Easter 2024
Christmas is
a time that most of us can, as human persons, identify with…most notably the joy
of the birth of a child. We all know mothers
who have given birth to children, and those are causes for great celebration.
But Easter
and the events leading up to Easter are very foreign to us on a natural level…we
need to remember that all that was necessary for Jesus to save us from Hell was
for Jesus to die and resurrect. And because
Jesus created space and time, Jesus could have set up the Old Testament
prophecies any way He wanted to, so we are faced with this confusing reality
that Jesus CHOSE to be TORTURED to death and then resurrect. as St. Peter reminds us in our first reading
today “To Jesus all the prophets bear witness”.
It is clear to us, as we look back through the Old Testament with
hindsight, we do see how nearly every line of the Old Testament points not just
to Jesus’ death, but to his immense suffering that He would undergo.
What are we
to take from this? I think one thing we
can say definitively is that Jesus came not only to save us but to show us how
to live, and In the Gospels, over and over again, Jesus says some variation of “if
you want to live, pick up your cross of suffering and follow Me”
Jesus
Christ, in CHOOSING to be tortured to death, has made holy our suffering
too, and that is the great news of Easter…by Jesus’ Resurrection, He has definitely shown that His triumph over death was through suffering, and so our suffering as well
has a sanctifying effect in our life now, in the lives of other people if we
offer our sufferings up for them, and, thirdly, our suffering in imitation of
Christ also helps us draw closer to Heaven.
Jesus Christ
SUFFERED death, but was resurrected today.
Amen. Alleluia!!!
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