Sunday, May 12, 2013

Ascending to the heart of the Father

Homily
Solemnity of the Ascension
12 May 2013
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center at the University of Kansas
Daily Readings


A blessed Mother's Day to all mom's out there today, from a Church who knows how to celebrate motherhood!  In every Catholic Church around the world, our devotion to motherhood is on display.  Mary has an icon in every Catholic Church I've ever been too.  Every one!  Tons of our Churches are dedicated specifically in honor of the motherhood of Mary. Of all the world's religions, there is not a close second to how deeply the Catholic Church celebrates motherhood.  No one else proclaims a mother to be the most perfect person who ever lived, and the first member of heaven, like the Catholic Church honors Mary her Mother!  No one else dares to claim the unthinkable, that Mary a human person is the Mother of a God that is a Father but who has no Father.  Our Church never stops celebrating Mary as the mother of the Church, the mother of Jesus, the spiritual mother of all of us who receive the gift of eternal life through her intercession, in the same pattern that we received life on this earth through our dear moms!  Happy Mother's Day to all our mothers, living and deceased, from a Church who knows how to celebrate a mother!

Just as Advent must not cave in too early to Christmas, nor Lent to spring break, so also Easter can not cave into the transition into summer, as busy a time as this is for all of us.  Our Easter celebration is not a decrescendo from Easter Sunday to Pentecost, but just the opposite!  The Ascension is a crescendo of anticipation and hope, a last stop before the unleashing of the greatest gift of Easter, the incomparable outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon the Church at Pentecost!  Woe to us if our Easter celebration is waning!  Today in a special way we celebrate that Jesus ascends to the Father taking with him something he did not have before the Incarnation!  He takes back the gift of a redeemed humanity - his Risen and spiritual body ascends to the heart of the Father, from whence the Word first came.  Today we rejoice that just as Christ in the Incarnation and Paschal Mystery filled humanity with his divinity, so today heaven begins to be filled with our humanity.  This my friends, is cause for increased rejoicing!

This joy of ours at our Lord's Ascension is not a fantastically pious and far-fetched hope that one day we too might get to fly around in new dimensions of time and space with spiritual bodies like super-heroes!  This will be great, don't get me wrong!  The little kid in each one of us I'm sure can't wait to try out the spiritual bodies that will be ours in the Resurrection!  Yet there is a deeper joy to be celebrated today, a joy much more real and profound.  The Ascension represents not just the hope of entering the new time and space of a new heavens and new earth, it is an entering more deeply into what makes us most human - our relationships.  What good would super-human spiritual bodies that could ascend and descend and be untouched by death and transcend so many of the limitations we now experience be, if those spiritual bodies were not filled by love and relationship, the things that make us human?  The reality is that without love and relationship, even spiritual bodies wouldn't amount to a hill of beans in the end.  For heaven for us is less of a place and more of a relationship.

For love is our origin, love is our constant calling, and love is our perfection in heaven.

In the Ascension, Jesus ascends most importantly, then, to the heart of his Father.  The Ascension becomes the sacrament then of the most important journey each one of us is making right now, a journey deeper into relationship with the one who knows us the best and loves us the most, our heavenly Father, and through this relationship to enter more deeply into our relationships with one another.  This journey to the heart of the Father, our final home, is more important than the peripheral gifts of the Resurrection - escape from sin and death and the reception of spiritual bodies.  This journey to the Father ensures that our hope in the Ascension is not a vain hope of escaping what it means to be human, but is always a desire to enter more deeply into the relationships that make us most human.  Throughout human history, it is those great saints who have contemplated the heart of the Father on high, to which the Ascension points, who who amazingly taught us how to love one another more perfectly here below.

The promised gift of the Holy Spirit, which comes in all its fullness at Pentecost next week, is here today, sent from the Father and the Son, to lift our hearts and minds in this sacred liturgy, to that place where Jesus and the Father dwell together.  May that Holy Spirit give us increased rejoicing as the Easter season grows stronger, not weaker, and in our contemplation of heaven teach us how to order our lives so as to journey together toward the heart of the Father, where we are destined to live forever.  Amen!  Alleluia!

Sunday, May 5, 2013

beauty entering into reality

Homily
6th Sunday of Easter C
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center at the University of Kansas
5 May 2013
Daily Readings
Audio

Every once in awhile, I'll get a question about why the Church needs beautiful things.  Jesus was poor.  He had no temporal power or wealth.  He did not have expensive things.  Would he want expensive Churches?  Does he need beautiful Churches? If not, then why do we have them?  Why does the Church need St. Peter's Basilica?  Many have been enthralled with our new Pope Francis eschewing some of the peripheries that come with the papacy.  Taking after his namesake, Pope Francis is showing us that great joy comes through simplicity and poverty.  Which is all good and an important part of the fullness of truth.

Other times, however, I get just the opposite comment.  People crave beauty. People desire to be beautiful.  When a bride gets married, she wants a beautiful Church in which to celebrate the beauty of the moment.  When I pray, I yearn to pray in a beautiful place, like St. Lawrence.  This beautiful chapel in which we pray tonight changed my life, and I'm not sure I could say I would be a priest if this church was not beautiful.  I am sure I would not be a priest if the prayer and liturgy here was anything less than breathtakingly beautiful.  On the one hand, people say beauty is an unnecessary escape from reality, even the opposite of the real world. Some would put beauty low on the list of essentials. Some people want more beautiful homes and secular buildings than churches.  On the other hand, people crave beauty and the desire to be beautiful is inescapable.  Churches have always been built to enter more deeply into the human experience, especially the experience of beauty.

Beauty is not just for the rich, either.  It's not just for those who can afford it.  It can be argued that the poor need beauty as much as they need food and water.  Perhaps food is more immediate, but being human and becoming human depends on the essential nourishment of the human soul.  If the soul of any human person, rich or poor, is not fed by the transcendentals of goodness, truth, love, unity and beauty, that soul will cease to be human.  I'm arguing here that beauty is not dispensable for anyone.

Catholic Churches then, are supposed to be sacraments of the heavenly Jerusalem that we hear described with such utter beauty in the book of Revelation.  It is a city born from heaven, and is not an escape from the created world or material reality or the human condition, but is a city that represents the world fully redeemed and made new.  Lest we lose a vision of what the world is supposed to be like, we are to continually visit our Churches, which are supposed to be our best guess at what the new Jerusalem will be, and what the destiny of the world looks like. Our Churches are nothing less than previews of what a world that is fully the dwelling place of God would look like.  And of course, Churches are at their most beautiful when they are filled with people yearning for transcendent beauty.  No, God does not need beautiful Churches.  He has no problem with vision or imagination.  But we do.  We need beautiful Churches for our hope to be sustained.  We need beautiful and sacred spaces to be human.

Jesus assures us in the Gospel as well that his Ascension to the Father is no escape from the world, but is entering more deeply into reality.  No, after taking a redeemed humanity with him to heaven, as a gift for his Father, Jesus promises us a greater gift; namely, that he will visit us and be with us and make his home with us in an even more perfect way through the gift of his Holy Spirit. The greater gift of the Holy Spirit solves the physics problem of how 6 billion plus people in the world can all be close to Jesus at the same time.  Before the Ascension and gift of the Holy Spirit, this is impossible.  Before Pentecost, we would all be fighting each other to get close to Jesus.  Through Pentecost, however, Jesus becomes more present, not less - more real, and less speculative, than if he were walking the earth today.  Through the gift of the Holy Spirit, which will make him present in the Eucharist in just a moment, we take our Lord in even more perfectly and really than those first disciples.  Through the Holy Spirit, Jesus fulfills his promise to come from heaven and to make his home with us, first in the sacred space of our Churches, then also in the very lives of those who belong to his body, the Church.  This Eucharist tonight is nothing less than a real foretaste and participation of what it will be like for the world to reach it's highest destiny. Going to Church is never escaping reality, but is going deeper into the mystery of the world's destiny and redemption.

In the month of May our devotion to Mary increases, for she is the first and best among us to allow herself to become a living tabernacle for Jesus through the work of the Holy Spirit.  May we have recourse to the humble example and powerful intercession of our Lady, who teaches us how to allow the Lord to make his home within us, especially through the Holy Eucharist we are about to receive.  Amen.

Sunday, April 28, 2013

love of the new creation

Homily
5th Sunday of Easter C
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center at the University of Kansas
28 April 2013
Daily Readings
Audio


In today's reading from the Book of Revelation, John sees a vision of a new heaven and a new earth, coming down out of heaven.  What is distinctive about the new creation?  Many things, but one line from today's reading grabs me in particular - God's dwelling place is with men.  During most of the book of Revelation, we see the great battle for souls - the cosmic struggle between good and evil, and souls being whisked away to heaven or lost to hell.  Yet in the end we do not see that God regrets his decision to create the earth, nor does he discard his material creation in favor of a return to a simply spiritual heaven.  This first creation is not a failed experiment. No, what we see is quite the opposite.  The plan is brought to fulfillment.  John sees a new earth being created.  The creation of the first earth is not temporary - it is meant to be redeemed forever. As the one on the throne says - I make all things new.  The fruit of the Resurrection of the Body is not the rescue of some souls for heaven, it is the beginning of the birth of a new earth as well.  What is remarkable about this new earth?  It is where God prefers to dwell.  The emphasis of the reading is not that man's dwelling place is with God, which of course is none the less true.  No, the emphasis is that God's dwelling place is with man - that's what's distinctive of the new creation.  The first garden was made out of love to be a dwelling place for Adam and Eve, but not for God.  In the second creation, a new earth is created for man and God to dwell together.  This second creation begins with the Resurrection of Jesus, the first born from the dead, which we are still celebrating with incomparable joy in this holy season.

A lot of times I see young people abandoning Christianity in favor of humanitarianism, and it boggles me and frustrates me that we have so dumbed down our vision of heaven, the new creation, that some people find a false dichotomy between the two.  The new creation described in the book of Revelation is precisely man as we find him today in the world fully alive and fully redeemed.  Some leave Christianity today because they think it is detached from reality and belongs to those afraid to live who hope in a fantasy afterlife of souls being whisked away from a wicked earth.  Yet the vision in Revelation shows just the opposite. A Christian is not interested in escaping humanity, but in welcoming God into the depths of humanity, so that humanity can be redeemed beginning from its weakest point, and sin and death conquered by love.  A Christian has not less incentive, but more, to co-operate with God in the redemption of the world, since such a redemption of precisely the human condition in which we find ourselves is the definition for us of what it means to pass over into heaven, and into the reality of eternal life.  Again, I repeat a Christian and his desire for heaven is never a flight from being human - it is a more courageous entering into humanity, so that God can fulfill his desire to make his dwelling place with men.

How do we go about entering into the depth of our humanity?  Jesus shows us the way in his new commandment.  What we have in the Gospel today is of course not just a repetition of love your neighbor as yourself.  Neither is it commensurate with other humanitarian versions of trying to love unconditionally.  No, in this commandment - there is a condition.  There is no love that is the basis of the Resurrection, and the creation of a new heaven and new earth, except the precise love that Jesus made perfectly manifest.  His commandment couldn't be more simple nor more precise.  Love one another as I have loved you.  This is almost the opposite of saying we must love unconditionally.  No, the condition is simple.  We must encounter and receive the unique and powerful and salvific love of Jesus in our lives, and try to learn about it in every possible way that we can.  We must meditate on the cross, and conform our lives to the mystery of the cross, knowing that the cross is the precise beginning point of the new creation, for it is there and at the empty tomb, and nowhere else, has a sign been given that there truly is a love stronger than death.

When this condition is filled, then and only then do we try to love, for it is only then that the precise love of Jesus, the only love that is the instrument of the new creation, flows through us.  Not our own love, as beautiful as it is, but the love that because it is Christ working in us, with us, and through us, can alone fulfill the new commandment our Lord gave us.  Love one another as I have loved you.


Saturday, April 20, 2013

the voice of Jesus

Homily
4th Sunday of Easter
Good Shepherd Sunday and the World Day of Prayer for Vocations
21 April 2013
Daily Readings


I know my sheep.  They hear my voice.  They follow me.

Sounds perfectly simple.  Know.  Listen.  Follow.  Yet ask any parent, or coach or teacher, or pastor, if simple things are easy, and they will laugh at you.  No sometimes the simplest things are the hardest to keep simple.  Know.  Listen.  Follow.  Sounds incredibly simple, but in practice, it is incredibly hard.

The 4th Sunday of Easter each year is nicknamed Good Shepherd Sunday, and is also given to us by the Holy Father as the World Day of Prayer for Vocations.  It is the Sunday when we Catholics are challenged to admit where we are in knowing and following the voice of Jesus.  For there is no such thing as having a deep relationship with someone, and not being able to know or hear their voice.  A voice is something unique to each person.  Not only the sound of the voice, but the words that are chosen as well.   Each unique person has a unique voice.  For our deepest friends, we recognize that voice instantly, and we miss it when we are apart from them.  Most importantly, for our deepest friends, we can internalize their voice, and remember and hear them even when we are apart from them.  It is fun to know friends so well that we know what their voice is going to say before they say it.

So it is with Jesus.  No one can say that he is an intimate disciple of Jesus, much less best friends with our Lord, without knowing his voice.  Today we reflect on our hearing, from the depths of our being, the most unique voice in human history.  A distinct and powerful voice, a voice that alone has the words of eternal life.    We should recognize instantly this voice when we hear it.  This is my body broken for you, and my blood poured out for you  - that's the voice of Jesus, the unmistakable voice of our Lord.  Leave everything and follow me - again, the voice of Jesus, and no one else's.  Whoever does not deny himself, take up his cross and follow me, cannot be my disciple - guess who?  That's right, the voice of Jesus.  It is a very different voice than when we are told to 'follow your heart' or 'do what makes you happy.'  On Good Shepherd Sunday we are challenged to do more than to listen to our own heart and to find our own voice.  No, when we go into the innermost parts of our person, we are invited not to be alone, but to conform the desires of our heart to the will of Jesus, the Good Shepherd, who knows us and loves us more than we know and love ourselves.

When I was a teenager, my mom knew me much better than I knew myself.  She told me that I should be open to the priesthood, and listen to what God was asking me to do.  It used to make me so mad.  I hated the pressure. I had my own ideas, and wanted to follow my own voice.  The last thing I wanted was someone telling me what to do, neither my mother, nor the voice of Jesus.  This is a reaction we all have when we doubt that anyone can know us as well as we know ourselves. Yet in reality, man does not make sense by himself.  He can only find his mission and vocation in life through relationships with others.  And so it is that in many of our relationships, we find that others know parts of us that we do not know.  My mom, who knew me intimately from my conception, who changed my diapers, and who had been watching me for years and years, and loving me, of course knew me better than I knew myself as a teenager.  Yet the only voice I wanted to hear, and to trust, was my own voice.

As vocation director for the Archdiocese, I tell men all the time they would make a great priest. Yet in order for my words to have any effect, a man must also be able to hear the voice of Jesus deep in his heart, in that place where the man prays.  Pope Benedict XVI rightly said about calling forth vocations in our Church, that if we fail to teach our young people to pray, there will be no way to talk them into a vocation.  Yet if we dare to teach them how to pray, to enter into that space where the unique and life-giving voice of Jesus may be heard, then there will be no way we could talk them out of their vocations.

It is at the Eucharist, my dear friends, where the voice of Jesus is most intimately and perfectly spoken.  Here the Holy Spirit makes present the voice of Jesus, not only in the scriptures, where we listen to things only Jesus can and does say, but most perfectly at the time of consecration, when we Catholics hear the most intimate and perfect words that can be spoken - this is my body, broken for you.  This is my blood, poured out for you.  The Eucharist, then, becomes the privileged place of discernment for each one of us - a chance when we hear the voice of the Good Shepherd, and ask ourselves if we have responded with generosity and faith.

It is on Good Shepherd Sunday when we are challenged to ask ourselves if we have kept something simple simple, or made it complicated.  I know my sheep.  They hear my voice.  They follow me.  Amen.


Wednesday, April 17, 2013

scattering

Homily
Wednesday of the 3rd Week of Easter
17 April 2013
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center at the University of Kansas
Daily Readings

In today's reading from Acts, we see the scattering, and subsequent growth of the Church, during the first persecution in Jerusalem.  It is precisely because of persecution that the Church grows - that blood is spilt, Christians imprisoned, and they arrive at new places to preach the word.  Those who are serious about the new evangelization do well to consider that it is when things are easiest that the Church grows the least.  This might be true as well personally, for the last beatitude is perhaps the most important - Blessed are you when they insult you and persecute you, and utter every kind of evil against you falsely because of me. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward will be great in heaven.  Those of us here to drink in Easter graces would do well not to shy away from asking for the grace of persecution, witness and martyrdom, for it is an honor to give witness to the Risen Christ.  And what greater sign could we give that the eternal life promised in the Gospel is a  reality within us, than to lay down our earthly lives in perfect witness?

The scattering of the first disciples might also remind us of how the Lord has scattered himself, so as not to lose one of those he has been given.  This scattering of the Lord himself is due to a certain persecution of him . . . a lack of faith.  Those who saw him in the flesh did not believe, and yet eternal life according to St. John consists in just this thing . .. seeing and believing.  The persecution of unbelief did not deter our Lord . .  in fact, he trusts our belief all the more, and our vision, as he scatters and hides himself in the Eucharist despite even more certain disbelief and persecution.  He does this so that at least one more person might have a chance to see him and believe in him . . . and that he might not lose one of those he has been given.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Mercy ground of the Resurrection

Homily
Divine Mercy Sunday
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center at the University of Kansas
7 April 2013
Daily Readings


Check this out on Chirbit


In the Easter season every Christian professes with all his heart and mind and strength that Jesus Christ is Risen.  Jesus Christ is truly Risen.  We profess a historical event that has changed history more than any other, a truth that has been passed down carefully and consistently for 2000 years so that it can reach our hearts and minds.  Christ rose from the dead.  There is confirmation of a love that is stronger than death.  Christians profess the Resurrection as the thing they most know to be true out of all the things they know to be true.

Yet this truth can of course be doubted.  No matter how much evidence is passed down, the Resurrection is a truth that goes beyond reason, so it can always be doubted.  Even Thomas after touching the wounds of the Risen Lord could have returned to his doubts the next day.  Doubting is always available to us.  Agnostics and atheists are the fasting growing segment of the religious landscape, and as many people are losing faith in Jesus as are encountering him through the Easter proclamation of the Church.

We can argue, of course, about how reasonable it is to believe the testimony of Thomas and those first apostles, who gave their lives to the truth of the Resurrection.  We can and should proclaim that the more you try to live the paschal mystery, the more you discover it to be true - that in entering into the suffering and death of Christ, we discover a new a distinctively different kind of life on the other side of the cross that we call eternal.  We can and should argue for this truth.

Yet many people will always have a hard time believing because Christianity is not at its core an argument.  Whenever we shout - Jesus is Risen!  Others can shout just as loud - no he isn't!  And this kind of back and forth goes nowhere.

Christianity at its core is less of an argument and more of a relationship, less a dogma and more a dialogue.  And in every relationship, human and divine, there is a critical and necessary interplay of faith and love, of trust and mercy.  Therefore, we cannot dare to shout the truth that Jesus Christ is Risen - the truth we know most to be true out of everything we know to be true - without simultaneously proclaming God is love.  God is mercy. So this second Sunday of Easter is not simply a crescendo of last week's Easter Proclamation He is Risen - it is also a contemplation of what it means to be visited by mercy itself - in the person of the Risen Christ.

For the Easter proclamation of the Church to grow stronger, what happens in tonight's Gospel is something that must happen personally and intimately, from the inside out, within each Christian.  The Risen Christ, bringing with him his victory over sin and death, comes to visit his Church from the inside out.  We see this in the story in his appearance in the upper room, where the apostles are gathered in fear.  We see it intimately as Thomas places his doubts into the wounds of Christ, and experiences most personally what a broken human person redeemed completely by love really looks and feels like.

The experience of us receiving the Eucharist in the Easter season is no less intimate.  For we take the Risen Christ deeply within us, into the inner recesses of those doubts and fears that still need to be healed, in those places where Christ's victory over sin and death has not yet been completed. When we receive the Eucharist, we are asking to be healed by divine mercy in the most perfect way possible - from the inside out, beginning from the weakest part of us, at that precise place where we cannot change ourselves.

The Risen Christ breaks through any remaining isolation within us with his mercy.  Until we have this experience, and unless we have this experience, our profession of the Resurrection will limp.  For it is only when we know we are loved that we respond with greater faith.  When we are healed, we respond with trust.  And vice versa, when we invite the Risen Christ to visit us with his unique and salvific power and victory and mercy, then the effect within us is perfect charity and greater mercy given, as the apostles were sent out to forgive the sins of others.

The celebration of Divine Mercy Sunday is a recent change to the Easter liturgical calendar.  John Paul II forever renamed the 2nd Sunday of Easter Divine Mercy Sunday.  He himself died on the eve of this Solemnity, after having allowed us to witness him at his weakest point, his closeness to death, giving further testimony of his trust in God's mercy.  Let us not be afraid, as he was not, to be vulnerable and dependent before others and before God, for the redeemed wounds of Christ remind us that the way to the Resurrection is not escaping our humanity, but allowing the mercy of God to visit us at our weakest point.  Amen.  

Saturday, March 30, 2013

powerful words

Homily
Easter Sunday of the Lord's Resurrection
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center at the University of Kansas
31 March 2013
Daily Readings


Check this out on Chirbit


Jesus Christ is Risen!  He is truly Risen!  Jesus Christ is Risen from the dead!  Alleluia!  Alleluia!

I know you've heard these words before.  Even if they sound good on Easter morning, it's not a surprise.  You were expecting me to say that - you were expecting to hear it.  But how do those words hit you this morning?  Are they more true, and more impactful, than anytime you have heard them before?  Better yet - are you ready to repeat them with more meaning than you did last year, with more meaning than you have ever said them before?

If those words hit us with any less intensity this morning than that first proclamation that made Peter and John run to the tomb, then we might as well go home.  For these words - Jesus Christ is truly risen - are the most mysterious and dramatic and profound words that have ever been spoken, and that ever can be spoken - in human history.  There is no middle ground - either these words are everything, or they are nonsense and are nothing.

Without these words - Jesus Christ is truly risen - there is no point in repeating the most profound words that Jesus Christ uttered - this is my body, this is my blood - because without the Resurrection even the Eucharist loses its meaning and leads nowhere new.  Without these words, even the most profound love the world has ever seen - the love manifested on the cross - ends in death.  Without the truth of the Resurrection, the Church and humanity cannot say for certain that we have found or experienced a love that is stronger than death.

Thankfully we do not have to generate the faith to say these words this morning out of nowhere.  Easter Sunday is the easiest day to proclaim the Lord's Resurrection as the thing I most know to be true out of all the things I know to be true.  Nature herself sets the stage, as winter gives way to new life.  The Church provides the sights and sounds and smells in Her sacred liturgy to heighten the senses and to pave the way for the proclamation.  We profess not alone but with the whole Church throughout the world, led by the historical cloud of witnesses from the first apostles to the latest martyr, all of whom professed the Resurrection to the point of death, so that faith in the resurrection could safely reach us here in Lawrence, Kansas on the 31st of March, 2013.  It is in this context that we profess with all our hearts and minds and strength today the beautiful Easter proclamation - Jesus Christ is truly risen.

All that support makes the Easter proclamation possible, but none of it makes your proclamation, or mine, any less personal or risky.  For being a Christian is never to go with the flow.  We are pitiable if we only renew our baptismal promises because everyone around me in Church is doing it.  Professing faith is never something small.  And today is not about showing up to buy a ticket at the eternal life lottery.

No what we do today is profess a faith that is exciting and dramatic, and a faith powerful enough to affect anyone who has become anesthetized to Christianity.  For no proclamation has ever shaken the history of the  world like an earthquake or so changed the dignity and destiny of man, as the proclamation that Jesus Christ is Risen from the dead.  That proclamation is either everything, or it is nothing, and it can't be a proclamation that limps out from the Church on Easter Sunday.  It can't be a proclamation ignored by a world that thinks Christians are those weak ones who need a myth to help them cope with the reality of life.

Against anyone who might think the Christian proclamation of the Resurrection is a myth for cowards or weak thinkers, we disciples of Jesus must be known as those who more radically and intensely than anyone else are searching for that love strong enough to conquer death.  That search led us first not to the empty tomb but to the cross, where perfect love is revealed perfectly.  On the cross we see a love that is ultimate truth and that casts out fear.  So it is there at the cross that with Jesus our Lord Christians avoid nothing and fear nothing.

To be a Christian must be the antithesis of being a naive coward, for the wisdom of the cross compels Christians to be soldiers who live the truth that suffering and death are to be welcomed, redeemed and conquered, not avoided.  A true Christian consequently proclaims the resurrection not as a vain hope in the future, but as a fruit of the cross that he has already begun to experience.  For the first fruits of the Resurrection are experienced by us right now, whenever we dare to live the radical truth given by Jesus that whoever loses his life, saves it for eternal life.

You and I gather to profess faith in the Resurrection today not simply because this faith has been passed down to us, but because we have actually tried being a Christian! For we are the most pathetic people of all if the Resurrection is something we have to pretend to be true, rather than something I've discovered to be true.  Woe to us if we cannot profess our life getting bigger, and our growing younger, every time I lose myself in the adventure of following Christ through his suffering and death, to the glory of His Resurrection!

I beg you this morning not to say something pitiable with your profession.  Please do not say something easy.  But with sharp minds and pure hearts and courageous wills, let us say personally and together profess
the most profound and dramatic and mysterious words that have ever been spoken, or that can ever be spoken.  Jesus Christ is truly risen from the dead.  Alleluia!  Alleluia!