Readings: Acts 10:34a.37-43; Ps 118:1-2.16-17.22-23; 1 Cor 5:6b-8; John 20:1-9
For those who experienced the Sacred Triduum, by Easter Sunday you are so immersed in the Paschal Mystery of the Lord’s death and resurrection that words not only fail but can get in the way. Liturgy, Mother Church teaches, is
prima theologia (i.e., first theology). As the suffix
urgy (from the Greek
urgos, meaning "to do") indicates, liturgy isn’t just something you do. It is an experience.
When engaged in wholeheartedly, liturgy is an experience that becomes an encounter. It is nothing less than an encounter with the Risen Lord, an experience of His real presence. In speaking of the Lord’s real presence in and through the sacraments, He can seem ghostly. This is okay because, until He returns, Jesus is made present by the Holy Spirit, the Holy Ghost.
The Holy Spirit is the
mode of Christ’s post-resurrection presence. So, the Holy Spirit is the way, the means by which, the medium of His presence. The sacraments are the Holy Spirit’s masterworks. Each of the Church’s seven sacraments features an
epiclesis.
Epiclesis is a Greek verb meaning to call down.
At baptism, plunging his hand into the water, the minister calls the Holy Spirit down on the font. This makes the water “holy.” This is what makes baptism more than just getting wet, which is the outward sign of this sacrament. It is Christ who, through the Holy Spirit, makes the water of the font efficacious for the inward graces conferred by the outward sign.
What are the inward graces received in baptism? Being washed clean from sin, restored to the state of original grace, being reborn as child of God, dying, being buried, and rising to new life in Christ. Because Jesus is risen, so are you! As Nietzsche observed: “only where there are graves are resurrections.”
1 Resurrection is not something you believe happened a long time ago. Resurrection is
the mode of Christian life.
I was joking a few days ago that maybe for his homily I would just say, “He is Risen! Let’s go live like it.” In truth, this encapsulates what Easter is all about. Let’s not forget, every Sunday, even in Lent, is Easter. Eternal life starts at baptism, not after physical death.
Just as every Sunday is Easter, every Friday, making exceptions for Solemnities that from time-to-time fall on Friday, is Good Friday. There is what I call the inverse property of redemption. There is no resurrection without crucifixion. Also, crucifixion without resurrection is nothing other than the cruel and tortuous execution of one more insignificant peasant by the Roman
imperium.
This inverse property of redemption is why it is important to experience the entire Triduum: Mass of the Lord’s Supper on Holy Thursday, the Lord’s Passion on Good Friday, and then Easter.
Easter is the time of overflowing grace imparted through the Church’s sacraments. Last night, in this very church, seven men and women were baptized. Along with two others, they were then confirmed, and they all received Holy Communion for the first time.
Resurrection can remain an abstract concept, a mere belief in a fact, or it can become a matter of experience. Faith is not a differential equation. Like the disciple who arrived at the tomb first but entered it after Peter, who saw the burial cloths strewn about the empty tomb and believed, faith is the experience of the mystery to be delved into ever more deeply.”
2
Despite believing, along with the others, this disciple did “not yet understand the Scripture that [Jesus] had to rise from the dead.”
3 As Anslem of Canterbury insisted:
Credo ut intelligam- “I believe so that I may understand.”
4 Not the other way around.
It is a custom in the Greek Ukrainian Catholic Rite for each person present at a baptism to receive a martyr’s ribbon. Marty, too is a Greek word. It means witness. What is it we witnessed last night? We witnessed seven people die, be buried, and rise to new life.
This is what I mean when I say liturgy is an experience that becomes an encounter with our Risen Lord. In a few moments, we will renew our own baptismal promises and be sprinkled with water from the same font in which our sisters and brothers were baptized last night.
Renewal of baptismal promises is that for which Lent is preparation. Prayer, fasting, and almsgiving along with other penitential and spiritual practices, including going to confession, which is made more available during Lent, is how we prepare for this renewal each year.
Through baptism, you are plunged into this mystery. It is this mystery you live as it unfolds through the events that make-up your life. What is life but experience? It is through experience that we come to understand ever more deeply what it means to rise from the dead.
Alleluia. Christus resurexit, quia Deus caritas est. Alléluia!
1 Friedrich Nietzsche. Thus Spake Zarathustra, Second Part XXXIII, “The Grave Song.”↩
2 John 20:8.↩
3 John 20:9.↩
4 Anslem of Canterbury,Proslogion, 1.