Easter Vigil 2016
In the pre-liturgy
darkness that seems impenetrable, we, the faithful, gather. It was only
yesterday, but seems like a lifetime, since we joined our voices with the blood-thirsty
crowds and have asked for Barabbas to be set free, and the preacher from
Nazareth to hang on a cross. The most sedate pacifist could be
transformed by a frenzied mob to do the unthinkable. What hope could there be
for us, for our world? The darkness is overwhelming and pervasive. But then,
a tiny spark jumps in the darkness and a flame catches. More than a
sentimental, nostalgic pyre upon which to toast marshmallows, this is the Great
Easter Fire. As it casts a light that is much brighter than its size, for the
first time we hear the words, “The Light
of Christ! Thanks be to God!” As the flame is
passed and the light grows, so too does the acclamation rise in crescendo, “The
Light of Christ! Thanks be to God!” and the surrounding gloomy darkness is vanquished
in an ocean of light. “It is true: In the solemn Easter Vigil, darkness becomes
light, night gives way to the day that knows no sunset.” (Pope Emeritus
Benedict XVI)
This is the night,
says the Exsultet, the Easter Proclamation which was intoned at the beginning
of this liturgy. This is the night which contains all nights, all time, and the
night by which all nights are changed. A re-enactment of creation, when God’s
word named light in the darkness, and light was. When the morning stars sang together
for joy at the overflow of life. A re-enactment of the night when God led a
terrified band of slaves through dark water to freedom. When the bones stood up
in the vision of the prophet, bone to its bone. When persons orphaned and
alienated by sin are now reconnected and adopted by God as His children. The
Elect waiting their baptism would soon witness this in the person.
For the one
impossible thing has happened. We have come to the place of death, and found
life. For this is not simply the story of a man restored to physical existence,
not a resuscitation, a “miracle” of science. This is the story of God in our
flesh, the light which spoke light into being, the wisdom which danced at
creation, making that final, that culminating, move into the last place of
loss, into darkness and death and abandonment, and making it no longer that
place, but a vast space of freedom and possibility. God in our flesh has gone
into death. God has gone, to use the old language, right down to the depth of
Hell, and brought us up again; and as when a light comes into a room, the
darkness can no longer be darkness but must be light, so death is now the great
unbounded space of life.
In the words of
the famous Easter homily by the fifth-century preacher John Chrysostom: “Hell
is angered because it has been frustrated, it is angered because it has been
mocked, it is angered because it has been destroyed, it is angered because it
has been reduced to naught, it is angered because it is now captive. It seized
a body, and, lo! it encountered heaven.” It is astonishing language. And we
have pledged ourselves to this language, to this story; to the assertion that
this is what lies at the core of reality. We have pledged ourselves to live in
this light, to tell this story, to live as if love is stronger than death.
But what does it
mean, here in a world where darkness has by no means vanished, where death is
very real, and love often seems to be lost or wasted or destroyed? Everyday, we
seem to be bombarded by news from the media reminding us of the seemingly all
prevailing problem of evil and its many manifestations. Sometimes it can feel
like little has changed – there is so much injustice, so much self-centredness,
so much that is wrong in our society and in our world that we sometimes fail to
see the bigger picture. Our hearts this Easter continue to be anxious and
distressed because we find ourselves in one of the biggest economic slumps in
recent history, literally, a Great Depression. We continue to witness the
continuation in various parts of the world of war, social tensions, persecution
and genocide of Christians and the painful hardships in which so many people
find themselves. We are all seeking an answer that will reassure us. Easter
offers us the answer which can calm our fears and reinvigorate our hope.
So, why do we
gather every year to re-enact and to recall this great moment in the history of
man, in the history of salvation? T.S. Eliot’s lines in Little Gidding, “The
end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place
for the first time.” And so we read the legend of creation, and we read the
story of Israel’s defining historical memory, and we read the stories of the
Gospels over and over, repeating them year by year, asking them to grow into
us, asking us to work with them, find new meanings, new understandings, and new
language. But they are not only stories. They speak of the reality which is
often hidden behind the veil of darkness, human depravity and despair. But
today, the lie will be exposed whilst Truth will be revealed in all its glory.
When Jesus died on
the Cross on the dark mountain, he entered the very depths of human destitution
and degradation. Calvary means there is no dark corner that Jesus has not
entered. This is good news for us, because it means no corner of our heart or
of the world is unredeemed or unredeemable. The story does not end with Good
Friday. The climax of the tale is Easter - when he rises from the dead, Jesus
transfigures every darkness, even the darkness of death. Christ has trounced
the enemy called death. He has vanquished his foes, seizing bright hope through
the darkness of the tomb! Dying, he secures our salvation. Rising, he seals our
liberation. After his resurrection, there is no darkness that cannot become
light. The powers of darkness remain real, but we now have the choice to die in
the dark or live in the light. To choose the light is what it means to be an
Easter people. It’s also what it means to be truly human.
The wonder of the
resurrection is upon us once more. May we embrace God's ever-new life with
every cell of our being, every yearning of our soul, and every muscle of our
will. There is no denying that there is evil in this world but the light will
always conquer the darkness. Yes, the dark night of our existence will be
vanquished by the coming dawn. Death will be defeated by its ancient foe, life.
The Devil will finally throw in his towel with the victory of God’s champion,
Our Lord Jesus Christ. This is what Easter is all about! “In the solemn Easter
Vigil, darkness becomes light, night gives way to the day that knows no
sunset!” “Alleluia! Alleluia! Christ is Risen, Indeed He is Risen! Alleluia!”
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