Easter is the feast of feasts, the unbridled joy and gladness of all Christians.
In
the very center of the Mass, the great prayer of thanksgiving, from
the first words of the Preface, expresses the unrivalled motive for
this joy: if it is right to praise You, Lord, at all times, how much
more so should we not glorify You on this day when Christ our Passover
was sacrificed, for He is the true Lamb who took away the sins of the
world, who by His Death destroyed our death and by His Resurrection
restored our life. Easter means, then, Redemption obtained — sin
destroyed, death overcome, divine life brought back to us, the
resurrection of our body which is promised immortality. With such a
certitude, we should banish all trace of sadness.
Today's
Psalm says, "This is the day which the Lord has made." Throughout
the octave we will sing of the unequalled joy which throws open
eternity to us. Every Sunday will furnish a reminder of it, and from
Sunday to Sunday, from year to year, the Easters of this earth will
lead us to that blessed day on which Christ has promised that He will
come again with glory to take us with Him into the kingdom of His
Father.
"I
rose up and am still with Thee." After His labors and His
humiliations, Christ finds rest with His Father. "I am still with
Thee." This is perfect beatitude. Through His cross He entered into
the possession of eternal glory. Christ has gained the crown of
victory; through Christ men also win their crowns of victory. Humanity
was under a curse and subject to the wrath of God. Now that they
have risen with Christ, their guilt has been destroyed. "I rose up
and am still with Thee." The liturgy places these words in the mouth
of the Church that she may pray them with Christ.
"The
earth trembled and was still when God arose in judgment." The
resurrection of Christ is the judgment and condemnation of those who
have turned away from God. This judgment was prefigured by the angel
who passed through the land of Egypt destroying the first-born of the
Egyptians. The Israelites marked the doors of their houses with the
blood of the paschal lamb. We are the new Israel, and "Christ our
Pasch is sacrificed." We mark ourselves with His blood, which we enjoy
in the Holy Eucharist. We have been pardoned, we are saved, we shall
live.
"He
is risen." The resurrection of Christ is a pledge of our own
resurrection. It is the foundation upon which our faith rests. It is
the guarantee of our redemption and God's assurance that our sins are
forgiven and that we are called to eternal life. "This is the day
which the Lord hath made; let us be glad and rejoice therein. Give
praise to the Lord, for He is good, for His mercy endures forever.
Alleluia." "Christ our Pasch is sacrificed. . . . The Lamb redeems the
sheep. Christ, the innocent One, hath reconciled sinners to the
Father."
Excerpted from The Light of the World by Benedict Baur, O.S.B.
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