Homily for Easter Sunday Year B 2015
Introduction
For Catholics, the liturgy this week has
offered a variety of unusual rituals and symbols, some of which might seem outright
bizarre especially for the younger members of our congregation.
·
We began with a procession of
palms on Sunday, something like our Mardi Gras parades, but without the beads
and naughty behaviour.
·
On Holy Thursday we washed the
feet of twelve people, carried the Blessed Sacrament away, leaving the
sanctuary bare.
·
Good Friday had us doing the
Way of Cross in Church and outside Church and adoring the Cross.
·
Tonight is perhaps the climax with
the many readings from the Bible, singing of the Exultet, the procession with
candles and the lighting of the fire.
One rather naughty young man, certainly not from this Church, was heard
describing the Easter Vigil as the barbecue service.
And we did all these things to express one
simple message: “Jesus is risen.”
But why do all these rituals and
ceremonies? Why not just come right out
and say, “Jesus is risen,” and then we can go home an hour earlier, something
which perhaps parents will little kids might really appreciate!
The Church uses all these ceremonies for
the same reason companies use commercials to sell us stuff. Companies know that it is not enough to tell people
about a product with words; you must also appeal to the other senses and even
the inner sense of imagination to help them get the message. That is why companies paid four million
dollars for a 30-second television commercial during this year’s super
bowl. To sell what? Budweiser, Doritos
and deodorant.
A few years ago I saw a really creative
soft-drink commercial on TV. A young boy
in a small town goes to a soda vending machine and after inserting two quarters
takes out two cans of Coca Cola. But
that is not the end of the story. Because
the boy is of short stature, he places the two cans of Coke on the ground,
about a foot apart, stands on them and now can press the button higher up. And so he presses the button for Pepsi, gets
his can of Pepsi soda and happily walks away.
The commercial ends with the words: “The joy of Pepsi.”
Scripture and Theology
The
ceremonies of this week with their unusual bells, yells and smells, have also
been trying to teach us a message, which is: “The joy of the resurrection.”
The joy
of the resurrection is the central message of the Easter story and indeed the
central message of our Christian faith.
Easter tells us that the failure of Good Friday was only apparent; God
has confirmed all that Jesus said and did by raising him from the dead. And most importantly, because Jesus rose from
the dead, we too have a shot at resurrection and at life with God forever.
And yet
this message is not always easy to understand.
Even the first disciples could not wrap their heads around it.
·
Mary Magdalene went to the tomb
very early in the morning, to attend to the body of her beloved Lord, but was
shocked to find an empty tomb.
·
On hearing the news about the
empty tomb, “The Disciple Jesus Loved,” and Peter raced to the
tomb and saw the empty burial cloths.
·
Later that evening the Lord appeared to the
whole group of shocked disciples, except Thomas who was playing hooky; he also
appeared to the two disciples travelling to Emmaus and they could not recognize
him.
Thankfully
for us, the Lord helped these first disciples to believe; after seeing the the
stone rolled away, the empty tomb and empty cloths, and after seeing the Lord
himself, they believed that the Lord had risen.
We who do
not have that privilege of being eye-witnesses have to rely on the testimony of
these disciples which we read in the Bible.
But we also rely on the rituals of our liturgy, which explain this
message to us in such a way that it sticks.
·
While the Fiat commercial uses a beautiful
woman to suggest that the fiat car is just as beautiful, we bless water that washes
away our sin in baptism and presents us to God clean and truly beautiful! After all St. Paul tells us that, as we have been baptized with the
Lord we shall also rise with him.
·
While the Budweiser commercial
uses a puppy to suggest that their beer is like a very close friend, we light a
fire and process with candles to teach us that only the resurrection brings true
and everlasting friendship with God.
·
While the goofy commercials use
talking lizards to sell us insurance, talking babies to sell us financial services
and talking teddy-bears to sell us toilet paper, our strange Holy Week rituals
draw us into a sense of mystery. We
realize that we cannot fully understand the resurrection and will understand it
completely only when we get to the other side.
Christian Life
But it
is not enough for a commercial to be informative, amusing or intriguing. A commercial must convince us to go and buy the
product.
After
struggling with cold-like symptoms for nearly a month, recently I saw an
allergy medicine commercial on television and was impressed by the relief it
brought that nice lady; so I went and bought some. And although as you can hear, my voice is
still kind of nasal, I have had some relief from all the coughing and sneezing. In my case, that commercial achieved its
purpose.
I would
hope that the ceremonies of this Holy Week have also left their mark on us, even
if in a subliminal way. After
experiencing the Easter commercial we must live like people who know the joy of
the resurrection. Let me suggest one
thing among many that we can do to experience the joy of the resurrection.
As we
Catholics know, every Sunday is a small Easter, for every Sunday is a
celebration of the death and resurrection of Our Lord. That is why we are required to attend Mass on
Sunday, not simply to fulfil some law of the Church, but because we want to take
part in that unique event of our salvation.
And so, can we renew our observance of Sunday as the day set apart for
the Lord, the day the Lord defeated death, the day the Lord has made for us to
rejoice?
·
We could recommit ourselves to attending Sunday Mass not only regularly
but also with deep devotion and attention.
·
We could recommit ourselves to making Sunday a family day, when we
spend time with family and with relatives and friends.
·
We could recommit ourselves to making Sunday a time to learn more about
our faith by reading the Scriptures and the Catechism.
What
the Easter commercial is selling is life with God for eternity and these things
should help to put us and keep us on the resurrection path.
Conclusion
Finally,
one other Easter tradition is the Easter egg.
This tradition comes from the practice of having to give up eggs during
Lent, thereby leading to a surplus of eggs at Easter. But this tradition also teaches about the meaning
of Easter.
Like
the egg represents new life, Easter brings us new beginnings, new birth and new
life in Christ. We begin this new life
on this side of heaven by our faith, our worship and our service, so that at
the Resurrection, we shall be found worthy of admission to the other side of
heaven.
No comments:
Post a Comment