Retreat meditation on the resurrection of the Lord
It is not all Good Friday. Christ has risen and is my hope! “I am the
Resurrection” (Jn 11, 25). Today is Sunday and this idea must dominate
my thoughts. In the midst of suffering and testing… optimism, confidence
and joy. Always joyful: because Christ is risen, he has conquered death
and is seated at the right hand of the Father. And it is Christ, my hope
who has risen. My Father, my Friend, he can die no more. What glory! In
the same way I shall rise “in Christ Jesus”… and after these days of
enormous, threatening clouds, I shall see Christ.
Because each day that passes I am closer to Christ. Grey hairs… heaven
is very near. When will this weak link finally break… “I desire to die
and be with Christ” (Phil 1,23). Because Christ triumphed and the Church
will triumph. The gravestone and the guards believed he was trampled
under foot. This will happen as well with our labor as Christians. It
will triumph! The greatest apostles are not the most attractive; nor are
the greatest successes those with the finest outward display. In
Christian action there is the success of failure. There are triumphs
that are more like late bloomers! In the world of the invisible, what
appears useless is the most effective of all. A complete failure
accepted willingly means greater supernatural success than all the
triumphs put together.
Sow the seed without concern for the results. Do not grow tired of the
sowing. Give thanks to God for the apostolic fruits of my failures. When
Christ spoke to the rich young man of the Gospel, he failed but how many
since have heard that lesson. In the face of the Eucharist many walked
away from him but, how many have come since then! You will labor! Your
zeal will appear fruitless but how many will live thanks to you!
After his resurrection, our Lord was not content to enjoy his own
happiness. Just as the joy of the teacher is the knowledge of his
students… his hope is not complete until all have learned; just as the
hope of the ship’s Captain is not complete until the last person is
saved… It would be unthinkable that Christ would content himself with
his own salvation.
All of heaven looks with great hope to the earth. St Ignatius has placed
great hope in us and he will not know fulfillment until the last Jesuit
has entered heaven. Hope is the link that unites heaven with earth. We
cannot imagine a tranquil heaven with large comfortable couches. St.
Peter has his eye on the Vatican all day. Earth is the daily paper of
heaven. This is why we can call out: Look here. Save us we are perishing!
Remember this is your work that is burning. Look here you saints! Look
at your work! Pray for us! The Church does this in an urgent, impelling
way!
Heaven is not completed: a large part of the Church is missing. And when
a poor man covered with the dust of earth arrives, how much joy there is
in heaven! The Lord tells us: there will be more joy in heaven… (Lk
15,7).
All of heaven is interested in what is happening on earth! And this is
why our Lord appears to his Mother… He is interested in everything, even
in the catch of his apostles; in what they eat: Is there anything left
to eat? He ate and distributed the pieces (cf. Jn 21, 1-14). It was to
show us that more than his own eternal happiness, he is interested in
his work on earth.