
As we celebrate the great Easter-event, we are reminded that this awesome season of life and hope spills over into a fifty- day celebration. In fact, at every Sunday Mass we celebrate the Easter-event: Christ has died, Christ is risen, Christ will come again, we acclaim for 52 weeks a year in every corner of Christendom. The Risen Christ is here among us in a unique way to remind us that our lives our not purposeless, that we do not travel alone, that Someone cares and that one day we too shall shine bright and beautiful with the fullness of the Risen Christ’s love.
A meditative piece that I would like to offer comes from the writer Anne Dillard. This popular author had converted to Catholicism and here is how she looked at that step. She said that at a Catholic Mass surrounded by so many people from different backgrounds with many different colors, shapes and ages, she said, “I am taking a stand with these people. Here I am. One of the people who love God.”
We are part of a whole civilization in danger of forgetting the true God. We are in the fast lane of agnosticism or practical atheism which is established on this point of view: Even if there is a God, God really doesn’t matter to me.
The Easter Event is a gigantic spiritual huddle by which we hope to get inspired, challenged, comforted, forgiven, and loved by the person of Jesus Christ. Integral to Him is the restoration of the true God to pre-eminence in human life. It all begins by remembering God and God’s loving acts in human history.
The followers of Christ were forever changed by the victory of Christ over death and by meeting the Risen Lord in the weeks after Easter. May it happen again this Easter as we gather in prayer and are able to say, “I am taking a stand with these people. Here I am. One of the people who love God.”
What a promising message and astonishing admonition for this season of Easter joy! Allow the Risen Christ to break the chains that bind us, especially those that bind our families, so that we might open our hearts to make room for the One who sets us free-the great liberator, Jesus the Christ.
May we all continue to support and encourage one another as we pray: Stay with us Lord…Live in our hearts forever.
EASTER SUNDAY TABLE PRAYER
Leader: This is the day the Lord has made.Let us rejoice and be glad,let us praise the Lord for his goodness.For behold, Jesus diedand now lives for evermore. Alleluia!
ALL: He has gone before us.Yet he is with us for all time. Alleluia!
Leader: Lord,on this most holy daylet your blessing rest upon usand upon our table.Strengthen us in this time together.We ask this in Jesus' name.
ALL: Amen.
Leader: Blest are you, Lord our God,who gathers us together in Jesus' name.We thank you for sharing your life with us,both in this mealand in all the ways you sustain us,through Christ, our Risen Lord.
ALL: Amen.
SYMBOLS OF THE SEASON
THE EASTER CANDLE…stands tall in the Main Lobby of our school. It is the symbol of Christ, our light. The candle represents Christ, the beginning and end of all times and ages. Five wax nails are inserted into the candle to signify the wounds that Jesus received in his hands, feet and side when he was crucified. The candle will remain burning brightly for the next fifty days. It is the light of Christ’s revealing love.
WATER…is also one of the great symbols of the Season of Easter. It is a symbol of Baptism through which we are initiated into the Christian Community. The baptismal font of the church has sometimes been referred to as the womb of the church. Baptism bridges our human divisions and calls us to the unity of one body, one spirit, one hope, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God. Vessels of water are placed in the main lobby to remind us of our baptismal call to be disciples of Christ Jesus.
The Risen Christ is here among us in a unique way to remind us that we do not travel alone, that Someone cares and that one day we too shall shine bright and beautiful with the fullness of the Risen Christ’s love.
SOME THOUGHTS ON EASTER BY SAINT AUGUSTINE
Let us chant Alleluia. Then the word of scripture will be accomplished,
the word not of combatants any more, but of victors:
Death has been swallowed up in victory!
Let us chant Alleluia here in the midst of dangers and temptations.
O blessed Alleluia of heaven!
No more anguish, no more adversity. No more enemy.
No more love of destruction.
Up above, praise to God, and here below, praise to God.
Praise mingled with fear here, but without disturbance above.
Here we chant in hope, there, in possession;
here it is Alleluia on the way,
there it is on arriving home.
SYMBOLS OF THE SEASON
THE EASTER CANDLE…stands tall in the Main Lobby of our school. It is the symbol of Christ, our light. The candle represents Christ, the beginning and end of all times and ages. Five wax nails are inserted into the candle to signify the wounds that Jesus received in his hands, feet and side when he was crucified. The candle will remain burning brightly for the next fifty days. It is the light of Christ’s revealing love.
WATER…is also one of the great symbols of the Season of Easter. It is a symbol of Baptism through which we are initiated into the Christian Community. The baptismal font of the church has sometimes been referred to as the womb of the church. Baptism bridges our human divisions and calls us to the unity of one body, one spirit, one hope, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God. Vessels of water are placed in the main lobby to remind us of our baptismal call to be disciples of Christ Jesus.
The Risen Christ is here among us in a unique way to remind us that we do not travel alone, that Someone cares and that one day we too shall shine bright and beautiful with the fullness of the Risen Christ’s love.
SOME THOUGHTS ON EASTER BY SAINT AUGUSTINE
Let us chant Alleluia. Then the word of scripture will be accomplished,
the word not of combatants any more, but of victors:
Death has been swallowed up in victory!
Let us chant Alleluia here in the midst of dangers and temptations.
O blessed Alleluia of heaven!
No more anguish, no more adversity. No more enemy.
No more love of destruction.
Up above, praise to God, and here below, praise to God.
Praise mingled with fear here, but without disturbance above.
Here we chant in hope, there, in possession;
here it is Alleluia on the way,
there it is on arriving home.




