The Gospels of Easter Day begin by saying one thing: very
early on the first day of the week, the women went to Jesus’ tomb. Here two
things hold our attention. The first one is the act of the women, and the
second is the emphasis on the first day of the week.
Early in the morning, the women go to Jesus’ tomb. That is
fascinating, and it shows their love for Jesus. They were, in a sense, eagerly
waiting for the dawn. Their heart was in the tomb because “where your treasure
is there will your heart be also.” (Matthew 6:21) Yes, their treasure was
Christ, so it is clear that Christ was the first on their list of priorities in
life. In fact, what came to my mind when I meditated on these women was my father,
who always wakes up in the morning and prays in front of the sacred heart of
Jesus.
This is a fact for each of us to introspect. My first
thought or first action when I wake up is proof of where my heart is. Where is
our treasure? Where is Jesus on our priority list? How do we begin our day? How
do we begin our week? In a sense, these women represent all the believers who
go to Church on Sunday mornings. May we begin the week with Christ and the
glory of His resurrection.
Secondly, when we hear the reference to the first day of the
week, we get the natural knowledge that it is Sunday early in the morning, but
for a jew, it is a reference that brings him back to the book of Genesis.
Because there the account of creation says that God completed the work of
creation in six days, and by resting on the seventh day, Saturday, He blessed
it and instituted it as a day of Sabbath
as a sign of the covenant of the old creation. That is, the first day of the
old creation was Sunday. So Jesus’ resurrection marks the beginning of the new
creation on the same day that God began the old creation. In other words,
everything is renewed through the death and resurrection of Christ.
Also, look at God’s creation on the first day: “God said,
Let there be light: there was light” (Gen 1:1). Light is created on the first
day. Jesus Himself said I am the light of the world. Therefore, when God says, “Let
there be light,” we must understand that the light is a prefiguration of the
true light that is coming into the world to enlighten everyone. And that light
is Christ, one who fulfils everything. He rested completely in the tomb on the
Great Saturday after his death and perfected the old Sabbath, the sign of the
covenant of the old creation and Sunday becomes the fulfilment of the old
Sabbath as the sign of the covenant of the new creation. That is why we
Christians celebrate Sabbath not on Saturday but on Sunday. It dates back to
apostolic times. Acts 19 and 1Corinthians 16: 2 are some examples. St. Ignatius,
the disciple of the apostle John, says: “Those who lived according to the old
order of things have come to a new hope, no longer keeping the sabbath, but the
Lord’s Day, in which our life is blessed by him and by his death” (CCC 2175).
Now let us come again to the woman who went to the tomb
early in the morning. Although their action early in the morning on the first
day of the week shows the depth of their love for Christ, apparently, it was a
vain journey because they saw an empty tomb. If so, one question remains. Is
our journey is to see the empty tomb? No. Christ is not found in the tomb
today. The three appearances after His resurrection teach us where we need to
look for Him.
First, Jesus appears to Mary Magdalene, who first sees Jesus
as a gardener (John 20:15).
He is in charge of the garden, which is the Church. Thus it
is revealed that the Church is the new Paradise. Mary Magdalene later
recognized the gardener when she heard His call. So the first way to identify
the resurrected Christ is to listen and read His Word. So, the question for us
is, are you ready to read a few Word of God at the beginning of the day?
The second is the experience of the disciples who went to
Emmaus. They considered Jesus to be a wayfarer (cf. Luke 24: 13-35). They
recognized Jesus when He blessed the bread and broke it. It reminds us that the
sacraments are the second way to understand and experience Christ. It also
reminds us that the one who walks with us is Christ, the only way to recognize
him is to share your bread with him.
The third appearance is on the shores of Tiberias (John 21:
1-14). Look at Jesus’ question to his disciples at the end of a night’s vain
work: “Children, have you any fish?” they replied: No. Jesus then tells them to
cast the net on the right side of the boat. And when they saw the net full of
153 big fishes, they recognized Christ. The net is a symbol of the Church. To
cast a net on the right hand also signifies surrender to the will of God. If
so, it teaches us that it is in the Church that we must seek, encounter, and
experience the risen Christ.
The word “you” in Jesus’ question to the disciples is
significant here: “do you have any fish”? That “you” includes all who work
without God. It reveals the futility of all work that is not with Jesus. Jesus
keeps asking this question to everyone who is working without even going for
Holy Mass, praying and enjoying life as they like.
So let us hold fast to the three ways of the Sacred
Scripture, the Sacrament and the Church to experience the risen Christ. These
three are interrelated.
Through all the words of Sacred Scripture, God speaks only one
single Word, his one Utterance in whom he expresses himself completely. Christ
(cfr CCC 102). “And such is the force and power of the Word of God that it can
serve the Church as her support and vigour, and the children of the Church as
strength for their faith, food for the soul, and a pure and lasting fount of
spiritual life.” Hence “access to Sacred Scripture ought to be open wide to the
Christian faithful.” (CCC 131). Moreover, the very foundation of the Church is
the Word incarnate Christ. Therefore, the Church constantly finds its
nourishment and power in Scripture. Sacraments are “powers that comes forth”
from the Body of Christ, which is ever-living and life-giving. (CCC 1116). The
sacraments are efficacious signs of grace, instituted by Christ and entrusted
to the Church, by which divine life is dispensed to us. (CCC 1131).
Dear friends, let us renew ourselves by accepting this
divine life daily. The resurrection gives us hope in the unexpected realities
of our lives, sorrows, misery, and disease. Yes, that is the biggest
difference. When the world tells us to eat, drink, and make merry, for tomorrow,
we will die, Christ tells us to love, sacrifice, serve, and pray so that
tomorrow we might live.
Let us choose life.
May God Bless you!


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