Pope
Calls to Embrace Resurrection
Vatican City- “ I live, but I am no
longer I”, Pope Benedict XVI stressed these words
as he called Christians at the Easter Vigil to embrace resurrection
not as event of the past, but as way of leading the world on a transformative
path away from violence and corruption.
The pontiff emphasized that “the joy of the Easter vigil”
is founded on the fact that through baptism and the resurrection “we
grasp hold” of Christ’s hands and “thus we also
hold on to one another’s hands, and we become one single subject,
not just one thing.
The vigil began at 10 p.m. in the atrium of the basilica, with the
blessing of the fire and the lighting of the paschal candle. Light
slowly began to fill the basilica as each of the 7,000 people on hand
lit their candles from the flame of the paschal candle.
During the vigil, the Holy Father administered the sacraments of
baptism and confirmation to seven catechumens from Albania, Belarus,
Peru, Japan, Colombia and Cameroon.
Below is a translation of Pope’s homily at the Easter vigil.
"You seek Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified. He has risen,
he is not here" (Mark 16:6). With these words, God's messenger,
robed in light, spoke to the women who were looking for the body
of Jesus in the tomb. But the Evangelist says the same thing to
us on this holy night: Jesus is not a character from the past. He
lives, and he walks before us as one who is alive, he calls us to
follow him, the living one, and in this way to discover for ourselves
too the path of life.
"He has risen, he is not here." When Jesus spoke for
the first time to the disciples about the cross and the resurrection,
as they were coming down from the Mount of the Transfiguration,
they questioned what "rising from the dead" meant (Mark
9:10).
At Easter we rejoice because Christ did not remain in the tomb,
his body did not see corruption; he belongs to the world of the
living, not to the world of the dead; we rejoice because he is the
Alpha and also the Omega, as we proclaim in the rite of the paschal
candle; he lives not only yesterday, but today and for eternity
(cf. Hebrews 13:8). But somehow the Resurrection is situated so
far beyond our horizon, so far outside all our experience that,
returning to ourselves, we find ourselves continuing the argument
of the disciples: Of what exactly does this "rising" consist?
What does it mean for us, for the whole world and the whole of history?
A German theologian once said ironically that the miracle of a
corpse returning to life -- if it really happened, which he did
not actually believe -- would be ultimately irrelevant precisely
because it would not concern us. In fact, if it were simply that
somebody was once brought back to life, and no more than that, in
what way should this concern us?
But the point is that Christ's resurrection is something more,
something different. If we may borrow the language of the theory
of evolution, it is the greatest "mutation," absolutely
the most crucial leap into a totally new dimension that there has
ever been in the long history of life and its development: a leap
into a completely new order which does concern us, and concerns
the whole of history.
The discussion, which began with the disciples, would therefore
include the following questions: What happened there? What does
it mean for us, for the whole world and for me personally? Above
all: what happened? Jesus is no longer in the tomb. He is in a totally
new life. But how could this happen? What forces were in operation?
The crucial point is that this man Jesus was not alone, he was not
an "I" closed in upon itself. He was one single reality
with the living God, so closely united with him as to form one person
with him.
He found himself, so to speak, in an embrace with him who is life
itself, an embrace not just on the emotional level, but one which
included and permeated his being. His own life was not just his
own, it was an existential communion with God, a "being taken
up" into God, and hence it could not in reality be taken away
from him.
Out of love, he could allow himself to be killed, but precisely
by doing so he broke the definitiveness of death, because in him
the definitiveness of life was present. He was one single reality
with indestructible life, in such a way that it burst forth anew
through death. Let us express the same thing once again from another
angle. His death was an act of love. At the Last Supper he anticipated
death and transformed it into self-giving.
His existential communion with God was concretely an existential
communion with God's love, and this love is the real power against
death, it is stronger than death. The Resurrection was like an explosion
of light, an explosion of love which dissolved the hitherto indissoluble
compenetration of "dying and becoming." It ushered in
a new dimension of being, a new dimension of life in which, in a
transformed way, matter too was integrated and through which a new
world emerges.
It is clear that this event is not just some miracle from the past,
the occurrence of which could be ultimately a matter of indifference
to us. It is a qualitative leap in the history of "evolution"
and of life in general toward a new future life, toward a new world
which, starting from Christ, already continuously permeates this
world of ours, transforms it and draws it to itself. But how does
this happen? How can this event effectively reach me and draw my
life upward toward itself?
The answer, perhaps surprising at first but totally real, is: This
event comes to me through faith and baptism. For this reason baptism
is part of the Easter Vigil, as we see clearly in our celebration
today, when the sacraments of Christian initiation will be conferred
on a group of adults from various countries. Baptism means precisely
this, that we are not dealing with an event in the past, but that
a qualitative leap in world history comes to me, seizing hold of
me in order to draw me on. Baptism is something quite different
from an act of ecclesial socialization, from a slightly old-fashioned
and complicated rite for receiving people into the Church. It is
also more than a simple washing, more than a kind of purification
and beautification of the soul. It is truly death and resurrection,
rebirth, transformation to a new life.
How can we understand this? I think that what happens in baptism
can be more easily explained for us if we consider the final part
of the short spiritual autobiography that St. Paul gave us in his
Letter to the Galatians. Its concluding words contain the heart
of this biography: "It is no longer I who live, but Christ
who lives in me" (Galatians 2:20). I live, but I am no longer
I. The "I," the essential identity of man -- of this man,
Paul -- has been changed. He still exists, and he no longer exists.
He has passed through a "not" and he now finds himself
continually in this "not": I, but no longer I. With these
words, Paul is not describing some mystical experience which could
perhaps have been granted him, and could be of interest to us from
a historical point of view, if at all. No, this phrase is an expression
of what happened at baptism.
My "I" is taken away from me and is incorporated into
a new and greater subject. This means that my "I" is back
again, but now transformed, broken up, opened through incorporation
into the other, in whom it acquires its new breadth of existence.
Paul explains the same thing to us once again from another angle
when, in chapter three of the Letter to the Galatians, he speaks
of the "promise," saying that it was given to an individual
-- to one person: to Christ. He alone carries within himself the
whole "promise." But what then happens with us? Paul answers:
You have become one in Christ (cf. Galatians 3:28). Not just one
thing, but one, one only, one single new subject.
This liberation of our "I" from its isolation, this finding
oneself in a new subject means finding oneself within the vastness
of God and being drawn into a life which has now moved out of the
context of "dying and becoming." The great explosion of
the Resurrection has seized us in baptism so as to draw us on. Thus
we are associated with a new dimension of life into which, amid
the tribulations of our day, we are already in some way introduced.
To live one's own life as a continual entry into this open space:
This is the meaning of being baptized, of being Christian. This
is the joy of the Easter Vigil.
The Resurrection is not a thing of the past, the Resurrection has
reached us and seized us. We grasp hold of it, we grasp hold of
the risen Lord, and we know that he holds us firmly even when our
hands grow weak. We grasp hold of his hand, and thus we also hold
on to one another's hands, and we become one single subject, not
just one thing. I, but no longer I: This is the formula of Christian
life rooted in baptism, the formula of the Resurrection within time.
I, but no longer I: If we live in this way, we transform the world.
It is a formula contrary to all ideologies of violence, it is a
program opposed to corruption and to the desire for power and possession.
"I live and you will live also," says Jesus in St. John's
Gospel (14:19) to his disciples, that is, to us. We will live through
our existential communion with him, through being taken up into
him who is life itself. Eternal life, blessed immortality, we have
not by ourselves or in ourselves, but through a relation -- through
existential communion with him who is truth and love and is therefore
eternal: God himself. Simple indestructibility of the soul by itself
could not give meaning to eternal life, it could not make it a true
life. Life comes to us from being loved by him who is life; it comes
to us from living-with and loving-with him. I, but no longer I:
This is the way of the cross, the way that "crosses over"
a life simply closed in on the I, thereby opening up the road towards
true and lasting joy.
Thus we can sing full of joy, together with the Church, in the
words of the Exsultet: "Sing, choirs of angels ... rejoice,
O earth!" The Resurrection is a cosmic event, which includes
heaven and earth and links them together. In the words of the Exsultet
once again, we can proclaim: "Christ ... who came back from
the dead and shed his peaceful light on all mankind, your Son who
lives and reigns for ever and ever." Amen!
Source: www.zenit.org |