Acts 3:13-15, 17-19
Psalm 4:2, 4, 7-9
1 John 2:1-5
Luke 24:35-48
The other day I sat down and
watched the movie Matchstick Men, which is about conmen and their work. One of
the conmen goes in to speak with a therapist and tells him he’s an antique
furniture salesman. At one point the therapist asks if it’s okay that he prop
his feet up on a footstool on account of his back trouble. The supposed antique
furniture salesman agrees without batting an eye. This goes on for a couple of visits
when the therapist finally says, ‘This footstool is an antique of great and for
weeks you don’t even seem to mind me propping my feet up, when normal people
usually balk at such an idea. So what do you really do?’
This scene struck me because it
showed that the conman was exposed because he failed to recognize something
that was of great importance, and which he should have known about. Looking
around the world today, I see a world full of people – including many
Christians – who celebrate Easter but who have no idea of the inherent value of
the Resurrection of Christ from the dead. Easter is the day (and season) when
we focus especially on the fact that Christ died and rose again, that He
conquered death, that He is victorious over sin, that He has opened the gates
of Heaven and all humanity is able to enter into the Eternal Heavenly Banquet.
But does the value of that really touch our hearts?
In the world today there are two
major issues that tend to veil the importance of Easter and make it difficult
for us to see the necessity of it in our individual lives. The first is
presumption of salvation. I have been to funerals and heard ‘they’re in a
better place’ and I wondered in my heart if those speaking actually knew the
deceased. The fact is that most of the world today presumes that the nature
course of things is that we die and then we immediately go to Heaven. But the
Gospel tells us another story. It tells us, instead, that the natural course is
that we die and go to Hell if we don’t at least try to follow the commands of
the Lord. And yet, every person who dies, whether they’ve ever said a prayer in
their life is automatically canonized as a saint in heaven. When we think in
such a way, we first rob the individual of prayers that might be helpful for
them to get to Heaven if they are in purgatory. And secondly, it harms us
because if I know for myself that I don’t have to do anything special to get to
Heaven, I very likely wont. I’ll settle for what’s comfortable and coast in.
But again, this is not compatible with the Gospel invitation to enter the
narrow gate and walk the way of the cross to find glory in eternity.
Connected to this is a loss of a
sense of sin. Things that we do routinely today would have been thought
unimaginable 75 years ago. And things that are sinful but not ‘major sins’
aren’t even concerns for the majority of the world. ‘It’s just who I am’ is the
common response. And yet, if we fail to see the impact that sin has upon our
lives – disconnecting us from God, grace, and salvation – then we fail to
recognize the gift that Jesus Christ has given us in conquering sin. I find it
interesting that so much of the Easter season talks about sin. St. Peter today
said, “Repent, therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be wiped away.” St. John told us, “I am writing this to
you that you may not commit sin.” And Jesus trumps them both, describing how
the Christ was to come, suffer, die, and be raised so that repentance for the
forgiveness of sins would be preached. Sin is at the foundation of the
Resurrection. If sin didn’t exist, Christ wouldn’t have had to take on our
flesh, suffer His Passion, die and rise from the dead. But sin does exist and
so we need a savior.
This is the Good News of the
Easter season: that although all of humanity is undeserving of eternal life,
but rather deserving of eternal death on account of our sins, the Lord Jesus
has come among us and died in our place and opened the gates of Heaven for us
to be able to enter in with Him and reign forever with the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. St. Augustine once
beautifully noted, “God created us without us, but He cannot save us without
us.” He invites us to take part in the plan He has made. Basically, it’s like
hitting jackpot at the casino. If you just kept the printout saying how much
you won it won’t do you any good; you have to cash it in. In much the same way,
the Lord has purchased our souls for eternal life. We simply have to walk the
way with Him and because of the Resurrection we can do so. May God grant us the
grace this day to cast out sin from our lives and rejoice in the gift of
freedom that Christ has won for us.
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