Sunday, April 09, 2023

The humiliation of resurrection

Sermon for the Sunday of the Resurrection

Together this Triduum,
we have been looking
at the humiliation
which Our Lord accepts 
in order to save us.

We are learning
that humiliation is
a return to being grounded.

We see Our Lord
ground Himself
to wash the dust off our feet
so that we can be exalted.

We see Our Lord
mocked, 
spat in,
slapped
and laughed at in His agony.

We see Our Lord
placed in the tomb
with the intention
of allowing Him 
to return to earth,
a final expression
from His lovers
that He was not no-one.

We have seen Our Lord
show us what humility is.

How then can the Resurrection
be an act of humility?

[PAUSE]

Surely the Resurrection
is the exact opposite
of humility.

Surely the Resurrection
says, "look at Me,
I've beaten Death!"

Surely the Resurrection
is an act of self-exaltation
a showing off
an "aren't I brilliant?"

Surely the Resurrection
is not an example
of having your feet on the ground.

[PAUSE]

It is when you realise
that the Resurrection
is for our benefit alone
and not for Our Lord's
that His humility
is shown even here.

In the Resurrection,
Our Lord's human nature
willingly submits
to His divine nature.

Human nature
goes to the grave.

Divine nature
cannot die.

After such brutal punishment,
human nature would see Death
as a release,
an end of pain
an chance of unlimited rest.

After His death,
Our Lord could simply
have returned to Heaven
and ruled from there.

That's not what He does.

He does not take up 
His crown.

He does not wear 
His robes of state
not carry His orb and sceptre.

He is not raised 
in a blaze of glory
in the sight of His persecutors
and executors.

His Resurrection is small.

It is intimate.

It is for those who love Him.

Yes, He has triumphed over death.

But His victory 
does not come
at the expense
of forcing people
to see Him as He is.

He would rather choose
a simple, quiet, joyful Resurrection
than a loud, brash 
incontrovertible statement
which forces people
to be a Christian.

His Resurrection is not for Him.

It is for us.

[PAUSE]

Our Lord's Resurrection
is grounded in truth.

Christ is God
but He does not cling to being God
out of love, respect, 
and to offer us Himself
as He really is.

This is humility.

There is no pretence.

There is no distortion of the Truth.

There is no ulterior motive.

In His Resurrection,
He offers us Eternal life
with what really is,
not what just appears to be.

[PAUSE]

One day,
we will see Him in glory.

And then, 
St John reminds us,
we shall be like Him
for we will see Him 
as He really is.

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