Sunday, April 4, 2021

The resurrection light grows – Acts 10:34-43; 1 Cor 5:6b-8; Mark 16:1-7

 Easter Sunday, Year B. Basilica of the Sacred Heart.

If you’re into setting records, those of you gathered here in the basilica this morning should know that we’ve collectively come in precisely second in one particular competition. That’s the competition to see how few people you can have at an Easter Sunday Mass in this basilica. Now, as the basilica hosts more and more Masses over the course of today, those Masses will equal our numbers and share our silver medals, but there has been no previous Easter Sunday Mass here that has come close to our number. Prior to 2020, of course, every single Easter Sunday Mass here has been full to the rafters (at least, since the basilica has been a basilica). Last year, though, the only people present were Holy Cross priests and brothers who lived on campus, and select campus ministry staff who were exercising some kind of liturgical ministry. Our celebration here is so much bigger than 2020 while still being so much smaller than all that came before, and (we hope and can with some confidence expect) than all that will come from 2022 on.

 

A lot of people have said to me that this Lent either has gone quickly for them, or even hasn’t felt all that Lenten, and that’s certainly been my experience too. I think a lot of that has to do with the contrast from last year. Last year, whether we gave up chocolate or soda was really irrelevant, when we all also gave up seeing friends and relatives, going to work or school, traveling, even leaving the house. Lent of 2020 felt so Lenten that this one seemed a little pale in comparison. I remember back in mid to late March last year, there was a sense among some people that if we just hunkered down for a few weeks, we could get back to normal by Easter. In Spring Break of last year, Notre Dame expressed a hope to get students back on campus by Easter Monday. Of course, that didn’t happen. What we thought might be an intense sprint of restrictions, of fear and isolation, became a marathon. But now, through this Lent, we’ve started to see more and more signs of hope, even as we’ve become increasingly aware that we can’t start acting like we’re out of the woods just because we can see a clearing in this distance. And I think these signs of hope have also been part of what has made this Lent seem somewhat less Lenten. A lot of people have told me that receiving their vaccine was a surprisingly emotional experience, and it was for me too.

 

If Lent felt a little less Lenten, I wonder how Eastery this Easter feels. For all the signs of hope around us, we’re still at far reduced numbers compared with usual, and, the same is true of far too many family dinner tables. So many carry grief with them to this Mass today. While job numbers are up, that’s little consolation to those who are still un- or under-employed. There isn’t going to be a moment when we suddenly snap back and say, “OK, pandemic’s over now.” Recovery is going to be gradual; a lot of things will still seem small, and distant.

 

I think that’s actually really appropriate for Easter. In St. Peter’s sermon, that we heard part of as our first reading, he tells the people that when Jesus rose from the dead, he didn’t appear to the whole world, but made himself present to a small group, those who had been with him during his ministry, those who would then be commissioned to bear witness. I’m not sure if that’s how I’d approach it if I had all the power in the universe and had just risen from the dead. I think I’d want something like the Rose Bowl parade, full of fireworks. But, thanks be to God, I’m not God. And God chose something rather different. God chose to have Easter be something small.

 

We can see that symbolically too in the fact that the women in the gospel go to the tomb at dawn. There’s a practical purpose for this; if you’re going to anoint a body outdoors, you’ll want to do that before the heat of the midday sun comes. But deeper, providentially, there’s a symbolism. A new light has arisen with Our Lord’s victory over sin and death, but it’s light like the light of dawn. Still somewhat furtive. Not yet as brilliant as it will be. As the Constitutions of the Congregation of Holy Cross put it, “We see by dawn’s first light, and we long for the fullness of day.” For God has conquered sin and death, but we still sin, and we still suffer from others’ sin, and we still die, and we still mourn the deaths of others. Especially today we remember Jude Alshufi, a doctoral student here at Notre Dame whose death was announced to the campus community on Good Friday.

 


Dawn has a fragility to it, a slightness, a dimness even. The light of dawn is something small, just as the first Easter, just as our Easter this year, feels somewhat small. But dawns grow and strengthen and become brilliant days. A little yeast can leaven the whole dough. Because while that first Easter seemed small, something really big had happened. Death and sin were conquered. Christ rose from the dead to show us the fullness of God’s love, that God loves us so much that not even death, death at our hands, could keep Him from being with us.

 

And the ways in which He’s with us now seem small. He’s with us in the poor served, He’s with us when two or three gather, He’s with us in the Spirit, who dwells in our hearts and prays in small sighs. And we long for more. More intimacy. Something bigger. And that will come. And on the Day of the Lord, for which we still wait, God will wipe every tear from every eye, and there will be no more sorrow or sadness or pain, for the victorious Lamb who was slain will be our light, and it will be glorious and brilliant and big. But for now it’s small, and what we see will be gradual and furtive. And that’s Easter. Therefore, let us keep the feast!


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