Easter
Morning 2017
Fr.
Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Priory, NOLA
St. Dominic Priory, NOLA
Mary
of Magdala sees that the stone has been moved, and she is confused.
Peter and the other disciples race to the tomb to see for themselves.
They do not understand either. The tomb is empty. Nothing is left
behind but his burial cloths. One believes but the others remain
perplexed. Despite having spent three years with Jesus as his
disciples, most of them do not yet understand the bare reality of
Christ's resurrection, much less do they comprehend the radical
transformation of human history that his resurrection initiates. Mary
and the other disciples are standing on the ground, the very spot
where Divine Love and human nature meet – in
person
– to heal the ancient rift btw God and Man. It all starts in a
manger and comes to its climax some thirty years later in a grave.
Though the salvation of all creation is not yet complete, everything
necessary is firmly in place. When we do our small part, when we
come to “understand the Scripture that he had to rise from the
dead,” we arrive at that very spot and begin our own participation
in what's to come. What's coming? Paul says, “For you have died,
and your life is hidden with Christ in God. When Christ your life
appears, then you too will appear with him in glory.”
Christ's
resurrection from the tomb and his eventual ascension is the promised
sign to us that we too will be given new life after death. Pope
Benedict gives us a clue how this will happen, “.
. .[his] Resurrection has reached us and seized us. We grasp hold of
it, we grasp hold of the risen Lord, and we know that he holds us
firmly even when our hands grow weak.” The whole purpose of the
resurrection is to bring all of creation back to the Father. What
does that mean for us now? BXVI says, “We grasp hold of his hand,
and thus we also hold on to one another’s hands, and we become one
single subject. . .”
All that grasping and hand-holding, all the following along and
behind, the “one single subject” is the Church, the Body of
Christ – here on Earth now but heading toward resurrection and
ascension. Our minute-by-minute task is to stay resolutely within the
Body of Christ, doing, saying, thinking with the Church so that we do
not let go of his hand. If you will be raised with Christ, then seek
always what is above. Live now with Christ. He has you firmly in his
grasp!
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