Happy Easter! Felices Pascuas! Joyeuses
Paques! Buona Pasqua! Frohe Ostern!
Today is a day to be joyful, happy and
enthusiastic about life. We have so much to be grateful for, especially the
gift of faith that enables us to relate to Jesus Christ as our way, our truth
and our life.
But, you may say, life is giving us so
many lemons.
You may have heard the story about parents who had twins,
one an optimist, the other a pessimist. The parents asked a psychologist how to
better understand these two. The psychologist recommended this: buy the
pessimist a nice bicycle; and for the optimist, go to a horse stable and gather
into a gift box the “stuff” you find on the stable floor.
When the twins opened their gifts, the
pessimist whined about the color of the bicycle and the lack of gadgets.
Meanwhile, the optimist looked inside his box and giggled, “There’s gotta be a
pony here somewhere!”
The moral of the story is obvious: be optimistic; enjoy life. That's what
Easter is all about.
Easter symbolizes new life. Because
Jesus Christ is alive!
Easter is about daybreak, starting over. Jesus’s resurrection is a new day. Each
morning, we awaken with a chance to start over. Perhaps the night before, we
carried burdens: things undone, bad things said, good things unsaid. But with
the dawn comes opportunity.
We begin
again TODAY. Who among us does not want to be more loving, more generous,
more caring, more thoughtful, more helpful? Who doesn’t know a heart to heal, a
relationship to mend, a lost soul to find?
This Easter, God wakes us up again, to rediscover His extraordinary grace transforming
our ordinary lives.
In the Gospel,
we hear the story of the resurrection of Jesus. Mary Magdalene comes to the
tomb only to find it empty; she summons Peter and John.
Jesus is not
among the dead. He is risen. He is alive. He has passed through this earthly
life--through the mystery of death-- and entered into a new, transfigured
reality. This heavenly reality is ours
as well. That is the Easter message!
Some of you
may have seen monuments to those lost in wars or tragedies like 9-11. One of
the most moving memorials for me is The Vietnam Memorial in Washington, DC.
That memorial displays the names of 58,000 plus men and women killed or missing
in that war. I’ve often thought, when I visited that memorial, How many hopes lie buried here. These
people were full of life, and suddenly they were dead.
The
disciples could have uttered the same words: how many hopes lie buried here. Yet soon after, Christ appeared to
Mary Magdalene outside the tomb, then to the disciples in the upper room, and to
the two disciples on the road to Emmaus. The resurrected Jesus was not a spirit
or ghost; nor was he simply resuscitated. Otherwise, they would have recognized
him immediately. The earthly and crucified Jesus was the same person as the
resurrected Jesus. But he was transformed into a new reality. Jesus said to the
disciples, I live, and because I live, we also live.
How is that?
We are born in the flesh, then reborn in
the Spirit. Water is poured upon us in the rite of baptism, and in these
waters the Spirit of God is poured out upon us. The triune God lives within us,
and we live within the triune God.
As we grow
into adolescence, the bishop anoints our forehead in the sign of the cross with
the oil of chrism—and God pours out more fully the gifts of the Spirit so that
we might practice more faithfully the fruits of the Spirit: love, generosity,
patience, and faithfulness.
And at this mass,
the living Christ sacramentally presences himself to us in the signs of bread
and wine. He mystically reenacts his salvific activity and becomes one with us
in Communion. The living Christ feeds us with his life so we can continue our
journey. Yes, we are a pilgrim people; and our purpose is to live with God
forever. If we should stumble, the rite of penance celebrates God’s mercy.
Yes, through
the sacraments especially, we experience the living Christ so that we can go
forth to love and serve. In the exchange of wedding promises, God strengthens
the love that binds a couple together. In the anointing of the sick, God heals
our sinful wounds. All the sacraments are signs of God’s unconditional love for
us.
Eternal life
in relationship with God and one another—that is our ultimate purpose. In the
mystery of our own dying, we believe we will make an evolutionary leap into a
new reality, as Jesus already has.
Easter is
about getting our priorities straight, about asking, “How can we become more
god-like, more loving, more generous, more helpful?” Easter is about finding a heart to heal, a
relationship to mend, a lost soul to refresh.
Easter is
indeed a fresh start. Jesus Christ
lives. And because He lives, we live. That
is the message of Easter. Amen.