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Tuesday, 20 April 2021

Eastertime and key facts of the empty tomb

Bishop Robert Barron. CNS photo/courtesy Word on Fire

Some people are attracted to the graves of the famous. Hundreds, even thousands of people go to graves to muse and meditate.

One such person is Catholic Bishop Robert Barron, who serves in the Los Angeles area. He studied in Paris and spent many hours in the cemeteries holding the graves of Chopin, Abelard and Heloise, and even Jim Morrison. In a video talk, Barron says of graves: “They're places of finality. They're places of peace, of contemplation.” However…

Then there's the grave that the Gospel writers are fascinated by. I'm talking about the grave of Jesus, to which three women go early on Easter Sunday morning. They've gone with oils to anoint the body, according to the Jewish custom.

They worried about who would roll the stone back, but I'm sure they were planning there to perform this ritual, and to muse and to ponder, remembering the great things that Jesus had said and done, probably feeling some anger at those that had betrayed him and denied him, probably weeping in their grief.

But they arrive, and to their infinite surprise, they find first, the stone rolled away. Has a grave robber been at work? But their astonishment only increases when, looking inside, they see not the body of Jesus but rather a young man in a white garment, who says to them, "You're looking for Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified. He has been raised; he is not here. Look, there is the place where they laid him."

The young man's message, to put it bluntly, was not that someone had broken into this grave, but rather that someone had broken out of it. What was their response to this shocking news?

And this is the first account we have in Mark's gospel. What's the reaction of these women?

"They went out and fled from the tomb, for terror and amazement had seized them." Yeah, graves, sure; they're places of quiet contemplation, places to muse, places to think. Then there's this grave, from which these women run in terror.


And thereupon, brothers and sisters, hangs the tale of Easter. Jesus is not a fondly remembered figure from the past. He's not a great spiritual teacher whom we recall with fond contemplation.

We participate in the terror that these women felt as the absolute novelty and shock and surprise of Jesus' resurrection dawned upon them.

What I love about this story is it militates against all attempts to domesticate the resurrection. And there's been a lot of this up and down the Christian centuries, and certainly in our own time.

When I was going through seminary — this is some years ago — these were the kinds of books that we read in the seminary.

"Oh, Jesus’ resurrection; oh, don't read that as something that really happened. Rather, the disciples after the death of their Master, knew that his cause would go on, and so they invented this story of an empty tomb and appearances to symbolize the fact that his cause goes on."

Or this view that was held by a very prominent theologian when I was going through school — after the terrible death of Jesus, the disciples nevertheless felt forgiven, and so they expressed this conviction with the stories of the empty tomb and the appearances.

Come on. I mean, this is impossibly thin gruel, and it does not correspond to the clear sense of shock, novelty, and excitement that runs through every page of the New Testament. Can you really imagine Paul tearing into Corinth with the news that "Hey, the cause of a dead person that I admired goes on."  They would have laughed him out of town.

Can you imagine all the apostles, they go careering around the world to their own deaths — with the message that they felt forgiven? I mean, give me a break.

These attempts to flatten out and domesticate the resurrection are undermined by this fundamental witness of the facticity of the resurrection.

Can I just draw three implications, friends, from the fact of Jesus' resurrection? First of all, it means that Jesus is Lord. You'll find this phrase often in the writings of St. Paul. In his Greek, "Iesous Kyrios," Jesus is Lord. And we might say, "Well, that's a blandly spiritual thing to say." But that was deeply subversive in the first century. Why? Well, because a watchword of that time and place was "Kaisar Kyrios," Caesar's the Lord. He's the one to whom my allegiance is due. He's the one in charge of my life.

How wonderful: the first Christians, in light of the resurrection, they purposely twisted that language. Not Kaisar Kyrios; Iesous Kyrios. Mind you, someone whom Caesar put to death, but whom God raised from the dead, he's the true Lord. He's the one to whom your allegiance is due.

And furthermore, how wonderful that they proclaimed this long before there was anything like an institutional Church, long before there were armies and armies of believers. These are a handful of people who were declaring this deeply subversive message of the lordship of Jesus.

Here's a second implication of the resurrection — again, not as some thin gruel, some vague symbol, but the fact of the resurrection — that Jesus’ claims about himself are now ratified.

Unlike any of the other religious founders, Jesus consistently speaks and acts in the very person of God. "My son, your sins are forgiven."

"Who's this man think he is? Only God can forgive sins."

Right. That's the point. Jesus is speaking and acting in the very person of God. "Oh, you've heard it said in the Torah, but I say…" Well, for a first-century Jew, to claim authority over the Torah, which was the supreme authority — the only one that could possibly do that would be God himself. Uh-huh. "You've got a greater than the temple here," Jesus says, in reference to himself. Again, for a first-century Jew, the temple was the dwelling place of God. Who could possibly say he's greater than the temple, except the one who in fact dwells in the temple?

In fact, this is why Jesus is brought to the cross: this apparent blasphemy, this man claiming to be God.

And then, see, when he died on the cross, even his most ardent followers were convinced that he was a sort of a sad fraud. Think of those two disciples on the road to Emmaus. "Yeah, we thought he was the one, but clearly he's not because there'd be no greater proof possible that someone was not the Messiah of Israel, than his death at the hands of Israel's enemies. Clearly he isn't God. Clearly he was just a deluded figure."

But when he rose from the dead — and I don't mean some vague feeling they had of being forgiven; come on — when he rose from the dead and appeared alive again to them, they knew now he is exactly who he said he was. They knew that Jesus' divinity, his claimed divinity, is ratified. And therefore, we have to give our lives to him.

If he is who he says he is — not one teacher among many, but God from God, Light from Light, true God from true God — what choice do I have? I must give my life to him.

Here's a third and final implication of the Resurrection: that God's love, everybody, is more  powerful than anything that's in the world.

What brought him to his cross? Cruelty and violence and hatred and injustice and stupidity and all forms of human dysfunction. It's on that cross, he bore all of this. The sin of the world came upon him. He went into the muck and the mud of the human condition. In fact, it closed over his head.

But then in the resurrection, when Jesus says "Shalom," and he offers this peace on the far side of all the dysfunction of the world, he shows thereby that God's love is more powerful than any of it.

That's why Paul can say, "I'm certain that neither death nor life, neither angels nor principalities, neither height nor depth, nor any other power could ever separate us from the love of God."

He knows it because of the resurrection, because he saw the risen Christ. That's where we find our hope, everybody. That's where we find our salvation. That word just means our healing. What's wounded us? Well, all the darkness and sin of the world; that's what's wounded us.

In the resurrection of Jesus, we find our salvation from all this, we don't take the resurrection as some, "Oh, that's an interesting fact from long ago." Come on; come on. We take it in as the definitive sign of the lordship of Jesus, the definitive sign that he's God from God, Light from Light, the definitive sign that God's love is more powerful than anything in the world.

See also on Substack here 

Monday, 19 April 2021

Something beautiful - it's your decision

A beautiful face, an untouched stretch of beach are often more than rivaled in their impact by beautiful actions or beautiful decisions. For example, a person who has someone in their power can do something beautiful by not exercising that control over the other when it would be a simple matter to use them for their own advantage. 
The beauty arises from the decision to regard as a better thing the gifting of respect and freedom to the other person. That gift allows the other to then grow and blossom in their own right. 
Similarly there are those beautiful decisions people find able to make in extreme circumstances where they offer even their own life for the good of another. A case in point is the sharing of a kidney. 
Just as flowers need good earth and rain and fertilizer, beautiful decisions need a good imagination,  a strong mind, and a heart that has learnt to be generous and brave.

Live Not By Lies: A Manual For Christian Dissidents

"We live in a world of lies, whether we want it or not. That's just the case. But you shouldn't accommodate to it." That statement, a reflection on the present as much as the past, is from Maria Wittner, a hero of the 1956 Hungarian uprising against the Soviet occupation. 

With the developed world infected by an intellectual and spiritual poison that rivals that of the thought-control beloved within the Communist system, such insight into how to remain free is a valuable message.

Wittner is one of the survivors of the Soviet-backed totalitarian regimes in Eastern Europe after World War II that writer Rod Dreher interviewed for his book titled Live Not By Lies: A Manual For Christian Dissidents published in the United States late last year.

A Communist court sentenced Wittner to death when she was 20. However, this was commuted to life imprisonment. You have a choice, she says: "If you want to live in fear, or if you want to live in the freedom of the soul. If your soul is free, then your thoughts are free, and then your words are going to be free."

Dreher called on the experience of European dissidents such as Wittner to learn how Americans in the first instance can prepare for what he sees as a soft form of totalitarianism, epitomised by wokism and the cancel culture, where the elite of academia, the mainstream media, and the corporate world, use all the levers of power at their disposal to control what is to be regarded as morally correct and socially acceptable.

As an observer in a distant land, I grieve at the way American society has become so toxic with the decline of Christian civilisation that made the nation so attractive in the international context. Now, it's easy to identify the marks of of a rapidly developing dictatorship in the United States, which seems to go beyond that what exists or is developing in Western Europe. The social sickness so evident daily, the lack of meaning in life among the young, and the failure of older Americans to display moral strength, all point to social collapse being not far away. 

This is how Dreher summarises his well-supported thesis:

The essence of modernity is to deny that there are any transcendent stories, structures, habits, or beliefs to which individuals must submit and that should bind our conduct. To be modern is to be free to choose. What is chosen does not matter; the meaning in is in the choice itself. There is no sacred order, no other world, no fixed virtues and permanent truths. There is only here and now, and the eternal flame of human desire. Volo ergo sum - I want, therefore I am. 

Sunday, 18 April 2021

Women in sport suffer concussion more than males

Australian Football Rules player Chelsea Randall after a collision with an opposing player this year

Experts say sportswomen are at higher risk of concussion than male athletes, and the effects of concussion in women tend to be more severe.

Dr Adrian Cohen, an emergency and trauma physician in Australia who researches concussion prevention, says women sustain more concussions than men in high-impact sports such as rugby league, rugby union and Australian rules football. Women also take longer to recover.

One possibility is that women may be more likely to report concussion. But Dr Cohen says there are complex physiological factors at play.

"There are structural differences between men and women's brains," he says. "They actually have a slightly faster metabolism than male brains, and they have slightly greater oxygen flow to the head.

"The cells themselves can be thought of as being slightly hungrier. So in the context of an injury that disrupts the supply of glucose and oxygen, it can help explain why they suffer more damage."

He also says women are joining high impact sports without years of tackle training and have had less opportunity to build up the strong neck muscles crucial in protecting against impact.

Dr Rowena Mobbs, a neurologist at Australia’s Macquarie University who researches and treats the effects of concussion in sportspeople, says there is truth to suggestions that women experience concussion symptoms more severely.

"But there is this really important overlap of chronic migraine after trauma, and the term for this is post-traumatic headache," she says.

"When we talk about migraine ... they're the same multitude of symptoms that can occur in concussion.

"So you can be dizzy and clouded in your thinking, lethargic and have double vision. And we know that women are at three times the risk of chronic migraine than men."

Read the whole piece here

For a 2019 article titled “Australian research shows female athletes have a higher rate of concussion and a prolonged recovery time”, go here

 

Wednesday, 14 April 2021

God's first and only instinct is to love us

Modern Pieta by American Conrad Albrizio, who died in 1973
God’s first and only instinct is to love us and for us to experience that love. We have been made by Him and for Him. He made us to enjoy His love and His life for ever.

What about sin? Judgment does not come from God but rather from our own choice. It is not God who dumps us; it is we who abandon Him.

It is not God’s judgment that we are to fear. Rather it is our own choices because they can bring us closer to Him or push us away from Him. It is our own choice to live in integrity and wholeness or not.

But it is the living in a world of love that is most important. The Father gives us His Son (John 3:16) and the Son gives us the Spirit, allowing us to share in their community of love. We become a new creation so that we know the inner peace and radiant joy of the new life lived in the power and love of the risen Jesus. (Easter is still fresh in mind and heart, giving rise to this reflection.)

Iraneus in the second century left us with this insight: “The glory of God is the human being fully alive”. The excitement of looking to serve God, to enter into a personal relationship with the God who somehow created everything that is essential in our lives, allows us to avoid being dazzled by the world’s accomplishments, instead seeing that there are more important elements of the human experience.

Everything in life falls into harmonious place when we align our lives to the God-given order, which allows us to work with grace in creating a better version of ourselves. Paul saw that in part the process entailed this: “Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable — if anything is excellent or praiseworthy — think about such things” (Letter to the Philippians 4:8).

Truth. “Whatever is true” — in the absolute sense — is the key! “The truth will make you free” (John 8:31), and that is the whole point of what has been passed down to us by those who have had to withstand times of martyrdom and persecution to do so: “I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and that your joy may be complete” (John 15:11). The joy comes through being on the right path — “I am the Way” — for human thriving.

Peace can be found in this life, even when difficulties threaten to overwhelm us. “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid” (John 14:27).

A peaceful heart and mind germinate from two gifts of God: “My kingdom is not of this world” (John 18:36), and “I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full” (John 10:10).

When we believe deeply that God is God, and I’m not, we can willingly enter into the relationship that God offers us with tremendous love and supreme mercy.

See also 

Tuesday, 13 April 2021

Jesus is God intent on sharing love in word and action

Jesus had a night-time dialogue with the Pharisee Nicodemus (John 3).  Nicodemus, while accepting in principle what Jesus has said about being born again in the Spirit, now wants to know how it can be brought about.

Jesus accuses Nicodemus and his fellow leaders of a lack of spiritual insight and a refusal to accept his testimony as coming directly from God.  “If you do not believe when I tell you about earthly things, how are you to believe when I tell you about those of heaven?”

Jesus does not speak simply on his own initiative.  He speaks of what he shares with the Father.  It is the Father’s words and teaching that he passes on to us – he is the Word of God.  His is not just a speaking Word; it brings all things from nothing, calls the dead to life, hands on the Spirit, the source of unending life, and makes us all children of God.  To experience all this we need to have faith in Jesus as truly the Word of God and to live our lives in love.

But the Word is not always easy to understand and it requires, above all, an openness to be received.  It is this openness that Jesus is challenging Nicodemus to have.  People respond to the Word in so many ways.  Some believe fully, others go away disappointed in spite of the many signs.  One is reminded of the parable of the sower (Mt 13:1-23).  To which ground-group do I belong?

And, up to now, only the Son has been “in heaven”, that is, with God.  (“In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God…”).  It is from there that he has come and “pitched his tent among us”.  He is in a position, therefore, to speak about the “things of heaven”, that is, to speak of everything that pertains to and comes from God.

The only solution is to put all our focus on Jesus.  “Just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the desert, so must the Son of Man be lifted up, that all who believe may have eternal life in him.”  This is a reminder of the incident in the book of Numbers where, as a punishment for their sins, the Israelites were attacked by serpents.  God told Moses to erect a bronze serpent on a pole and all who looked at the serpent were saved.

Jesus, in a much greater way, will also be “lifted up” both on the cross and into the glory of his Father through the Resurrection and Ascension.  And he will be a source of life to all who commit themselves totally to him.

To what extent are we “looking at” Jesus? Is he the centre of our attention in all that we do and say?

Let our constant prayer be: “Lord, grant that all my thoughts, words and actions be directed solely to your love and service this and every day.”

Reflection for Tuesday of the Second Week of Easter

By Fr Frank Doyle SJ, Living Space: https://livingspace.sacredspace.ie/e1023g/