Dear Friends,
It is easy for us to forget that the message of Easter is
for all seasons and not just springtime. Even now, as we glory in the fall
season with the harshness of winter not far behind, we would do well to keep Easter
at the heart of our being and doing. Easter is the culmination of a battle
between life and death. In Jesus, we know that life wins out, but in our day to
day lives, death challenges us mightily: the death of our hope, the death of
aspirations any time of the year.
and ideas that have not yet blossomed, the
death of relationships that are tentative as buds. Easter flounders or flourishes
in our hearts.
This battle between life and death, for which we claim
victory through Christ is something that other
cultures find true in their own way.
The desire to live is in us, no matter what part of the
world we come from, no matter what we hold in faith, no matter where we have
been transplanted. The Irish poet, John O’Donohue wrote a poignant piece about being an exile and then
coming to the Easter moment of belonging
in a new place. I offer excerpts of it here, that we may read it against the struggle
between life and death, and find ourselves encouraging exiles from other places
who have come to our land to Easter here with us:
“When you dream, it is always of
home. You are there among your own,
The rhythm of their voices
rising like song…Then you awake to find yourself listening
To the sounds of traffic in another land. For a moment , your whole body recoils
At the strange emptiness of
where you are…Nothing of you has happened here.
No one knows you. The language
slows you.
The thick accent smothers your presence. ..
The thick accent smothers your presence. ..
The things you brought from home Look back at you out of place here …
Now is the time to hold faithful To you dream, to understand That this is an interim
time full of awkward disconnection. Gradually you will come to find Your way to
friends who will open doors to a new belonging. Your heart will brighten with new discovery. Your presence will unclench And find ease, Letting your promise and
substance been seen.
Slowly a new world will open for
you. The eyes of your heart, refined
by this desert time, will be
free To see and celebrate the new life
For which you have sacrificed everything.”
Easter is
today for the refugee, the exile, the asylum seeker, the stranger in our midst.
Recognizing their pain of loss, the deaths they have died along the way, let us
stretch out our hands to them in love and offer them new life. After all, have
we not also known the death and resurrection of Jesus ourselves?
-Sister Joan Sobala
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