1. "Mors et vita duello conflixere mirando . . ."
"Death and life have contended in that stupendous combat: The Prince of
life, who died, reigns immortal" (Easter Sequence).
Once again, today, the whole Church pauses in amazement at the empty
tomb. Like Mary Magdalen and the other women, who came to anoint with
spices the body of the Crucified One, like the Apostles Peter and John
who came running at the word of the women, the Church bows before the
tomb in which her Lord was placed after the crucifixion.
A month ago, as a pilgrim in the Holy Land, I had the grace of kneeling
before the stone slab which marks the place of Jesus' burial.
Today, Easter Sunday, I make my own the proclamation of the Heavenly
messenger: "He is risen, He is not here" (Mark 16:6).
Yes, life and death were locked in combat and Life was victorious for
ever. All is once again oriented to life, to Eternal Life!
2. "Victimae paschali laudes immolent christiani . . ."
"Christians, to the Paschal Victim offer sacrifice and praise. The sheep
are ransomed by the Lamb; and Christ, the undefiled, has sinners to his
Father reconciled".
The words of the Easter Sequence marvellously express the mystery
accomplished in Christ's Passover. They point to the power of renewal
flowing from his Resurrection. With the weapons of love, God has
defeated sin and death.
The Eternal Son, who emptied Himself to become the obedient servant to
the point of dying on the Cross (cf. Phil 2:7-8), has conquered evil at
its roots by opening to contrite hearts the path of return to the
Father. He is the Gate of Life who at Easter overcomes the gates of
hell. He is the Door of salvation, opened wide for all, the Door of
divine mercy, Who sheds a new light on human existence.
3. The Risen Christ signals the paths of hope along which we can advance
together towards a world more just and mutually supportive, in which the
blind egoism of the few will not prevail over the cries of pain of the
many, reducing entire peoples to conditions of degrading misery.
May the message of life proclaimed by the angel near the stone rolled
back from the tomb overturn the hardness of our hearts; may it lead to
removing unjustified barriers and promote a fruitful exchange between
peoples and cultures.
May the image of the new man, shining on the face of Christ, cause
everyone to acknowledge the inalienable value of human life; may it
encourage effective responses to the increasingly felt demand for
justice and equal opportunity in all areas of society; may it impel
individuals and States to full respect for the essential and authentic
rights rooted in the very nature of the human person.
4. Lord Jesus, our Peace (Eph 2:14),
Word made flesh two thousand years ago, Who by rising from the dead have
conquered evil and sin, grant the human family of the third millennium a
just and lasting peace; bring to a happy outcome the talks undertaken by
people of good will who, despite so many doubts and difficulties, are
trying to bring an end to the troubling conflicts in Africa, the armed
clashes in some countries of Latin America, the persistent tensions
affecting the Middle East, vast areas of Asia, and some parts of Europe.
Help the nations to overcome old and new rivalries, by rejecting
attitudes of racism and xenophobia. May the whole of creation, inundated
by the splendor of the Resurrection, rejoice because "the brightness of
the eternal King has vanquished the darkness of the world" (Easter
Proclamation).
Yes, Christ has risen victorious, and has offered man, Adam's heir in
sin and death, a new heritage of life and glory.
5. "Ubi est mors stimulus tuus?"
"O death, where is your sting?" (1 Corinthians 15:55), exclaims the Apostle
Paul, touched on the road to Damascus by the light of the Risen Christ.
His cry echoes down the centuries as the proclamation of life for the
whole of human civilization. We too, the men and women of the
twenty-first century, are invited to be mindful of this victory of
Christ over death, revealed to the women of Jerusalem and the Apostles,
when they arrived hesitantly at the tomb.
Through the Church, the experience of these eye-witnesses has come down
to us too. It is a significant part of the journey of the pilgrims who,
during this Year of the Great Jubilee, are entering through the Holy
Door, and going away with renewed courage to build pathways of
reconciliation with God and with their brothers and sisters.
At the heart of this Year of grace, may the proclamation of Christ's
followers be heard more loudly and clearly, a joint proclamation, beyond
all divisions, in ardent longing for full communion: "Scimus Christum
surrexisse a mortuis vere." "Yes, that Christ is truly risen from the
dead we know, Victorious King, your mercy show!"
Amen.