Friday, April 12, 2013

He Has Risen, 3rd Sunday in Easter



Would we recognize the Risen Lord?

Would we grasp what a new and glorified body, a “spiritual body” as Paul describes it, looks like?
The two disciples on the road to Emmaus didn’t.  The disciples in the boat didn’t. Mary Magdalene (the first person to see the Risen Lord, didn’t. And when she did recognize him, those close to Jesus didn’t even believe her story and Thomas refused to believe until he had touch with his own hands.

Yet, despite all this, perhaps as early as the 1st decade of the Church, we hear surprisingly and un-dramatically -“God, has raised Jesus from the dead”

These are words of faith to be sure, but they are also words that proclaim a lived experience, that though unworldly and beyond understanding was never the less concretely experienced and to such a profound depth that those who were afraid became bold and could proclaim with real conviction what we still proclaim today - “Christ is risen”

We also have Paul’s encounter with the Risen Lord on the road to Damascus, different in substance from the other encounters, but obviously tangible, and electrifying.  Paul adds his experience to the already accepted list of Post resurrection events
“For I hand on to you what I also received: that Christ died; that he was buried; that he was raised on the third day. He appeared to Cephas, then to the Twelve.  After that, he appeared to more than five hundred brothers at once, most of whom are still living, though some have fallen asleep.  After that he appeared to James, then to all the apostles. Last of all he appeared to me”
 
It is useless to try to make a chronological or geographical map of the post resurrection appearances. 
They are not a checklist, but the collective experience, collapsed and synthesized into those representative events cherished and proclaimed by the earliest oral traditions that stand behind the gospels.

Let’s do a quick roundup;

In all four Gospels Mary Magdalene, sometimes with other women, goes to the tomb and finds it empty.
In Mark’s longer ending, he simply adds “He appeared to first to Mary Magdalene.” This experience is filled out in John where Jesus calls Mary by name and only then does she recognizes him and addresses him with the intimate term for teacher - Rabboni. Mark has Jesus appear to two unnamed disciples on an unnamed road. Luke fills this in by giving the name of the road as the road to Emmaus and completes the encounter with the breaking of bread and the opening of scripture and the recognizing of Jesus in these actions. Jesus appearing to and commissioning the 11 takes pride of place in all four Gospels. John expands that appearance to two encounters one w/out Thomas one with. And today we have John’s additional encounter with the Risen Lord, not in Jerusalem, as the other encounters were, but in Galilee. 

What does it all mean? On one note it means the details are interesting but of no importance. It is the certainty, the conviction, the experienced encounter with the Risen Lord that counts for everything.
How important is certainty and conviction, Paul reminds us -
“If Christ has not been raised, then empty is our preaching; empty, too, your faith. Then those who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished. If for this life only we have hoped in Christ, we are the most pitiable people of all.”
That is – There is no hope, no salvation and we might as well pack up and go home.

But, not today, today we are with the disciples back home in Galilee.  Where they are waiting, keeping their heads low and trying to keep their spirits high.
To lighten their sadness and ease jangled nerves they are doing what is familiar, comforting in its ordinariness, they are fishing.  But, they had a lousy night of it and by dawn were disappointed and tired. From the shore the unrecognized Risen Lord, calls out (obviously with a real living voice) and tells them to cast their nets on the other side, which they do and of course they catch a huge amount fish. Perhaps, because the beloved disciple suddenly remembers an earlier experience when Jesus first called them from their fishing boats, he takes a second look.  And now, in the remembering, his eyes are opened and he recognizes Jesus.
And so says to Peter – “it is the Lord”. Peter jumped (without hesitation or thinking) into the sea and races the hundred yards or so to the shore, while the others trail in the boat, lugging the catch of fish.

 When they arrived on the shore, there was a real charcoal fire (hot and smoking), and some real food (perhaps bread & olives) already prepared (with real hands).  Jesus (in a voice that is clearly understood) asks for some of the fish to cook up.

In this familiar, simple action among friends, Jesus; the risen, glorified and transcendent, was still the Jesus, who did not deem equality with God something to be grasped.He, who is God, simply invites them “come, eat” He invites them to a meal that surly must trigger remembrance of their last supper together. 
But, this invitation is also completely new and different, because for the first time this table fellowship was with the risen Christ.  It was Eucharistic. 

And in the braking of the bread, as it was for the two disciples at Emmaus, they begin to remember and begin to believe and were now filled with a new deep seated joy. This new belief and Joy that transformed them completely were gifts of the Spirit. When Jesus was raised from the dead the Holy Spirit became active in the world.

It is true Jesus had already breathed on them imparting the new but still hidden life of the Spirit and it would be fifty days before Pentecost, when the Holy Spirit, burst forth giving birth to a new collective boldness and new faith, which would be the boldness and faith of the Church.

But, on that day the Holy Spirit was already helping John to remember and to see and also encouraging Peter to boldly act in faith. We know the Spirit continued in their lives because Peter says so in the first reading "God raised Jesus.  We are witnesses of these things, as is the Holy Spirit, whom God has given to those who obey him.”

And this life in the Spirit leads us to the second part of the Gospel story.

This bit is important, because it reminds us that with the appearance of the risen Jesus comes the sending forth on mission. It is clearly about Peter’s three denials & their remedies in his admission of love for Jesus  three times. It is clearly about Peter being given the authority to feed (that is nourish & sustain) Jesus’ flock.
But what is important is not the authority given to Peter, but the means demanded by Jesus of carrying it out - love comes first, authority second. 

Authority from Jesus is always in the Spirit.  That means real power and authority always looks like selfless love, sacrifice and commitment to service.  Real authority is lying down one’s life.

Perhaps, here Peter remembers (and now understands) Jesus washing their feet. Finally, Jesus says to Peter “follow me”.  

And so they did and we still follow today in the light and joy of the Easter proclamation – Our Lord has risen. We are the present day witnesses to these things.

To proclaim the Risen Lord with conviction and joy is to proclaim our love for him and to proclaim our love for him is to, without reservations, take up his mission, as he asked Peter to do.
And sharing his mission makes us sharers in the life of the Spirit and collectively we are made his servant Church.  

Indeed, he is risen – alleluia alleluia.