Gospel: Easter Sunday of the Resurrection of the Lord
Today is Easter Sunday of the Resurrection of the Lord and the Gospel for today's greatest feast will be lifted according to St John (click here for the Mass readings from USCCB).
Today we begin the Easter season, our 50-day meditation on the mysrery of Christ's Resurrection. Our Gospel today tells us about the disciples' discovery of the empty tomb. It concludes by telling us that they did not yet understand that Jesus had risen from the dead. Thus, the details provided are not necessarily meant to offer proof of the Resurrection. The details invite us to reflect upon a most amazing gift, that is faith in Jesus and his Resurrection.
Each of the four Gospels tells us that Jesus' empty tomb was first discovered by women. This is notable because in first-century Jewish society women could not serve as legal witnesses. In the case of St John's Gospel, the only woman attending the tomb is Mary of Magdala. Unlike the Synoptic accounts, St John did not describe an appearance of angels at the tomb. Instead, St Mary Magdalene is simply said to have observed that the stone that had sealed the tomb had been moved, and she runs to alert Simon Peter and the beloved disciple. Her statement to them is telling. She assumes that Jesus' body has been removed, perhaps stolen. She does not consider that Jesus has been raised from the dead.
Simon Peter and the beloved discipke race to the tomb, presumably to verify St Mary Magdalene's report. The beloved disciple arrived first but does not enter the tomb until after Simon Peter. This detail paints a vivid picture, as does the detail provided about the burial cloths. Some scholars believe that the presence of burial cloths in the tomb offers evidence to the listener that Jesus' body had not been stolen (it is understood that grave robbers would have taken the burial cloths together with the body).
The Gospel passage concludes, however, that even having seen the empty tomb and the burial cloths, the disciples do not yet understand about the Resurrection. In the passage that follows, St Mary Magdalene meets Jesus but mistakes him for the gardener. In the weeks ahead, the Gospel readings from our liturgy will show us how the disciples came to believe in Jesus' Resurrection through his appearances to them. Our Easter faith is based on their witness to both the empty tomb and their continuing relationship with Jesus--in his appearances and the gift of the Holy Spirit.
Alleluia! Christ is risen!
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