From the Pastor’s Desk,
The Resurrection is something that only God has done and therefore is not a part of our human experience. It did truly happen, but it is a trans-historical event—a divine intervention into human history. Thus an event that historians cannot prove or disprove. God’s actions are not the subject of historical proof. God’s actions are seen, understood and accepted through our faith. Perhaps the COVID 19 virus could almost be an example. We are told it is here, all around us, but we cannot see it, hear it, smell it or touch it. The sun is shining today and it is a beautiful day and people are out walking, mowing and riding our bicycles. We take it on faith in our medical community that the virus is here and it is deadly and we need to protect ourselves.
According to the Gospels, it took some time for Jesus’ family and friends to finally recognize Him. They knew his voice, they touched Him, they shared meals with him. He was not a ghost. The Gospels very definitely emphasized the physical characteristics of His appearance. However, the Gospels also made it clear that there was something different about the risen Christ. He was no longer subject to the limitations that mortality places upon us. Once risen, Jesus was present to his friends without them at first knowing Him. He could enter rooms where the doors were shut. He could appear suddenly and just as suddenly disappear, as he did with the two disciples when He broke bread at Emmaus.
Today begins the season of celebration and hope. In the eyes of the world, Good Friday had ended in a catastrophic event. But in the darkness of the night of Holy Saturday, it became quite clear that the devil had lost the fight—death no longer had power over us. Our faith and the hope that springs from it declares that, through the power of God, life will win in the end. Despite what this world throws against the followers of Christ, there is the hope of being with our loved ones once more, sharing paradise with them and with our loving God forever. Those four words spoken at the grave by the angel, “He has been raised,” are words that sent a shock through the entire universe. The impossible had happened—life from the grave. Our human story was no longer birth, life, and death. It had become birth, life, death, and eternal life. That first Easter was not just a happy ending to Jesus’ story; it was a radical new beginning for the human race. With the Easter Vigil, we began the great celebration of the Easter Season. The purple of Lent and the red of the Passion have been put away, and we celebrate Jesus breaking the bonds of death for us all. CHRIST HAS RISEN!
I look forward to being able to celebrate the Eucharist in the Cathedral filled with all of you around the altar of our Lord. Be safe and know that Fr. Joseph and I are praying daily for all of you. May our loving God protect each of us.