Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Tuesday of the First Week of Easter

(Acts 2:36-41; John 20:11-18)

One might think that with the passage of time, youth would have greater self-understanding and peace. Reports, however, are to the contrary.  Youth today live in anxiety.  Perhaps a cursory review of our world may reveal why.  The world today glorifies the individual but leaves behind the family.  Traditionally, it was the family that taught values; today, they are often conveyed in schools and broadcasted through the media.  What is more, these values are often mistaken.  Certainly the license to have sex before marriage is an aberration of virtue.  Even more troublesome, the view of institutions as essentially corrupt has left many wandering in a storm without shelter.  People feel like Mary Magdalene in today’s gospel.

Mary’s world has been turned upside down with the news the Jesus’ body is not where it was laid after his death.  She jumps to the conclusion that it was a conspiracy: “’…I do not know where they laid him.’” She is so distraught that she cannot identify Jesus when looking at him.  Then Jesus calls her by name.  Her world stops spinning as she focuses on her beloved.  She wants to hold him forever – not in a sexual way but in adoration.

We should hear the Lord calling each of us by name.  He comes to us in the sacraments and through meditation on the gospels.  He tells us not to worry for he, who has conquered sin and death, loves us.  Despite the challenges of contemporary times, we will be all right if we follow him.