He is Risen, Indeed He is Risen! Alleluia!
On Good Friday, the world was darkened by an eclipse of the
sun. Evil was so tangible that even the earth shuddered with an earthquake. It
was a day when lies and conspiracies and plotting seemed to conquer truth, and
darkness seemed to eclipse light, and death seemed to have been victorious over
life, and Satan seemed to have gotten the upper hand on God.
But enough of that. For now we celebrate a morning when the
tomb was empty; a morning when light was so bright it blinded roman soldiers
and burnt an image into a burial cloth; a morning when life triumphed over
death, and truth trumped falsehood, and hope was victorious over despair, and
faith championed doubt, and God put Satan in his place. For He is Risen, Indeed
He is Risen! Alleluia!
The extraordinary news of Easter morning is that not only
did Jesus Christ conquer death for himself, but that he shares that victory
over death and sin and despair and darkness and sin and evil with us. His
victory is ours. He invites us to share in his triumph. If that is not
extraordinarily Good News, I don’t know what is.
On the High Holy Days, many of us come to Church for a lot
of different reasons: perhaps you are here today because it’s simply family
tradition or because it just seemed like the right thing to do; perhaps you are
a life-long Catholic, and there was never a doubt that you’d be at Church on
Easter Sunday.
Maybe there’s a bit of darkness, or a lot of darkness in
your life, and you just needed to draw near to the brightest light you possibly
could today. In that case, you’re in very good company, because I’m pretty sure
everybody in this Church has experienced are periods in life that seem more
like Good Friday than Easter Sunday. Periods of life when you wonder about
life’s meaning, periods of life when we seem stuck on a cross, or overwhelmed,
like life has buried us in a tomb, when we struggle to find God amidst all the
chaos and violence and evil in the world.
The message of course today is that Good Friday does not get
the last word. Easter morning does. Our faith in Jesus Christ allows us to be
confident that evil and death do not get the last word. So, if there is a part
of your life, that still seems to be stuck in Good Friday, I invite you to ask
Jesus very sincerely today, to enter that part of your life, to transform it.
Ask him to come into that Good Friday broken relationship, that Good Friday
doubt or confusion, that Good Friday sense of defeat. And to allow him to bring
Easter Victory to your Good Friday sufferings.
A number of years before his death, Pope Francis offered
these words on Easter: “Let the risen Jesus enter your life, welcome him as a
friend, with trust: he is life! If up till now you have kept him at a distance,
step forward. He will receive you with open arms. If you have been indifferent,
take a risk: you won’t be disappointed. If following him seems difficult, don’t
be afraid, trust him, be confident that he is close to you, he is with you and
he will give you the peace you are looking for and the strength to live as he
would have you do.”
In just a few moments we will renew our baptismal promises.
From time to time I meet a college student or older adult who, though baptized
as an infant has left the practice of the Catholic faith: they aren’t coming to
mass and they don’t accept the truth behind particular Church teachings. I ask them why they’ve left the practice of
the faith in which they were raised.
And they often say, “well, I was baptized as a baby, so I didn’t get a
choice to become Catholic or not.”
Well, to all of you, who feel like you didn’t get a choice,
today, and every Easter, we renew the promises of our baptism, we renew our
faith that Jesus rose, we renew our belief in all the Church teaches in his
name. You will then be sprinkled with
the Easter waters, that the Lord may breathe new life into your religious
commitments.
In fact, the Early Christians celebrated every Sunday as a
“little Easter”. They knew that without this little Easter every week, they’d
be allowing those forces which conspired against Christ on Good Friday to have
power over them. So, if you want to make this Easter part of your deliverance
out of the Good Fridays in your life, make every Sunday a “little Easter”
For, if the power of Christ’s resurrection is to overflow in
your life, constant faith must be an open conduit. Don’t shut off the flow of
grace. If you are tempted to do so, remember that it’s the power of the world
trying to isolate you again.
So today, the priest will ask every one of you here six
questions for the renewal of your baptismal promises. The first three have to do with Sin. Christ’s Easter victory was a victory over
sin, so the Christian is to seek to be rid of anything that has to do with
sin. So the priest will ask, “Do you
renounce sin, so as to live in the freedom of the children of God. Do you renounce
the lure of evil, so that sin may have no mastery over you? Do you renounce
Satan, the author and prince of Sin?”
What are we saying, when we say “I do” to these
questions? I’m promising to do
everything in my power, with the help of the power of Easter, to put an end to
sin in my life, to put an end to all self-absorption and all selfishness. I’m
promising to do everything in my own power to change my life, to alter my daily
and weekly routines, that they can better reflect the Christian faith as taught
by the Catholic Church. I’m renouncing
all of those excuses of laziness which hinder the power of Easter becoming more
manifest in me. All the powers of lust which cause me to focus on passing
earthly pleasure instead of eternal heavenly joy. Today, we readily turn away
from these things. For those excuses, those sins, are the most likely culprits
for not enjoying the peace and joy God wants for us.
The last three questions of the baptismal promises concern
the doctrines of the Faith. Do you
believe in God the Father, do you believe that Jesus Christ suffered and died
and rose again, do you believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy Catholic Church.
These are teachings the Church professes every Sunday when
we profess the Creed. These are the
truths upon which our religious life rests.
These are the truths that give us strength in the face of temptation,
they are the light of truth in the darkness of the world’s confusion and error.
Amidst all of the nonsense in the world, all of the error perpetuated through
modern media, all the fake news out there, the Christian can say, I know these
things to be true.
We renew our baptismal promises today, and by doing so open
ourselves to the power of Christ’s Easter Victory. Through them, we become
heirs of the promises of Christ, that we, like him, shall be risen from the
dead and live forever. For he risen from the dead, indeed he is risen,
alleluia, alleluia.

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