I have a playlist of songs that I go to during Holy Week. I like to have the playlist going in the
background around the house. Sometimes
I will take ear buds and listen during a prayer time, letting the songs sweep
over me and imaging myself at the different events of Holy Week and Easter
Sunday. One of my favorites is this
rendition of “Were You There?”
The answer? “Yes,
you were there.” You were really and
truly present. You were in Christ’s heart, before His eyes. You
were held in His mind. His crucified
heart fought to beat for you. His
nailed palms stretched out through time and space for you. His body was stretched out in the tomb to
fill and give life to the tombs and voids in your life. This is not some theological reflection;
this is real!
I often get distracted and become, in a sense, numb to the
reality of the week. I water down
Christ’s sacrifice through intellectual abstractions and theological
distractions. I get lost in considering
the rhetorical reasons why a Gospel writer choose a particular word or phrase,
or how an image or term is referencing this psalm or that prophet. I forget the reality of the Cross.
He really suffered and died. We went to a local parish for the Good
Friday liturgy. During the liturgy
there is a time known as the Veneration of the Cross, when individuals go and
express some expression of gratitude and devotion by placing a hand or kiss on
a wooden cross. The local parish had a
small sliver of the true Cross (a relic).
This opportunity reminded me of the historical reality of God’s saving
acts. Some have said that if all the
relics of the true Cross were gathered from around the world and put together,
there would be enough wood to build Noah’s Ark. Perhaps some relics are not legit. But if Christ was able to multiply loaves of
bread and fish to feeds crowds of thousands, whose is to say that God could not
multiply the ultimate sign of victory over sin and death?
You were there. On
the Cross, Christ held you, your situation, the circumstances of your life that
seemed hopeless, lifeless, an empty tomb.
Over the past several days I have been mindful of so many family and
friends that have experienced some form of tragedy:
·
The heartbreaking passing of a newborn or
toddler.
·
A spouse’ s battle with cancer.
·
The loss of a teenager son or daughter in a car
accident or to addictions or mental illness or random acts of violence.
·
A couple’s struggle with infertility.
·
The hospitalization of a premature infant or
loved one.
·
The sudden loss of a job.
·
A reopened wound that remained bound and hidden
for years.
In all of these trials and heartaches, valleys and tombs,
Christ is with you. He has always been
with you, even though it felt like abandonment, despair, and death. You have never been alone, because, yes, you
were there. You were there in Christ’s
heart, He was conscious of you as He experienced abandonment on the Cross. You were there as He was wrapped and laid in
the tomb. He brought you and the tombs
of your life into the ground with Him.
Death is not the end.
In His resurrection, He breathes new life into our tombs, in our losses,
in our tragedies.
·
There is a medical healing through the
physicians and medicine.
·
There is a miraculous healing that goes against
all odds and statistics. (Yes I am
specifically referring to you Wojo)
·
In their loss through infertility or the passing
of a child, a couple or family finds new life as they reach out to others.
·
Sometimes the story ends with a healing in this
world, and sometimes a healing in eternity.
We find solace, light, and life when we discover
Christ present with us, in the middle of our despair, darkness, and death. There is an unexplainable joy. Each of these resurrections give witness to the healing power and presence of Christ's Resurrection. Not only was the Cross a real historical event, but so was
the Resurrection. It is not just a
symbol or analogy. For as St. Paul
said:
But if Christ is preached as raised from the dead, how can some among you say there is no resurrection of the dead? If there is no resurrection of the dead, then neither has Christ been raised. And if Christ has not been raised, then empty too is our preaching; empty, too, your faith. Then we are also false witnesses to God, because we testified against God that he raised Christ, whom he did not raise if in fact the dead are not raised. For if the dead are not raised, neither has Christ been raised, and if Christ has not been raised, your faith is vain; you are still in your sins. Then those who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished. If for this life only we have hoped in Christ, we are the most pitiable people of all. But now Christ has been raised from the dead, the first fruits of those who have fallen asleep. For since death came through a human being, then resurrection of the dead came also through a human being. For just as in Adam all die, so too in Christ shall all be brought to life. (1 Corinthians 15:12-22)
This is Good News!
This is news worth sharing to the ends of the earth. If our limited experience in missions has
taught us anything it is this: All throughout the world, people are hurting, trapped in
their brokenness and bound in the snares of sin. Sometimes it is their own sin; sometimes
snared by the sins of others. They are
laid in tombs behind sealed immovable stones.
How can we remain numb? How can
we not share God’s love? How can we
withhold the stories of Christ’s resurrection in our lives and give testimony
to the empty tombs now vibrant from our own lives? How can we not share this with our friends,
families, and neighbors and to the ends of the earth? Were not our hearts burning within us as we
realized that we were there?
Some updates and prayer intentions…
Please keep little Rebekah in your prayers. She is doing well but there is some concern
with her weight gain. At her doctor’s
appointment last Tuesday, she was at 6 lbs.
By 10-14 days an infant should be back up to her birth weight. Rebekah was 7 oz shy after 20 days. We did take her to release tongue and lip
ties, which seem to help a little. We
have also supplemented with pumping and bottle-feeding. We have another appointment this upcoming
Tuesday. If she is not back to 6 lbs 7
oz, we will consider some testing and formula.
Rebekah’s baptism will be on Divine Mercy Sunday! We are also excited that her godparents
(Pete and Sarah Hammer) and their four children will travel down for a visit.
Right now our timeline and plans for returning to Mexico are
still in place. Our original plan and
hope is to return the first or second week of May. Of course this is contingent on Rebekah’s
health and weight gain. We are also
waiting on paperwork for her passport.
Please pray that the paperwork and passport application goes quickly and
smoothly.
Finally, this upcoming week there is a youth group coming
down to Louisiana from New York for a week retreat and service. No the group is not from Buffalo. We will help facilitate the retreat, taking
them to different work project sites and visiting nursing homes and doing home
visits. May God bless the teens and
their chaperons as they travel and spend a week with those in need in
Abbeville. We should have more to share
next week.
Nice reflection on the reality of God's greatest gift to us--his only Son. I enjoyed the song: I can see why it moves you. We will pray for Rebekah's heal1th--looking forward to future posts on the Gehl family's great adventure and ministry to God's people
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