Easter Vigil
It’s no
secret that eight is a lucky number for the Chinese and many other Malaysians
too. Non-Cantonese dialect speakers would however protest and point out the
fact that this only applies to the numeral when spoken in Cantonese – the number
8 or "Fatt", sounds like another Cantonese word for prosperity. The
Hokkiens have made a big come back in recent years by insisting on using “Huat
Huat Huat,” their word for prosperity, which sounds nothing like the number 8
in their dialect.
But you
may be interested to know that the number eight is also a big thing for us
Christians too. Immediately, most people would associate the number eight with
the Beatitudes, eight beatitudes if you follow the order from the Gospel of St
Matthew. But there is another important association with the number eight. The
Eight Day refers to Sunday, and more importantly, it refers to the first Sunday
of Easter. Tomorrow, we Christians celebrate our eighth day.
For
Jews the number eight symbolised salvation, rebirth and regeneration: eight members
of Noah's family were saved in the time of the Great Flood and it was on the eighth
day of his life that a male child was circumcised, signifying his entrance into
the covenant family of Israel, the chosen people of God. But for early
Christians the eighth day came to be
associated with the resurrection of Jesus Christ and the formation of the New
Covenant. Jesus was raised on the day after the seventh day, which was
the Sabbath, making Jesus’ Resurrection on the eighth day. Therefore, Sunday, the
first day of the week, is also the day of the New Creation just as the old
Creation also began on what is the first day of the week. St Augustine
called Sunday, “the Day of the Lord,” as “an everlasting eighth day.”
The
Catechism of the Catholic Church 349 teaches: “The eighth day. But for us a new day has dawned: the day of
Christ's Resurrection. The seventh day completes the first
creation. The eight day begins the new creation. Thus, the work of
creation culminates in the greater work of redemption. The first creation
finds its meaning and its summit in the new creation in Christ, the splendour
of which surpasses that of the first creation.”
Indeed
for us, a new day has dawned – the day of Christ’s Resurrection. Therefore,
everything about this Vigil points to the fact that Easter is the feast of the
new creation. God’s new creation has begun. Jesus is risen and dies no more. He
has opened the door to a new life, one that no longer experiences illness and
death. He has taken mankind up into communion with God himself. And that is
precisely why the Church starts the liturgy on this day in darkness, and
beginning with the lighting of the new Paschal Candle, all of us in the Church
are soon swimming in a sea of lights. It is as if we hear the word of God,
spoken once again on the first day of creation, “Let there be Light! And there
was Light!”
After
the darkness of Good Friday, we now witness the light of this new creation. At
Easter, on the morning of the first day of the week, God said once again: “Let
there be light”. The night in the Garden of Gethsemane, the solar eclipse of
Jesus’ passion and death, the night of the grave had all passed. Now it is the
first day once again — creation is beginning anew. “Let there be light”, says
God, “and there was light”: Jesus rises from the grave. Life is stronger than
death. Good is stronger than evil. Love is stronger than hate. Truth is
stronger than lies. The darkness of the previous days is driven away the moment
Jesus rises from the grave and Himself becomes God’s pure light. Now Jesus
draws all of us after Him into the new light of the resurrection and He
conquers all darkness.
But the
resurrection of Christ has not only brought about a new day with its new light.
We too have become a new creation. How did this come about? Through the
sacrament of baptism and the profession of faith, the Lord has built a bridge
across to us, through which the new day reaches us. The Lord says to the
newly-baptised: Fiat lux — let there be light. God’s new day — the day
of indestructible life, comes also to us. Christ takes you by the hand. From
now on you are held by Him and walk with Him into the light, into real life.
Baptism
is more than becoming part of a community. Baptism is also more than a simple
washing. It is a new birth. A new beginning in life. It is a new creation! It
is truly death and resurrection, rebirth, transformation to a new life.
Therefore, in baptism we experience what St Paul writes in his letter to the
Galatians, “It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me!” St Paul
can say this with so much conviction because in Baptism we give ourselves over
to Christ — He takes us unto Himself, so that we no longer live for ourselves,
but through Him, with Him and in Him; so that we live with Him and thus for
others.
Baptism,
then, makes us new creatures, it bestows on us the blessings promised to
Abraham, it releases us from the slavery of sin and brings us into new life, it
brings us into the new wedding covenant between God and His people redeemed in
Christ, it quenches our spiritual thirst for God, it gives the wisdom that
enlightens our path to God, it purifies us and gives us a new heart and a new
spirit, it crucifies our old self and our sinful body and raises us up from the
dead, and, finally, it is our share in Christ’s death, in His victory over
death and in His resurrection.
This is
the joy of the Easter Vigil: we are reminded that in baptism, we have become a
new creation, freed from all the deficiencies and limitations that have marred
the old creation. In the Resurrection of Jesus, we witness the triumph of the
new over the old. We witness how love has been shown to be stronger than death,
stronger than evil. Love made Christ descend, and love is also the power by
which He ascends; the power by which He brings us with him.
On this
night, as we enter into the Eight Day, the Day of the New Creation, the Day of
the Resurrection, it is time to rejoice once again over Christ’s victory over
death and sin and our sharing in the graces of the resurrection. It is a time
for some of us to be baptised, and for the rest of us to “renew our Baptismal
Promises.” But for all of us, let today be a reminder of what we
once were – trapped in sin and darkness, what we now are – new creatures and
adopted sons and daughters of God, and what we shall yet one day be –
co-sharers in eternal glory of the saints in heaven. Today, is a day of new beginnings, not just for those who will be
baptised, but for all of us. That which is “new” will always remain “new” until
the very end. Alleluia.
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