“He
Saw And Believed” by Rev. Paul Berghout (@FatherPB)
Piety
This
man God raised on the third day and granted that he be visible,
not
to all the people, but to us,
the
witnesses chosen by God in advance,
who
ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead.
He
commissioned us to preach to the people
and
testify that he is the one appointed by God
as
judge of the living and the dead. Acts
10:40-41
Clear
out the old yeast,
so
that you may become a fresh batch of dough,
inasmuch
as you are unleavened.
For
our paschal lamb, Christ has been sacrificed.
Therefore,
let us celebrate the feast,
not
with the old yeast, the yeast of malice and wickedness,
but
with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth. 1 Corinthians 5:7-8
When
Simon Peter arrived after him,
he
went into the tomb and saw the burial cloths there,
and
the cloth that had covered his head,
not
with the burial cloths but rolled up in a separate place.
Then
the other disciple also went in,
the
one who had arrived at the tomb first,
and
he saw and believed. John 20:6-8
Study
There
is a sign in Theo & Stacy’s Greek Restaurant in Kalamazoo, Michigan, that
says, “People who believe the dead never come back to life should be here at
quitting time.”
Let
me tell you an Easter story:
A
long time ago, a Frenchman incurred the displeasure of the emperor Napoleon,
who put the man into a dungeon. He was forsaken by his friends and forgotten by
everyone in the outside world. In loneliness and near despair, he took a stone
and scratched on the wall of his cell, “Nobody cares.”
One
day a green shoot came up through the cracks in the stones on the floor of the
dungeon.
It
began to reach up toward the light in the tiny window at the top of the cell.
The
prisoner kept part of the water brought to him each day by the jailer and
poured it on the blade of green.
It
grew until, at last, it became a plant with a beautiful blue flower.
As
the petals opened in full blossom, the solitary captive crossed out the words
previously written on the wall and above them scratched, “God cares.”
Christ
himself is like that plant and that flower, reaching out to us in the darkest
recesses of our souls.
Who
will roll away the stone from those places where death and decay have us locked
in or trapped?
Easter
becomes an opportunity to imagine God would be present in our lives to roll
away the stone from the graves in the darkest recesses of our souls.
The
water of the Spirit should always be flowing in our lives.
Yet,
only where there are graves is there Resurrection.
Resurrection
is the experience of dying to the old life and finding a new life, a better
life. Recovering addicts know this perhaps better than anyone. Many of us in
our diocese have been doing Catholic jail ministry for decades.
As
the Rev. Carl Malin says, “The best gift you can give to addicts is a sense of
God’s love through your genuine love and concern for them. An addict will sense
moralism and condescension and dismiss you as a source of help. Likewise,
however, an addict will sense genuine love, when given, and be open to letting
you into his or her life. Victory comes as we admit to our powerlessness over
an illness that is greater than we are. We stop our useless attempts to control
and ask for help from those who know more about it than we do. Having admitted
defeat, we are now in a position of asking for help from God and some of His
friends. Out of defeat, victory; from death (of self-centeredness), life, hope,
Resurrection.”
There
is now unleashed a divine salvific energy into the world. As John O’Brien says, “To be an authentic
Christian one must become part of that unleashed energy; the Christ-life must
become one’s own.” His conquering of death and rising to New Resurrected Life
flows potentially in us, which is the key to the joy that awaits all who follow
in Christ’s footsteps.
“Ubi
Caritas Gaudet, ibi est festivitas” —Where charity rejoices, there is
festivity.”
Charity
is the “infused supernatural virtue by which a person loves God above all
things, and loves others for God’s sake.”
Action
In
the race for Easter graces – John is younger, which represents the purity of
intention. He “saw and believed.” He not only outruns Peter, but he surpasses
him in coming to faith regarding the Resurrection. Because both saw the same
thing, faith must not be merely a matter of evidence. Ultimately, Peter will
also believe, but in this story, he responds slowly.
The
Desert Fathers spoke of a first resurrection of the soul that happens when we
have overcome the passions and aligned our will to love God above all things; a
second resurrection of the body is to follow when God judges the living and the
dead when Christ returns. If things work out right, we go to our death already
resurrected.
When
our parents and church baptized the majority of us, we were too young to
remember it or even appreciate it.
We
now have the renewal of our baptismal vows as this is what our Resurrected life
is – Having God’s grace in us so we can love God above all things, reject evil,
and love others for God’s sake.
Amen.
2 comments:
Tony D living the Risen life even now! Thx
That was beautiful! Thank you Father. God Bless! MJ
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