Vatican
City, 31 March 2013 (VIS) – Yesterday at 8:30 in the evening, the Holy Father
presided at the Easter Vigil in St. Peter's Basilica. The liturgy began in the
church atrium with a blessing of the new fire and the preparation of the
Paschal candle. After processing to the altar with the lit candle and the
singing of the “Exsultet”, the celebration continued with the Liturgy of the
Word, the Baptismal Liturgy, and the Liturgy of the Eucharist.
During
the Vigil, the Pope administered the sacraments of Christian initiation
(Baptism, Confirmation, and Eucharist) to four catechumens: one from Italy, one
from Albania, one from Russia, and one from the United States. After the Gospel
was read, the Holy Father dedicated his homily to discussing the holy women who
went to the tomb and found it empty. “We are afraid of God's surprises! He
always surprises us!” Following is the full text of his homily:
“Dear
Brothers and Sisters,
In
the Gospel of this luminous night of the Easter Vigil, we are the first to meet
the women who went to Jesus' tomb with spices to anoint his body (cf. Lk
24:1-3). They go to perform an act of compassion, of affection, of love. It is
a traditional gesture for a beloved person who has died, just as we would do
too. They had followed Jesus, listened to him, felt themselves to be understood
in their dignity, and they had accompanied him to the end, on Calvary, an at
the moment he was taken down from the cross.”
“We
can imagine how they felt as they made their way to his tomb: a certain
sadness, sorrow because Jesus had left them and was dead, his story was over.
Now they would go back to their previous lives. But the women continued to feel
love and their love for Jesus compelled them to go to his tomb. At this point,
however, something completely unexpected happens, something new, which upsets
their hearts and their plans and which will upset their whole lives: They see
the stone rolled away from the tomb. They draw near and they do not find the
Lord's body. It is a reality that leaves them perplexed, doubtful, full of
questions: 'What is happening?', What does this all mean?' (cf. Lk 24:4).”
“Isn't
that also what happens to us when something truly new occurs in our everyday
lives? We stop, don't understand, don't know how to handle it. New things often
frighten us, even the newness that God brings us, the newness that God asks of
us. We are like the Apostles in the Gospel: we often prefer to hold on to our
sureties, to stop at the tomb, to stop at just thinking about the departed one
who, in the end, lives only in our memory like great persons of the past. We're
afraid of God's surprises. Dear brothers and sisters, in our lives we are
afraid of God's surprises! He always surprises us! That is how the Lord is!”
“Brothers
and sisters, let's not close ourselves to the newness that God wants to bring
to our lives! Often we are tired, disheartened, sad; We feel the weight of our
sins and think we're not going to make it. Let's not get locked up in
ourselves. Let's not lose our confidence. Let us never give up. There are no
situations that God cannot change; There is no sin that He won't forgive if we
open ourselves to him.”
“But
let's go back to the Gospel, to the women, and take a step forward. They find
the tomb empty. Jesus' body is not there. Something new has happened but this
still doesn't tell them anything certain. It raises questions and leaves them
perplexed without offering an answer. And then, two men in dazzling garments
who say: 'Why do you seek the living one among the dead? He is not here, but He
has been raised.' (Lk 24:5-6). What had been a simple gesture, an act certainly
undertaken in love—going to the tomb—now transforms into an occurrence, a truly
life-changing event.”
“Nothing
remains as it was before, not only in the lives of those women, but also in our
lives and in our story of humanity. Jesus isn't someone who has died. He is
risen. He is the Living One! He has not simply come back to life but is life
itself because He is the Son of God who is the Living God. Jesus is no longer
in the past but lives in the present and is projected toward the future. Jesus
is God's eternal 'today'.This is how God's newness presents itself to the eyes
of the women, of the disciples, of all of us: victory over sin, over evil, over
death, over everything that oppresses our lives and gives them a less human
face.”
“This
is a message that is addressed to me, to you, dear sister, to you, dear
brother. How many times do we need Love to tell us: Why do you seek the living
one among the dead? Our problems and our everyday worries tend to wrap us up in
ourselves, in sadness and bitterness... and that is where death lies. Let's not
look there for He who is alive!”
“Accept
the Risen Jesus into your life, then. Welcome him as a friend, with confidence.
He is life! If up to now you have been distant from him, take a small step: He
will welcome you with open arms. If you are indifferent, take the risk: You
will not be disappointed. If following him seems difficult to you, don't be
afraid: entrust yourself to him and rest assured that He is close to you. He is
with you and will give you the peace you are seeking and the strength to live
as He wants you to.”
“There
is one last, simple element that I would like to emphasize in the Gospel of
this luminous Easter Vigil. The women encounter the newness of God. Jesus is
risen, He is the Living One. But, faced with the empty tomb and the two men in
dazzling garments, their first reaction is one of fear: They 'bowed their faces
to the ground', St. Luke notes. They didn't even have the courage to look. But,
when they hear the announcement of the Resurrection, they accept it with faith.
And the two men in dazzling garments introduce a fundamental word: remember.
'Remember what He said to you while He was still in Galilee … And they
remembered his words.' (Lk 24:6,8).”
“This
is a call to remember their encounter with Jesus, with his words, his deeds,
his life. It is precisely this loving remembrance of their experience with the
Master that leads the women to overcome every fear and to take the announcement
of the Resurrection to the Apostles and to all the others (cf. Lk 24:9).
Remembering what God has done and continues to do for me, for us; remembering
the path we have travelled—this opens wide our hearts to hope for the future.
Let's learn to remember what God has done in our lives!”
No comments:
Post a Comment