Tuesday Within Easter Octave, April 19
Acts 2:36-41
/ John 20:11-18
Jesus speaks to Mary of Magdala; "Stop holding on to me."
A mother had just returned from driving her only son to the college hostel. She walked into his empty room, clutching a note he had written her. She began to cry uncontrollably, realizing that his new world at college would never be her world—their world. Finally, after a long cry, she let go of the note and let it fall to the floor.
In the
months ahead, after the pain of separation had worn off, the mother discovered
something remarkable. By "letting go" of her son, she found that they
could love each other in a whole new way— an adult way that was far more
fulfilling than the earlier mother-child relationship. Mary of Magdala
(Magdalene) discovered the same thing after she let go of the earthly Jesus and
began relating to the risen Jesus.
***
Are we
holding on to something that we should let go of? What I keep I lose; what I
give away is mine forever.
***
It is not always easy to recognize the risen Lord.
This was the experience of Mary Magdalene. We too, are asked, “Whom are you
seeking?” Are we really seeking the Lord Jesus? Do we recognize him not only in
our prayers and during the reception of the Holy Eucharist, but also when he
walks by our side in our sufferings and in our joys, in the people around us,
and in the ordinary events and circumstances of life? Jesus is indeed our Lord
and Messiah. Mary Magdalene recognized him when she heard his voice. Are we
really in love with him and attuned to his Good News that we can say when
hearing him: “It is you, Lord, speaking to me.”
***
The first
sentence still belongs to the sermon Peter gave on Pentecost Sunday
(yesterday's reading). The rest of the reading shows what every preacher would
like to experience: the good effect of a sermon. The people are shaken. Peter
awakened in them the consciousness of sin. "You have killed him". In
our days, the consciousness of sin is becoming rarer and rarer, and with it the
question they ask: What must we do? The question arises only when we are aware
that not everything is all right. This insight is already the work of the Holy
Spirit. Peter answers: Repent. He
demands a conversion, a change of mind, a change of the direction in which we
are going. The perfect sign of such a conversion is baptism. It is the
forgiveness of sins and the beginning of t/le new life in which the gifts of
the Spirit are given. With the Spirit a new power comes into our souls: love.
The effect of the sermon: 3000 were added to the number, which had been 120
(see Act 1.15).
***
Mary wept. She wept when she saw the empty tomb and she wept when she saw Him. Through tears we never see clearly. They were tears of desire; they were tears of love. Her desire and love got the greatest reward. The human tears delayed it. She was not interested in angels. She wanted Jesus. Even when she stood before him, she did not recognise him, till he called her by name. Jesus knows the name of everyone. We mean a lot to him. She did not know anything else to say but "Master". Many words would have spoilt it. He is the master to whom she belongs. She cannot hold him as yet. Only faith can experience his presence. His humanity has been accepted by the Father. He is with him. That is where we find him. To find our way home to the Father is the paschal mystery.
Prayer
Our God of life, we profess our faith in Jesus and
recognize him as our Lord and Savior. Make us listen to him, when he speaks his
Good News to us, for it is a message of life. May we also hear his voice, when
he cries out to us in people in need or simply when he speaks to us through the
people who express to us their joys and hopes, their love and their faith. We
ask this through Christ, our Lord. Amen.