Jesus, Light of the world
by Father Mathurin of the Mother of God
My dear brothers and sisters, it is with joy that we celebrate the
Resurrection of Jesus.
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During Holy Week, the Great Week we live through
every year, we meditate and contemplate Jesus in the greatest thing He did for
us: die on a cross. After having lived thirty-three years on earth, Jesus died,
was laid in the tomb, and rose again. That is how He spread His light.
I remember that when I was a little boy, the ceremony of light during the
Easter Vigil made an enormous impression on me. It is not by chance that the
Church wanted a ceremony so powerful in images and symbols, precisely to
strike the minds of children of every age.
At the beginning of the Easter Vigil, all the lights are turned off. Everything
is in the dark, in darkness and silence. Then you glimpse a very feeble ray of
light coming from the back of the chapel, the symbol of Jesus coming out of
the tomb. The priest walks forward carrying the Paschal Candle as the deacon
intones Lumen Christi: “The Light of Christ.” The further the Candle advances,
the more everything becomes luminous.
During the ceremony, the children light their little candles from the flame of
the large Paschal Candle. Then each assistant lights his candle by the contact
of the children’s candles. Then, from candle to candle, the flame is
communicated to the entire congregation.
This is exactly what happens in the supernatural realm. The little child must make a personal effort to draw
near to the great Candle in order to have the light. Scarcely does he receive the light that he can already
communicate it to another, who also makes the gesture of holding out his candle. It is in this way that Jesus uses
His children to communicate light to the world. But there is a gesture to be made. Each one must make his effort,
each one must perform acts in his life to receive the light that is offered, in order to receive all of Jesus’ teaching.
Jesus came in His Father’s name to communicate His teaching to us. I am the light of the world. He who
follows Me does not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.
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By ourselves, we are in darkness. Who
among you has never experienced darkness, obscurity? If for an instant we leave God aside, we experience this.
The more we withdraw from Him, the more we are in darkness. To be in the light we must voluntarily draw near
to Jesus as in the Easter Vigil ceremony. We must put ourselves in contact with Him, in contact through the
Gospel, in contact through prayer, in contact through the Eucharist, Communion and Holy Mass. And then we
must maintain this contact with God in order to keep the light. That is the explanation of this beautiful ceremony
we have just celebrated.
Jesus, Light of the world: He came, He did His full part, He gave His life upon the cross. On the eve of His
Passion, He gave Himself as food in the Eucharist. But we must make the effort to receive Communion worthily,
fittingly. In this way Jesus enlightens us, illuminates our life. Our tiny little candle is lit, and we begin to see our
way.
Why is it that people do not know very well where they are going? Draw near to Jesus, the true Light, and you
will see the way! Enter into prayer. Put yourself in contact with the Gospel. Apply yourself to living it. Implore
Jesus to give you that grace, and you will have the light. I assure you, my brothers, my sisters, my friends, God
will guide your life. Those who are willing to come into contact with the Light and make their personal effort
receive it. The three main ways to draw near to the Light are prayer, meditation of the Gospel and
reception of the Sacraments. This is how Jesus wanted it to be.
He rose again as He said
The leaders, the Pharisees and the Priests, were afraid of Jesus
after His death. Having witnessed His miracles, they recalled that He
had said He would rise again. When they asked Jesus, What sign can
You show us to justify what You are doing? He replied, Destroy this
temple, and in three days I will raise it up again.
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And on another
occasion, when the Scribes and Pharisees said to Him, Master, we
want a sign from You that we can see, He replied: No sign shall be
given other than the sign of Jonas the Prophet. Jonas was in the
belly of the fish three days and three nights, and so will the Son of
Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.
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The Jews understood this so well that as soon as Jesus had died,
they went to speak to Pilate who, as the governor of Judea,
represented Roman authority. They said to him: “We have
remembered how, when He was alive, that deceiver said, After three
days I will rise again. Give orders, therefore, that the sepulcher be
guarded until the third day, lest His disciples come and secretly
remove His body and say to the people: He has risen from the dead. This last imposture would be even worse
than the first.”
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You must guard this dead man so that He does not come out of the tomb! Exasperated, Pilate
answered, “You have guards, post them! And do not bother me any more.”
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I put you in the context so that you may have a clearer idea of what happened. The Apostles had forgotten that
Jesus had predicted several times that on the third day He would rise again. The disciples of Jesus, His friends
and relatives, were afraid, they were in hiding. But apparently His enemies believed so much in the resurrection
of Jesus that they had the tomb guarded by soldiers. Jesus had given numerous proofs that He was truly the Son
of God. Many signs had drawn attention to His death, among others a major earthquake on Good Friday at the
moment the Saviour expired upon Calvary. The Gospel relates that again on Easter morning, the earth quaked
violently. The soldiers, terror-struck, falling down from fear like dead men, witnessed the spectacle: an Angel
shining like lightning rolled back the tombstone and sat upon it.
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Recovering somewhat from their fright, the soldiers went to look into the tomb and saw that it was empty.
Jesus was already gone when the Angel rolled back the stone. The guards went to report to the priests, the Jewish
authorities who had posted them, and related what had happened. They were still trembling in every limb. The
Gospel says: They held a council with the Elders of the people; and after deliberation, they gave a large sum of
money to the soldiers and imposed these orders on them: “Say that His Disciples came by night and stole Him
while you were sleeping. And if the governor finds out anything about it, we will persuade him and protect you
from any penalty.”
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Now, Roman law condemned to death ipso facto any sentinel who slept at his post. Perhaps the soldiers did
not know how to read and write, but they knew that this statement would imperil their lives. “Say that we were
sleeping? We will be put to death!” The Gospel does not record this detail, but the answer of the Scribes implies
it: “Do not worry about the governor, we will take care of him. We give you money, and we have some for him
too. We will arrange everything. We know the governor; we have been dealing with him for a long time. You will
say that the Apostles took away the body of Jesus while you were sleeping.”
First of all, when you are sleeping, do you know what is happening? If the guards were sleeping, how could
they have seen the Apostles taking the body? And if the Apostles had taken it, the Roman governor and all the
authorities in Jerusalem would have set everything in motion to find the corpse. Do you think they would have let
this happen so easily? But this assertion, absurd as it was, passed into history. The devil thinks he is very smart,
but his fabrication is far from brilliant. The fact of having guards posted at the tomb provided one more proof of
the truth of the Resurrection. Had there been no guards, we might say that we have no evidence. But we do.
In a way, these unfaithful Jews believed in the Resurrection of Jesus more than the Apostles did. You can see
how far hardening of the heart can take you. In spite of obvious signs, we can become hardened and fight against
God because we do not want to obey Him. We want to follow our whims, we want to follow our pride, our vanity,
and God thwarts us.
Jesus: the Way, the Truth, and the Life
Shortly before He died on the cross, Jesus said to us, each one of us: “My little children, My little boys, My
little girls, if you wish to be My disciples, deny yourselves, take up your cross daily, and follow Me.”
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If Jesus
were not God, it would be rather insolent for Him to say such a thing. But He is God, and He proved it.
To prove that He is truly the Son of God, He predicts His Resurrection: “They are going to destroy Me, put Me
to death, but I will rise again.” Saint Paul says, If Christ has not risen, vain is your faith.
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If Jesus had not
resurrected on Easter Day, all that He taught us does not hold up. My brothers and sisters who are religious, and
you who have gone some distance to come and pray with us: if Jesus had not risen, you would be wasting your
time. You might just as well have stayed home and enjoyed yourselves.
But Jesus is risen, and He is risen because He is God. If He is God, His teaching and His examples are true,
and we are all obliged to follow them. From the moment of His birth, and during the thirty years He lived hidden,
Jesus teaches us by His examples, so that we may do as He did. And during the three years of His public life, He
teaches us with His words written in the Gospel. It is serious. We can no longer trifle. Everything holds together
in our religion, there are no missing pieces. And we see the central piece today: the Resurrection of Jesus,
supreme proof of His divinity.
Jesus is God incarnate. He left Heaven and took the body of a man to show me the way. He says: I am the
Way, and the Truth, and the Life. No one comes to the Father but through Me.
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We cannot go to God, to
Heaven, to our blessed eternity, without following Jesus. On this day of the Resurrection, a beautiful day of joy,
we are still talking about the Cross, the Passion ‒ we cannot avoid it. I speak to you about the Resurrection, but
as long as we are on earth, we are always brought back to the Passion of Jesus. We too are called to resurrect and
take part in His happiness one day. But in order for us to resurrect with Him, first we must follow Him, not only
for a little stretch of the road, and then run away when things start getting rough. When things become costly,
difficult, painful, shall we be tempted to go off on a tangent, in another direction? No, we must follow Jesus right
to the end. This is our religion. This is the truth.
Love stronger than death
Very early in the morning, Mary Magdalen makes her way to
the tomb of Jesus with perfumes, wanting again to manifest her
respect for Him.
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While the Apostles are fearful and the soldiers
alarmed, Mary Magdalen is full of love. When she reaches the
sepulcher, finding the stone already rolled back, she hastens to
enter without any hesitation. When we love, we are not afraid, we
follow, even up to Calvary. Mary Magdalen truly loved. A great
sinner woman converted by the Master, she had remained on
Calvary. No soldier frightened her. And she was the first at the
tomb, which she found empty.
The Apostles loved Jesus also, but their love was too weak, and
fear got the upper hand. Magdalen knew where they were hiding;
she went to see Peter and John, and said to them, “They have
taken the Lord from the tomb, and I do not know where they have
laid Him!” Peter and John ran immediately to the tomb. John,
who arrived first, remained at the entrance of the sepulcher
waiting for Peter, who was older and ran less quickly. These are
little details that say a lot. Already at this moment, John recognized the authority of Peter, established by Jesus,
as the head of His Church. He is aware of Peter’s fall, his denial; he knows that he did not follow the Saviour on
Calvary, whereas he, John, had been there. He remained humbly at the entrance and let Peter enter first, out of
respect for his authority. The Gospel says that on seeing the empty tomb, they saw and they believed. Note well:
they did not believe in the Resurrection. They believed in the word of Magdalen who said that Jesus was no
longer there.
Returning to the sepulcher, Magdalen tearfully sees two Angels in the tomb. And turning, she sees Jesus but
does not recognize Him. Thinking that He is the gardener, she asks Him: “If you are the one who removed Him,
tell me where you have laid Him, and I will go and take Him. I want to see Him.” Jesus says to her, “Mary!”
Recognizing Him at once, Mary replies: “Rabonni! My Master, my God!”
Believing instantly, she rushes towards Jesus. He stops her, saying: “Do not touch Me, keep your distance, for
I have not yet gone up to My Father. But go to My brothers and tell them: I ascend to My Father and your Father,
to My God and your God.” Go and tell My brothers: what touching words! Jesus will employ these same words
when He appears to the holy women. “Go and tell My brothers that I will go before them in Galilee.”
The Apostles remained His children, remained His friends, as He had called them at the Last Supper. But now
that Jesus has risen from the dead, things take on a new dimension. Jesus calls them “My brothers.” The Master
must soon depart, and they will have to take over. They are His Apostles, they are other Christs. They will have to
go and teach the truth to the world.
When Mary Magdalen returns to tell the Apostles that she has seen Jesus, they do not believe her. Neither do
they believe the holy women who declare that they too have seen Him.
“Did not the Christ have to suffer these things?”
Another episode unfolds on this same Easter Sunday. It is the
story of “The Disciples of Emmaus.” Having followed Jesus and
lived in His very pleasant company, they had listened to His voice
and seen His deeds. They had regarded Him as the hope of Israel,
the Messiah awaited for thousands of years. Jesus was their hope,
their love. But the Master is dead. They have seen Him
condemned, humiliated, scorned, berated in the worst way,
climbing Calvary, crucified, laid in the tomb. For our two men,
since Jesus is dead, it is pointless for them to remain in
Jerusalem. So they are on their way back home in mortal
dejection. I invite you to read the episode related in the Gospel.
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Their story really hits home.
On their way back to Emmaus, we see them sad and
despondent, looking as if they have experienced disappointments
on every level. Have you ever seen people who are discouraged, on
the verge of despair? They drag their feet, their shoulders are
rounded, the sun is no longer shining. Nothing matters to them
any more, it is death. The two disciples are returning in full daylight, on the Sunday of the Resurrection, in
extreme sorrow, for they do not yet believe that Jesus has risen, despite the affirmations of the holy women.
On the way, a stranger meets up with them, joins them and strikes up a conversation: “My good friends, you
seem very sad. What has happened to you?” Cleophas and his companion reply: “Are you such a stranger in
Israel that you have not heard of the things that have happened these last few days?” ‒ “No, what things?” ‒
“Jesus was a prophet among us, a man mighty in word and deed. If you had only heard Him! When He spoke, the
crowds were thrilled. We were very down-to-earth people, living only for material things. Once we heard this
Man, the earth no longer mattered to us. We wanted to live for God, do something for Him. We witnessed the
miracles He worked. But His enemies succeeded in doing away with Him. We don’t understand what happened.
We thought He was the Son of God, the Messiah. This is the third day since they killed Him. He is dead, it is all
over.” And Jesus said to them: “O foolish men, slow of heart to believe in all that the Prophets have
foretold! Did not the Christ have to suffer all these things before entering into His glory?”
And as He walked with them, He began to explain Holy Scripture, quoting from the prophecies of the Old
Testament. “Did not a certain prophet predict that the Messiah would be rejected by His own people, that He
would be forsaken, scorned, humiliated, and die a most cruel death? Look! This prophet predicted it, and that
other one too. This Jesus you are talking about fulfilled the Scriptures. Therefore, He is truly the Messiah.”
They reached the little village of Emmaus at the end of the day;
it was getting dark. The Stranger acted as though He would go
His way. Our two men urged Him to stay: “It is nighttime. You
cannot go on. Come in and have supper with us.” Their invitation
was motivated a little by self-interest. They wanted to continue
having their hearts warmed up! This man spoke to them so well
about the things of God that they wanted to hear more. The
Stranger accepted. Sitting down with them, He took some bread
and broke it. The Gospel says that at that precise moment, the
disciples recognized Jesus. They had witnessed the institution of
the Holy Eucharist on the evening of Holy Thursday. You can
imagine how their hearts melted, and how deeply ashamed they
were over seeing themselves abandoning Jesus after having
followed Him and loved Him. In His immense mercy, Jesus
Himself, hidden under the appearance of a stranger, had come to
them and revealed the meaning of the Scriptures to them. The
disciples would later say: “Our heart was burning with love while
He was speaking to us on the road and revealing to us the
meaning of the Scriptures.”
But Jesus has already left, He is gone. The two, finding themselves alone, review these events in their mind.
The Gospel says that these same men, who had walked under the hot sun from Jerusalem to Emmaus by day,
totally despondent, with heavy hearts like two condemned men, now rush off to retrace their steps in the
opposite direction in the dark of night. They go back to Jerusalem to tell the Apostles: “He is risen! We saw Him!
We walked with Him. We spoke with Him. He explained the Scriptures to us. He revealed everything to us.”
When the faith of the disciples of Emmaus had wavered, they abandoned everything. Upon recovering the
faith, they rebounded. My brothers and sisters, when we have faith, when we have hope, when we have love in us,
we run, we fly. We no longer drag our feet. Why do we drag our feet sometimes? It is because we lose faith,
because we lose love, we lose hope. We drag along: “It’s not funny, what God is asking us to do. It is really hard.
He makes us climb Calvary.” But when we have faith, when we have hope, when we have love, it is no longer the
same. We enter into the way of God, we walk in His footsteps, we follow Him with an ardor, a will, an energy, and
the grace of God carries us.
My brothers and sisters, on this Easter Day, this is the grace I wish for you: the grace of faith, real faith. When
we have faith, we love. When we have faith, we hope. Keep the faith, my brothers. Increase it. When we lose faith,
we lose everything. We lose it through our negligences, through the habit of sin, through love of and attachment
to our little sins. If we do not receive the sacraments, or if we receive them unworthily, with negligence and
distraction, we lose faith. We must not play with God’s graces.
The Virgin Mary, Coredemptrix with Jesus
I would like to conclude by adding a word in honor of our good
heavenly Mother, the Virgin Mary. During these days, we have
accompanied Her in Her sorrow, especially yesterday, Holy Saturday,
specifically consecrated to contemplation of the Sorrowful Virgin. Her Son
is dead, He is in the tomb, but She remains. Our good Mother is there
alone, holding the Church, while the Apostles have all taken fright and run
away. She keeps the faith, and She knows that Jesus will resurrect.
But what sorrow is Hers! It is an immense, boundless, infinite sorrow.
On this Holy Saturday, She alone bears all the sufferings of the world. The
Virgin Mary continues the Redemption. She has faith, She has hope, She
has love at its highest level.
Jesus has left, He has relied on Her. He knew who He could rely on.
The Gospel does not report it, but we can assume that the very first
manifestation of Jesus was to His Mother. If there was anyone who was
happy on the Sunday of the Resurrection, it was the Virgin Mary. She
exulted with joy all the more because She was the One who had suffered
the most, by following Her Son on His way of sorrow, His way of the cross.
To the Virgin Mary on this Easter Sunday be all the praise, all the glory
She deserves. She carried the Church, She carried the cross, She continued
to suffer. Jesus repays Her well for it today, He gives Her a consolation that surpasses all human conception. The
Gospel says nothing about it. The Virgin Mary was self-effaced. When She saw Her risen Son, whose death She
had witnessed and whose corpse She had held, what joy was Hers! What a sorrowful tragedy She had lived
through with Her Son, and how She suffered after the death of Her Jesus! Now He is risen!
Blessed Virgin Mary, Our Lady of the Resurrection, we ask You for the great grace of faith. We ask it of You for
ourselves and for all our brothers and sisters.
Faith, the foundation of the supernatural structure
On the day of the Resurrection, the Church very rightly recommends that we ask for faith. Faith is the
foundation of the entire supernatural structure. We are going to offer this Holy Sacrifice of the Mass to ask for
this immense gift of faith. May nothing stop us. May we truly believe that Jesus is God.
True faith makes us active. A faith that does not cause you to act is mere fiction. Faith without works is
dead,
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says Saint James. If I say that I believe and I do not act, do I have faith? No. These are only empty words.
True faith makes us act. If we believe that Jesus is the Son of God, we must follow Him, we must
walk in His footsteps, follow His way of the cross, His sorrowful way. We must climb Calvary with Him.
During this Easter Mass, let us ask for the grace of faith, the grace to be true, to fully live our faith. Faith is not
very widespread today. There are not many people on this earth, unfortunately, even among Christians and
perhaps among us, who have a true and active faith, a faith which makes them follow this way of Calvary. We
must be true before God. That is the grace we are going to ask of Him, this supreme gift of true faith which will
put us in motion to truly follow Jesus.
As Jesus immolates Himself in my hands on the altar, let us make this prayer together for all our brothers and
sisters of the earth, for all souls of good will. Look at the disciples of Emmaus: they were men of good will, they
were not evil. But they were losing the faith and were in the process of abandoning Jesus. Let us make an
attentive prayer, a prayer of the Church, to ask for this gift of faith for all souls of good will. A great number of
souls have gone much further than the disciples of Emmaus in their abandonment of the faith. These people are
not evil, perhaps they do not have bad will, but they have abandoned the way of faith. Let us ask for this gift of
true faith, which will make us and our brothers and sisters walk upon the true way. It is this inestimable grace
that I wish for you and that we are going to pray for.
1.
Sermon given on Easter Sunday.
2.
St. John 8:12.
3.
St. John 2:19.
4.
St. Matthew 12:39-40; St. Luke 11:29-30.
5.
St. Matthew 27:62-64.
6.
The High Priests had guards at their disposal for the Temple service. Pilate authorized
them to employ them for this purpose.
7.
St. Matthew 27:62-66; 28:11-15.
8.
St. Matthew 28:12-14.
9.
St. Matthew 16:24; St. Mark 8:34; St. Luke 9:23, 14:27.
10.
I Corinthians 15:14.
11.
St. John 14:6.
12.
Cf. St. John 20:1-18.
13.
St. Luke 24:13-35.
14.
St. James 2:26.