Rising
with him to a new life
Jewish tradition
tells of a rabbi who gathered his students together very early in the morning
while it was still dark, and asked them this question: ‘How can you tell when
the night has ended, and the day has begun?’ One student answered: ‘Maybe it’s
when you see an animal and you can distinguish if it’s a sheep or a dog.’ ‘No,’
the rabbi said. A second student answered: ‘Maybe it’s when you are looking at
a tree in the distance and you can tell whether it’s a fig tree or a peach
tree.’ ‘No,’ said the rabbi. After a few more guesses, the students demanded
the answer. The rabbi replied: ‘It’s when you look on the face of any woman or
man and see that she is your sister, and he is your brother. If you cannot do
this, it is still night, no matter what time it is.
In St John’s
account, the Easter story begins very early in the morning of the first day of
the week while it is ‘still dark’. In one of his letters, the same writer
insists that ‘the darkness is passing away and the true light is already shining.
But this is strictly on one condition, which he spells out clearly: ‘Whoever
loves his brothers and sisters, John says, ‘lives in the light.’ On the other hand,
whoever prefers to hate . . . is in the darkness.’ (1 Jn 2:8-11). Just two days
ago, as we remembered the sufferings and death of the most marvelous human
being the world has ever known, we came face to face with the dark side of
human nature. This darkness led the enemies of Jesus to torture, humiliate, and
finally murder him on a cross. On that black day in Jerusalem, the capacity of
human beings to hate, hurt, and harm one another went completely out of
control. It’s no wonder, then, that ‘darkness came over the whole land until
three in the afternoon that ‘the sun’s light failed', and that ‘the curtain of
the temple was torn in two‘ (Lk 23:24).
Between light and
darkness, between good and evil, one mighty struggle is still going on. It’s
going on in the physical cosmos, in human societies, and within our personalities.
Although darkness often appears to be stronger than light, it has not yet
triumphed. The light is remarkably resilient. Often in danger of being
extinguished, it manages to survive, and even to win many victories. The words
of Mahatma Gandhi, the father of modern India, still ring as true as when he said
to Annie Besant years ago: ‘When I despair, I remember that all through history
the way of truth and love has always won. There have been tyrants and
murderers, and for a time they can seem invincible, but, in the end, they
always fall.’ The words of the Easter Vigil liturgy express the same truth in
an equally appealing way: The power of this holy [Easter] night,’ it proclaims,
dispels all evil, washes guilt away, restores lost innocence, brings mourners
joy. It casts out hatred, brings us peace, and humbles earthly pride.’ Our
celebration of Easter reminds us that the darkness of evil and hatred will
never have the last say. The resurrection of Jesus proclaims the ultimate
triumph of light over darkness and goodness over evil, both in us and in our
world.
Jesus was buried at sunset, as darkness was once again creeping over the earth, to all appearances a victim and a failure. But on the third day afterwards, the sun came up on him victorious and triumphant, alive, powerful, and influential. Once again, ‘the true light, which enlightens everyone, was coming into the world” (Jn 1:9). So, we celebrate his resurrection today by rising from darkness and death ourselves. The Risen Lord himself, represented here by this beautiful Easter candle burning in our midst, is asking us to leave behind the works of darkness, to renounce and reject anything and everything in our lives which is dark, sinister and evil, and as persons connected to him by baptism, to ‘walk always as children of the light‘, following in his footsteps.