March 22, 2008
Only Christians Believe Christ Is Risen
Gospel Commentary for Easter Sunday
By Father Raniero Cantalamessa, OFM Cap
VATICAN CITY, MARCH 21, 2008 (Zenit.org).- To the women who had come
to the tomb on Easter morning the angels said: “Do not be afraid.
You seek Jesus of Nazareth, the crucified. He is risen!”
But did Jesus really rise? What assurances do we have that we are
dealing with something that really happened and not an invention or
suggestion? St. Paul, writing no more than 25 years after the event,
lists all the people who saw Jesus after the resurrection, the
majority of whom were still alive (1 Corinthians 15:8). For what
fact of antiquity do we have testimony as strong as this?
But a general observation will also convince us of the truth of the
event. At the moment of Jesus’ death the disciples were scattered;
his case was taken to be closed: “We had hoped that he would,” the
disciples of Emmaus say. Evidently they did not hope anymore.
And then all of a sudden we see these same men proclaim together
that Jesus is alive and face, on account of this testimony, trials,
persecutions and, in the end, one after the other, martyrdom and
death. What could have caused such a total change if not the
certainty that he had truly risen.
They could not be deceived because they spoke and ate with him after
his resurrection; and then they were practical men, not at all given
to easy exaltation. They themselves doubted at first and put up not
a little resistance to believing. Neither could they have wanted to
deceive others, because, if Jesus was not risen, they were precisely
the first to be betrayed and to return. Without the fact of the
resurrection, the birth of Christianity and of the Church becomes a
mystery that is still more difficult to explain than the
resurrection itself.
These are some objective, historical arguments, but the strongest
argument that Christ is risen, is that he is alive! He is alive not
because we keep him alive by talking about him, but because he keeps
us alive, he communicates the sense of his presence to us, he makes
us hope. “He touches Christ who believes in Christ,” St. Augustine
said, and the true believers experience the truth in this
affirmation.
Those who do not believe in the reality of the resurrection have
always advanced hypotheses that it be treated as a phenomenon of
autosuggestion; the apostles “believed” to see. But this, if it were
true, would constitute, in the end, a miracle no less great than the
one that people try to avoid admitting. Suppose that different
people, in different situations and places, all had the same
hallucination. Imaginary visions usually come to those who intensely
expect and desire them, but the apostles, after the events of Good
Friday, did not expect anything else.
Christ’s resurrection is, for the spiritual universe, what the
initial “Big Bang” was for the physical universe, according to one
modern theory: such a massive explosion of energy impressed on the
cosmos that expansion of energy that continues even today at a
distance of billions of years. Take away from the Church faith in
the resurrection and everything stops and shuts down, as when the
electrical current goes out in a house.
St. Paul writes: “If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord
and believe in your heart that God raised him from the death, you
will be saved” (Romans 10:9). “The faith of Christians is the
resurrection of Christ,” St. Augustine said. Everyone believes that
Jesus died, even the pagans, the agnostics believe it. But only
Christians believe that he has also risen, and one is not a
Christian unless he believes this.
Raising Christ from the dead, it is as if God had approved his
conduct, impressing it with his seal. “God has given to all men an
assurance by raising Jesus from the dead” (Acts 17:31).
Copyright ©2002-2008 |