The good news of Easter Sunday fills us with overwhelming joy. The rumours are true. Jesus is risen. This is wonderful news and it's worth repeating.
Can it be true?
Have you heard the
news? How often have we heard this
phrase ... or some derivative of it?
Sometimes what follows is myth and sometimes it is truth, but in most
cases, we shouldn’t believe anything to be true until we can find some proof. That’s the principle, but it seems to me that
in today’s world of fast-paced information exchange, some people accept any
rumor as gospel, even before they have checked out the sources.
Today, Christians are gathering throughout the world, in
places just like this one because we too have heard the news. Some of us may be here because we have heard
the news from someone else, but we have not yet had a chance to check out the
sources. Some of us believe this news to
be true because we trust the sources from which we have received it, and others
of us have no doubt at all that the news is true because we have heard the
truth for ourselves.
Someone might ask: What
is this great news, and why all the fuss?
The answer lies in the experience of the women who went to the tomb early on the first day of the week, while it
was still dark (Jn 20:1). These
women had spent time sitting with Jesus.
They had heard him say that on the third day he would rise, but who
among us believes that such words could actually come true? Even today, as we sit and chat with our
family members and friends, how often do we speak about heaven, about the time
when we will no longer walk on this side of the grass? Such subjects are taboo, yet this is
precisely what the women were witnessing.
Numbed by fear and disbelief, they ran to Simon Peter and the other disciple ... and said to them: They
have taken the Lord out of the tomb, and we do not know where they have laid
him (Jn 20:2). These are words of
fear and confusion, human words that portray human emotions. Peter and the other disciple also set out and went toward the tomb ... running
(Jn 20:3). They too could not
believe what they were hearing. It was
only when they reached the place and saw for themselves: the linen wrappings lying there ... and the
cloth that had been on Jesus’ head, not lying with the linen wrappings but
rolled up in a place by itself (Jn 20:5-7) that they believed.
Later on, Peter, Paul and the other disciples would speak
openly about this moment when they witnessed the fulfillment of the good news
that Jesus had spoken about ... that one day he would rise: we hear a bit of
their testimony in the other readings today.
Because they were able to speak about it, we have heard the good news,
and this is the reason why we celebrate today, why we greet one another with
exuberant joy today, why our voices ring out:
He is risen! Alleluia!
Happy Easter!
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