples lived in a time when a foreign power occupied their homeland. This foreign power, the Romans, pushed their pagan views upon all under their rule. They promoted worshipping false gods; sexual immorality, both homo- and heterosexual in nature; violence and intimidation as the surest way to keep peace (we might say today: might makes right).
But the Romans were not the only problem for the Jews. No, there was real spiritual oppression by their own religious leaders, twisting the law and its meaning. No small number of Jews found themselves in a position outside of what the Pharisees taught as a moral way of life. How often do the Gospels relate that tax collectors and sinners were following Christ and changing their lives! There were also many diseases and illnesses that could shorten a person’s life or lead them to be ostracized from even family and friends.
Among the Romans, the Pharisees, sickness, and a lack of personal holiness, the disciples knew they needed a savior. They knew that they had to change, but didn’t know if they could do it. They hoped for life after death, a place of the fullness of blessings and peace, but did not know if such a place were attainable.
We ourselves live in a time that differs greatly and in some ways not at all from the time of the disciples. Advances in medicine have extended life expectancy, but there are new diseases being developed, and wreaking havoc across the world. Some Catholic bishops, priests, and laity promote teachings contrary to the faith. Rather than a foreign government pushing their will upon a particular people, a wide-sweeping acceptance of worship of money and power, sexual immorality of various kinds, seemingly endless violence, even against children, and a might-makes-right mentality are ubiquitous.
The power of Easter is that God the Son conquered all that is wrong and fallen through His Death and Resurrection. We no longer have to wonder if life after death is possible; Christ died and came back to life. If death, the consequence of sin, no longer has the last word, then everything good and holy is possible. No power, whether earthly or spiritual, can hold us back if we are in Christ. No oppressor will have the final victory over us if we belong to Christ, the Victor over sin, death, and everything that connects itself to those fallen realities.
Easter gives us the answer, just as it gave the answer to the first disciples, and has given the answer to countless generations since then. Easter is a reminder that sin and death do not get the last word, but God does, because God conquered sin and death in Christ. If we want Easter to make a difference, and not just be a Sunday where we eat better food and see other relatives, then we must take hold of the Easter graces and practices and live them out each day and each week. If we want to see endless violence and suffering end, then we need to live as Easter people.
Easter means making God number one in our life. Not sports. Not vacations. Not relaxation. Not exercise. Not even another person, as dear as they may be to us. God has to be number one. Those other things and many more are good, but they cannot take the place of God. If you want the reign of sin and death to which we have grown so accustomed to end, go to church every Sunday and Holyday, not simply to go, but to be transformed by the grace of God. Go to confession at least every month, to acknowledge that you are a sinner and in need of God’s mercy. Allow Christ’s victory over sin to take hold in your life by handing over to Christ all that is fallen and sinful, and receive the mercy which makes possible true transformation.
Easter means not supporting death, in any of its forms. If we wish to live in Easter joy, we cannot re-invite the works of death into our life, or the life of others. In its most extreme positions, it means not supporting abortion or euthanasia. How can we not expect death and destruction when it’s openly voted for and codified in law? When we devalue one human life, we devalue all human lives. Other works of death include racism, unjust prejudice, and even those actions and thoughts of hatred towards other at work, on the road, or in any other place. None of those are part of the new life that Christ brought. The demonization of those who have different views, even if the ideas they propose are wrong, does not contribute to the new life that Christ desires for us.
If we wish Easter to be more than simply another Sunday; if we wish to see an end to the widespread violence and hate, then we need to open ourselves up to the graces from God that take us away from death and lead us to eternal life. Go to church every Sunday and Holyday; go to confession regularly; stop supporting works of death. If we want the joy and peace of Easter, of Christ’s victory over sin and death, then live His life each day to the best of your ability. Allow the power of Easter to resonate in every inch of our being. [In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.]
A blog to communicate the fruits of my own contemplation of Scripture for most of the Sundays and Holy Days of the Liturgical Year. By this blog I hope that you can draw closer to the Triune God and see how the Word of God continues to be living and effective in your own lives.