EASTER VIGIL
2019
Leading up
this holy night, the whole church has been keeping vigil. At the Last Supper, Jesus gave us an example
of how we are to transform the world.
Jesus got down on His knees and washed the feet of his disciples, and
said we are to do likewise: that is to
say, we are to wash the feet of God’s poor.
On Good
Friday, the crucified Jesus showed us that death is not a defeat. Rather it is in dying that we are born into
eternal life. The fullness of Easter joy
is experienced on the other side of the cross.
Now we
celebrate the Easter Vigil, the mother of all vigils.
We began
this solemn Easter Vigil with the lighting of the Easter Fire in the landscaped
area at the front entrance of the Church.
From the Easter fire, we lit the Easter candle, the Christ candle – the
light of the Risen Christ that overcomes the darkness’s of our lives.
After
lighting the Christ Candle, we enter the Church in darkness. It is the darkness of the closed up tomb
where Jesus’ body lay on Holy Saturday.
The stone has been rolled in front of it. No light enters. It is utterly dark.
It is the
darkness of the loss of someone dear to us, whose absence we fear we will never
be able to deal with. The darkness of a terrifying diagnosis. The darkness of
not knowing where a child of ours is. The darkness of a shattering reality that
we had no idea was coming our way.
The darkness of
the Church at the beginning of our liturgy speaks most directly to the daily
reality of our lives. After the shock of death or words that bring
despair--words like cancer, divorce, terminal, downsizing--we find
ourselves living with the "what next" of life--and we enter the dark
void of unknowing. It is the darkness that the people of France experience in
the burning of their cathedral.
This is where
many of us live, from time to time. Yes, there are times when we live between
death and resurrection. It is the valley of grief and unknowing--for us as well
as for the first disciples. On Holy Saturday we, and they, don't know what the
future will bring. Whether the cancer will be cured, or we will love again, or
find a job that fulfills our calling. It is a time of dark uncertainty.
From the first
Scripture reading, the creation account from the Book of Genesis, ”In the
beginning, when God created the heavens and the earth, the earth was a formless
void and darkness covered the face of the deep..." In the beginning, all
was a dark void. And in this empty tomb where Jesus was buried, we find the
same reality--it is a dark void. How
many times will we find ourselves in that dark place? A place where any ray of
hope is extinguished in the vacuum of fear, of not knowing, of total emptiness.
But in that
place, somehow through the grace of God, we must be patient. We must wait for
the wind of the Spirit, the "wind from God that sweeps over the face of
the waters" to fan the dim embers of our faith.
"Then God
said, 'Let there be light,' and there was light.... God called the light Day
and the darkness he called Night. And there was evening and there was morning,
the first day."
You see, both
darkness and light are part of the first day. Darkness and light are halves of
every day ever since that first day. Darkness and light are essential parts of
our lives. And when we find ourselves in that dark lonely place, we must remind
ourselves of this truth. There will always ultimately be light in the midst of
the darkness.
Darkness is
shorthand for anything that scares me--either because I am sure that I do not
have the resources to survive it or because I do not want to find out.
The Exsultet,
the beautiful hymn of praise that Jacob sang so powerfully, proclaims this
rhythm of dark and light, of night and dawn, of death and resurrection: "This
is the night...when you brought our ancestors, the children of Israel, out
of bondage in Egypt....
"This
is the night...when all who believe in Christ are delivered from the gloom
of sin, and are restored to grace and holiness of life....
"This
is the night...when Christ broke the bonds of death and hell and rose victorious
from the grave....
"How
blessed is this night, when earth and heaven are joined, and we are reconciled
to God.
Liturgically we
light the Easter Candle because we believe in the light that comes from the
Risen Lord. Indeed, in the light that
comes from the Risen Lord, the darkness of fear and the darkness of sin is no
more. This Easter candle needs to be lit
in the deep recesses of our hearts.
This night is a
night of Easter Joy. Alleluia,
Alleluia. We now welcome in the
Sacraments of Initiation all of our chosen candidates into discipleship of our
Risen Lord: Jude Bowers, Thane Bowers,
Elizabeth Bowers, Lynn Edgar, Stan Lehman, Cynthia Walker, Angel Benitez,
Natalie Giunta, Audrey Huff, and Maya Michelucci. Then the whole community will be invited to
renew your baptismal vows and share in the mystery of the Eucharist in which we
are fed and nourished at the Table of the Lord.
We cannot
celebrate Easter in one day; we will not come to faith in one Mass. As God’s Easter people, we make the journey
together over the course of a lifetime.
Whenever and wherever we trust and hope in the light that comes from the
Risen Lord, our spiritual darkness fades away.
As surely as the dark of night gives way to the dawn, the Lord’s gift of
Easter joy awaits you.
Have a Blessed
Easter night. This night is filled with
Easter joy!
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