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This year's Easter decor: lilies, hydrangeas ...and black bunting. |
This is the day the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad in it!
The ancient celebratory antiphon for Easter, not only Sunday but through the eight days of the Octave, leaves no room for confusion about the task at hand, nor the about the identity of the source of its mandate. Giddy devotees of liturgy and law will enjoin, It is forbidden to fast on a feast! and commence suitable revelry. This is neither inappropriate nor unseemly.
Yet Easter Tuesday morning, having left my car for some work and set out on a walk, I pulled out my rosary, squinted to mark the day of the week and thus identify the cycle of Mysteries it called for, and groaned: the Sorrowful Mysteries already? So soon? The great grief of Good Friday had been eclipsed by the eruption of joy Holy Saturday and Easter Sunday, but here I was returning to the Passion and Cross. It seems we still walk in the shadow of death, even as we rejoice in the light of the Risen Lord.
Even before that, though, the reality of our dwelling in the valley of the shadow had crashed into our week of exultation. The day before, Easter Monday morning, I learned only after I had offered the 6:30 Mass that our Holy Father Francis had died hours before. The newspaper I had one hour earlier brought into the rectory and laid on the kitchen island had as its lead photo the Pope in his Popemobile the morning before, with the caption Pope emerges from long convalescence for Easter Sunday. The shadow of death defines the light.
Long have I been convinced that the day of one’s death can reveal the care or even favor of the Lord of the Living. For the Good Shepherd to gather to Himself the earthly shepherd of His flock as the eight-day celebration of the Resurrection begins provides that the Church is obliged to rejoice even as she would turn to mourning.
Our rejoicing in the resurrection is not untouched by our continued vulnerability to death, and our grief at the loss of a loved one is similarly changed by the confident and joyful hope of the resurrection. By her own laws and obligations, the Church must celebrate Christ’s victory for the full eight days, and can only acknowledge grief as situational, occasional, or even incidental. A funeral Mass is permitted in the Octave, and indeed Francis will be mourned with one and buried on Easter Saturday. But all other Masses must be of and for Easter, only including a mention of our call for the repose of the soul of the Pontiff. The memoranda and instructions flowing from national and diocesan liturgical offices over recent days have been detailed and clear.
It is clearly more than simple liturgical directives that guides our dispositions as Catholics. Christ is risen, and that changes everything. Even death is changed, but it is not eliminated. Therefore, we do not grieve like the others do, who have no hope, as Saint Paul indicates to the Thessalonians (1 Thes 14:13). In these days our rejoicing pushes away grief.
At the end of that Tuesday morning rosary, I recalled my prayer practice twenty years ago, after John Paul II had died. I would add at the end of every Rosary I offered one Our Father, Hail Mary, and Glory Be for the happy repose of the soul of our deceased Holy Father, and then one Our Father, Hail Mary, and Glory Be for whoever was the man next to be called to the Chair of Peter. I commend this practice to you now. The former is our duty and our privilege as Catholics to offer prayers for our father who has died. The latter is similarly an obligation but also a lifeline to tether us to the spiritual reality of life in Christ in the Church, and the great working-out of divine providence through the actions of the Cardinals over coming days. It can inoculate us against the frenzied media coverage of this holy undertaking that presents it as resembling nothing so much as the mad scramble to bestow the Democratic Party nomination for president of the U.S., because alas, that’s the most important thing of which they know. Thank God you and I know better, and more.
Yes, life in Christ is more. The Church is a divine institution, not a merely human one, even as the human nature of its members be on full and sometimes gruesome parade. Membership in Christ and headship of His Body have political and temporal dimensions, but more importantly, sacramental and eternal dimensions. Christ is risen from the dead and we are raised with him, even as we walk in the valley of the shadow of death. Our lives and our days are changed forever by Christ’s victory and our sharing in it, and even as grim realities perdure, certain days bring specific obligations.
This is the day the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad in it!
Monsignor Smith