Metropolitan Anthony of Sourozh
Christ is risen!
When Christ first rose from the tomb and appeared to His disciples
and the myrrh-bearing women, He greeted them with the word
"Rejoice!". And then later when He appeared to the Apostles His
first words were "Peace be unto you!"; peace, because their
confusion was very great - the Lord had died. It seemed as though
all hope had perished for the victory of God over human wickedness,
for the victory of good over evil. It would seem that life itself
had been slain and light had faded. All that remained for the
disciples who had believed in Christ, in life, in love, was to go on
existing, for they could no longer live. Having tasted eternal life
they were now condemned to expect cruel persecution and death at the
hands of Christ's enemies. "Peace be unto you", proclaimed Christ.
"I have arisen, I am alive, I am with you, and henceforth nothing -
neither death nor persecution - will ever separate us or deprive you
of eternal life, the victory of God". And then, having convinced
them of His physical resurrection, having restored their peace and
an unshakable certainty of faith, Christ uttered words which may in
the present age sound menacing and frightening to many, "As the
Father sent Me, so I send you". Only a few hours after Christ's
death on the cross, not long after the fearful night in Gethsemane,
the betrayal by Judas when Christ had been taken by His enemies,
condemned to death, led out beyond the city walls and died on the
cross, these words sounded menacing. And it was only faith, the
conquering certainty that Christ had risen, that God had conquered,
that the Church had become an invincible force that transformed
these words into words of hope and triumphant God-speed.
And the disciples went out to preach; nothing could stop them.
Twelve men confronted the Roman empire. Twelve defenceless men,
twelve men without legal rights were out to preach the simplest
message, that divine love had entered the world and that they were
willing to give their lives for the sake of this love, in order that
others might believe and come to life, and that a new life might
begin for others through their death. [I Cor. IV :9-13]
Death was indeed granted them; there is not a single apostle except
St. John the Divine who did not die a martyr's death. Death was
granted them, and persecution and suffering and a cross (II Cor. VI:
3-14).
But faith, faith in Christ, in God Incarnate, faith in Christ
crucified and risen, faith in Christ who brought unquenchable love
into the world, has triumphed. "Our faith which has conquered the
world is the victory."
This preaching changed the attitude of man to man; every person
became precious in the eyes of another. The destiny of the world was
widened and deepened; it burst the bounds of earth and united earth
to heaven. And now we Christians, in the words of a western
preacher, in the person of Jesus Christ, have become the people to
whom God has committed the care of other people; that they should
believe in themselves because God believes in us; that they should
hope for all things because God puts His hope in us; that they
should be able to carry our victorious faith through the furnace of
horror, trials, hatred and persecution - that faith which has
already conquered the world, in the faith in Christ, God crucified
and risen.
So let us also stand up for this faith. Let us proclaim it
fearlessly, let us teach it to our children, let us bring them to
the sacraments of the Church which, even before they can understand
it, unite them with God and plant eternal life in them.
All of us, sooner or later, will stand before the judgment of God
and will have to answer whether we were able to love the whole world
- believers and unbelievers, the good and the bad - with the
sacrificial, crucified, all-conquering love with which God loves us.
May the Lord give us invincible courage, triumphant faith, joyful
love in order that the kingdom for which God became man should be
established, that we should truly become godly, that our earth
should indeed become heaven where love, triumphant love lives and
reigns. Christ is risen! |