Sunday in the Octave of Easter, Year B; Breen-Philips Hall
We’ve had so long now of having to think about distance. The 6-foot wingspan touchdown Jesus reminds of one thing we need to do to keep one another safe. Distance, barriers… physical things we need right now, but I wonder if we’ve let them get a hold of parts of our spirits where they really don’t belong. I’m glad that Notre Dame tries to be consistent in its messaging in using the phrase “physical distancing” rather than “social distancing,” because it’s so important that we strive to remain socially connected, throughout this pandemic, throughout our lives. And being socially connected doesn’t just mean superficial interactions, but genuine, vulnerable, intimate friendships. And behind that lies spiritual connectedness. Keeping close to God, and allow our other relationships to feed and deepen that central relationship. Sometimes things that are hard feel too heavy to hold, and so we put up barriers and make distance in our spirits. We don’t let ourselves feel another’s pain, or even our own, we don’t offer that to God, let ourselves be inspired to act.
But Jesus comes to us still.
That’s what the gospel today tells us. The disciples in that room had set up
two barriers: a locked door, and fear. Neither stop Jesus. Not even death,
death at our hands, would stop Jesus from being with us. That’s the quality of
love that the resurrection testifies to. So, certainly, locked doors won’t. So,
certainly, fear won’t. But still, he invites us to unlock those doors, and move
out from behind the barrier of fear.
He comes and bids them “Peace.”
No mere formulaic greeting, he wishes them the rich fullness of Shalom
peace. And Jesus’ word does what it means. No more fear. Find peace. He
enlivens them with a renewed gift of his breath, of his very spirit, like that
breath God first breathed into the nostrils of the earth creature who became
Adam.
And then he shows them his
wounds and his scars. He shows them that he did not fear to come close to a
scary world. He let himself be vulnerable. He, who has the power to come back
from the dead, has the power give live, to give peace, could have used that
power to avoid all suffering, but did not. Instead, he chose to share
completely with our human situation, be wounded by our human fallenness, suffer
with us, and rise, that we too might be able to rise.
That we might be able to rise
from fear to courage, that we might be able to rise from locked doors to open
hearts, because we too have his spirit within us.
As God sent Christ into the
world, so Christ sends us. His sends us to give of ourselves as fully as he
gave of himself, knowing that that makes us vulnerable, knowing that he can
heal any wound. What are we to give, as the early Christians we read about in
Acts practiced deeply sacrificial giving? What do we have locked away, too
afraid to put in contact with another?
I’ve often reflected that for
most students, your most valuable possession is your time. There is so much to
do. How might some of that be sacrificed? For family, for a friend, for those
in need, for God? But I think that alongside time also stands our hearts. There
is so much that is hard to hold right now, that, as I said at the beginning, it
can be so easy to keep spiritual distance instead of physical distance, to not
open our hearts to risk caring about one more suffering soul, to risk love
strong that it might break our hearts.
Jesus unlocks the door. Jesus says do no be afraid. Jesus shows us his wounds, his scars, and says, when you hurt, know I’m right there with you. Blessed are those who believe without seeing. But how many of those need there be? How many might be able to believe when they see Christ in his followers, in us, as come close in spirit and bid people “Peace.”
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