JERUSALEM, APRIL 12, 2009 (Zenit.org).-
Here is the homily the Latin patriarch of Jerusalem, Archbishop Michel Sabbah,
gave today, Easter Sunday, at the Basilica of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem.
* * *
"They have taken the Lord from the tomb, and we don't know where they put
him". Mary Magdalene has lost track of Her Lord and is panicked; she and many
others as well.
How very many people are seeking the Lord and yet not finding Him in politics,
economics, international justice, and constitutions of so-called modern
Christian countries. It is just as Mary Magdalene said: "they have taken the
Lord, and we do not know where they have put him."
But for His part God too is seeking to meet up with us, to save us from
ourselves by sharing with us His divine nature. Becoming incarnate, He comes
into our human story, into the history of our Church, and right into our
personal lives. He has found us and we have met Him in our families, in our
work, in the small conflicts that entangle us, and in the little sacrifices
that we have imposed upon ourselves this Lent. And every time we meet Him, it
is Easter.
Where do we meet the Risen one? Jesus told his followers to meet him in
Galilee, but Galilee is all the places human beings are to be found: among the
poor, the sick, marginalized, the victims of violence, among us sinners and
the even among powerful of this world who push Him out from the society and
are determined to grant Him no public forum.
But He keeps on coming into our history gratuitously offering His mercy,
forgiveness and love. As we meet Him, let His love be believed, lived,
celebrated and let our very lives become feasts of love! This is Easter: The
historical fact of His resurrection is the guarantee of our own resurrection.
This meeting up the Risen Lord on our journeys gives us believers a special
characteristic. It has to be said that we Christians sure do have some nerve!
We dare to talk about Easter, joy and the victory over death while at the same
time the count of the victims of war, of disease and of natural catastrophes
goes up, while each day bombards us with new images of violence and conflict,
and in Gaza the Holy Land is cruelly bathed in blood.
We do not forget this. Christ, the one who has promised us victory and peace,
knows what suffering is in his heart as well as in his body. Abandoned,
rejected in every way, He shared our humanity right to the bitter end, in
aguish, in neglect, in the death that He conquered. It is in the midst of
failure, physical and moral suffering, periods of solitude, doubt or
abandonment, and even as we face death itself that the unheard of announcement
of the Resurrection meets us. He comes to meet us there, so we dare to sing
our Halleluiah: we have found Him, He is risen and we are risen with Him!
The resurrection is at work each time we choose to give succor and to love his
Jesus in our neighbor; each time we prefer His forgiveness to hate, each time
that we allow love and peace to claim a place among men.
The resurrection is in the new children of God that are born through baptism
and in each time we feel ourselves to be living members of this Church: not
dead or dormant members, but living, conscious, faithful and responsible
members who are joyful and positive.
Let us look for the signs of His resurrection, like the apostle John entering
the tomb. "He saw and he believed" because of the simple clues, the shroud and
the head cloth lying in place, sunken in on themselves, empty of the corps
that had been wrapped up in them. The resurrection often shows itself through
tiny clues, not always through great events. The one who loves in Christ,
though he be wounded, sees these signs and shouts "Halleluiah."
On this Easter day we have to proclaim our Halleluiah, first of all with our
families and among ourselves. We must, however, not be ashamed of showing our
faith in the Risen Jesus to those on the outside through our witness, our joy
and our fraternal charity. Let us have courage to be ourselves in front of God
and men!
Have a blessed feast, a safe trip home and happy Easter to all!
+ Fouad Twal, Patriarch