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He is risen indeed!

Victory over death in an age of terrorism, innocent martyrs killed daily, and millions seeking freedom from persecution is the hope of the resurrection.  Hope comes not by escape from suffering, nor is one called to embrace misery as inevitable but from the risen Lord.  We embrace hope and claim our victory over death in redemptive suffering as we offer ourselves to our Lord, our whole being to live according to his will.  Death is not foreign to life for each day there is a sense of an ending with the hope of a new beginning with the sun rise.  With each five years of life there is a physiological transformation with an ending to one stage of life and a new experience in our physical and spiritual growth and maturation.  Life stages are not a drama we pass through onto another stage but a meaningful journey of purification of mind, heart, and will for the sanctity of the soul.

Jesus is risen and he appears to his disciples with the greeting “Peace be with you”.  He breaks bread, eats fish, and appears to many.  The joy of this peace is the witness of victory over death that brings peace to live the truth with courage.  Jesus is now sending his disciples to go forth and live the truth with courage in the face of what will lead to their persecution.  Our victory comes in living the truth found in the risen Lord.  Embrace life in its goodness and in service of the greater good of humanity and the environment.  It begins with our home environment, our families, friends, and our state of life called to be holy.   Our sacred space is given within through our baptism not to be kept hidden but to shine light upon the world. 

The difference a life makes is in the embrace of love we are willing to offer to one another. It is the embrace of generosity, compassion, forgiveness, understanding, and charity to the needs of others.  The sting of death is in the seduction of a world’s relativity in action of self-justification.  Our freedom is our justification by the blood of the lamb in Christ.  Because he lives, we live the light of eternity.  Hope in the unseen is now seen through the eyes of faith and the will to embrace love with courage.  Go forth,  He is risen indeed! 

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Palm Sunday

It begins, the Great Remembrance of the great sacrifice of Jesus Christ.  He who lays down his life for all humanity emptied himself and received the glory of God the Father.  Our Lenten journey was an invitation to empty ourselves from our attachments and to be purified by the sacrifice that comes from love in preparation to receive the glory of God the Father this Easter.

What has filled that emptiness of self that is reflective of the resurrection?  Sacrifice brings us closer to our identity, who we are and who we are called to be.  In sin we acknowledge our weakness and in obedience we encounter the power greater than us to overcome our sin.  It sets our compass in the direction to serve the purpose for which we came into the world.  That purpose begins with the two greatest commandments, love of God and love of neighbor and in the encounter with God and neighbor our mission becomes revealed.    

The past self has the opportunity to die to self, receive mercy and rise to new life.  What has changed this Lenten season to bring about a transformation in us?  In the times we have said “yes” to be present, charitable, and humble, while enduring our sacrifices and persevering in kindness and generosity for the greater good we have become the image of God’s love and mercy. 

To let go and let God is to receive a taste of his glory bound to his love.  Through our sacrifice and acts of charity we enter into sacred space to be in communion with him, all the saints, angels, and our brothers and sisters in Christ. 

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5th Week of Lent

Lazarus come out!  That was this Sunday’s call from Jesus.  As we approach Holy Week our scriptures have us reflect more on death and God’s power over death.  We saw it on Sunday’s gospel in the death of Lazarus and Jesus announcing, “I am the resurrection and the life, whoever believes in me, even if he dies will live and everyone who believes in me will never die.  Do you believe this?”  That is the question we need to answer for ourselves in facing death.  Fear of death is a powerful force for the evil one to use on us. 

This week King Nebuchadnezzar in his “utter rage”   has Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego bound and thrown into the furnace but four appear to be walking in the fire, unfazed by it, and the “fourth looks like the son of God”.  How is it that Nebuchadnezzar recognizes the fourth as the “son of God” but the Jews don’t recognize the son of God before them fulfilling the scriptures?  The great sign is victory over death.  Soon we will be celebrating the passion of the Lord and Jesus victory over death.  “Do you believe this?”  Shadrach, Meshach, Abednego, Martha, and Mary believed. 

The fear of death is powerful among the earthly living?  Why, a lack of faith?  Perhaps one reason is we are taught the definition of death is “the end of life…a permanent and irreversible cessation of all vital functions” in Webster’s Dictionary.  This is a contradiction to God’s spirit in us for everlasting life.  If this humanity was the true “end of life” then Jesus coming is a myth for the weak and vulnerable and his miracles an illusion. 

Science will attest that in human development all our cell structure dies and is renewed about every five years; thus an infant dies to itself to become a child, and a child dies to become a teen…in more ways than one…and a teen passes on to become an adult and the adult an elderly person with the same spirit and soul given to the infant.  We are not in the custom of saying each dies to itself into the next stage of life, we say we grow and develop.  We also grow and develop into the divine life and image of our creator.  Jesus calls us to die to oneself and be transformed into his image. 

The final transformation is to leave this body for a spiritual state and then the final coming when we will have an incorruptible body reunited to our soul.  Two more stages to grow into.  Recall the transfiguration of Jesus when he appears with Moses and Elijah, they are all alive. 

So what is death?  Sin is death and death is a permanent and irreversible separation from God.  We fear mortal death and don’t fear sin to the pleasure of the evil one who desires our permanent and irreversible separation from God.  Human decay is the stench of sin.  Death where is your sting?  It is in sin.  Jesus victory over death is not a mortal victory over the body, it is the victory over sin for our humanity that we may believe. 

Catechism has clear teaching on death.  In #1105 we read, we must “be away from the body and at home with the Lord.  In that ‘departure’ which is death the soul is separated from the body.  It will be reunited with the body on the day of the resurrection of the dead.  #1006 say, “Death is in fact ‘the wages of sin.”  #1007 says, “Death is the end of earthly life.”  #1008 says, “Death is a consequence of sin.”   And, #1009 says, “Death is transformed by Christ.” 

It also reminds us to die in a state of Christ’s grace is to participate in the Lord’s death so we can also share his Resurrection (#1006).  This participation we will be celebrating liturgically this coming Holy Week but we live it daily.  Thus as scripture says, “not all will die” but all share Christ’s death.  Let us remain among the living for all eternity.  Prepare to live on! 

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Thy Kingdom come, and so it has!

The Kingdom of God is at hand in the “multiplication” of the sacraments as parents, sponsors, and children prepare for 1st Communion at St. Francis Xavier in La Feria, Texas, and it is already at hand.  The gift of the kingdom we hold as a treasure unlike the treasure of the world is everlasting.  Earthly treasure makes a poor man rich and a rich man poor because it is limited and in the exchange some gain and others lose within limited resources.  Heavenly treasure is seen in the multiplication of the loaves, as Jesus makes visible the miracle of his creation as a gift in the lives of those who come to receive the sacred now transformed into temples of the sacred kingdom.  Faith is in action, in obedience, and in the joy to be called children of the Most High. 

The Kingdom is celebrated in the Universal Church and in the domestic church at home when we gather together to pray, share a meal of thanksgiving, and celebrate life. 

Viva Cristo Rey! 

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