Easter Vigil
2025
With this
solemn Easter Vigil, we celebrate the centerpiece of our Catholic Christian
faith – the Resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ. Indeed, this is the most sacred night of the liturgical year.
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 darknesses 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.
In our prayer,
the darkness of the Church at the beginning of our liturgy speaks to the daily
reality of our lives at times. 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 can be a time of dark
uncertainty.
Into the
darkness of our lives, we proclaim the great Easter mystery that the light of
the Risen Christ overcomes the darkness of our lives. Susan Gividen proclaimed the Easter mystery
in the singing of the Exultet.
Rejoice,
heavenly powers!
Rejoice, O
earth, in shining splendor!
Rejoice, O
Mother Church, exult in glory.
Sound the
trumpet of salvation.
Jesus
Christ, our King, is Risen!
Let this
place resound in joy,
Echoing the
song of all God’s people!
Then in the
Liturgy of the Word, we are swept through the landscape of our salvation
history.
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.
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.
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.
In the second
Scripture reading from the Book of Exodus, as God leads Moses and the
Israelites out of Egypt at night, the Israelites cry out to God in fear and
uncertainty as they see the massive army of Pharaoh in pursuit behind them,
while in front of them is the sea--they are trapped in the darkness of fear and
faithlessness. "It would have been better for us to serve the Egyptians
than to die in the wilderness!" they cry out. But Moses tells them,
"Do not be afraid, stand firm, and see the deliverance that the Lord will
accomplish for you today.... The Lord will fight for you, and you have only to
keep still."
It is so hard
to keep still in the fearful dark, isn't it? It is so hard to trust that
the wind of God's spirit will, finally, blow on the dim embers of our cooling
faith.
Thanks be to
God, the angel of God who was going before the Israelite army moved and went behind
them; and the pillar of cloud moved from in front of them and took its place behind
them." The divine presence, the
angel of God, glowing within the cloud in the darkness, blocks the oncoming
threat of the Egyptian army. You see, there will always be light in the midst
of darkness. God will show up at night. We have only to keep still.
Darkness is
part of every day. But there will be light. What would our lives with God look
like if we trusted this rhythm of darkness and light instead of fighting it?
Then in the
Gospel, the angels announce to the women of Jerusalem that Jesus has been
raised from the dead as he had foretold.
Alleluia, Alleluia. The final word was not the death of Jesus. The resurrection of Jesus gives us the
mystery of our faith that in dying we ar born to eternal life.
Following
this Liturgy of the Word, we will joyfully celebrate the Sacraments of
Initiation with our RCIA candidates.
They have been on a spiritual journey all of their lives. Some time ago, they have heard God’s call and
enrolled in the RCIA program. They have
been praying and discerning, and we have been praying for them.
As a faith
community, we rejoice with an Easter joy in welcoming our elect fully into the
sacramental life of the Church, the mystery of the dying and rising of Christ
Jesus.
As well as
rejoicing with our elect, we will all be invited back to the baptismal font to
renew our baptismal commitment to live our discipleship of the Lord Jesus.
The final
movement of the great Easter Vigil is the Liturgy of the Eucharist.
We gather to give thanks to the Lord our God.
In Eucharist, we are fed and nourished at the Table of the Lord. We share in the mystery of the dying and
rising of Christ Jesus. As the community
of the baptized and as a Eucharistic community, we proclaim that we are an
Easter people and Alleluia is our song.
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