BREAKTHROUGH
For
centuries people dreamt of flying. Then we did it. In 1903, the first plane
left the ground. What a breakthrough! Less than seventy years later we landed
on the moon! Who can believe what men and women can do? It is astonishing.
Easter is
moving from ignorance to enlightenment. From one way of being to another. We
tend to make Thomas a scapegoat for our unbelief. ‘Doubting Thomas’. But does
he deserve the description any more than we do? Everyone who appears in the resurrection
narratives in the gospels ‘couldn’t believe it’ at first. They were all
doubters. Then they moved to a new state of knowledge which allowed frightened
Peter to stand up and address ‘the whole House of Israel.’ It was a
breakthrough for him, for them and for us.
The gospels
are replete with stories of breakthrough. The woman at the well was a
frightened broken woman, the target of derision in her community. Then she
listened to everything Jesus said to her and slowly she was lifted out of
herself. She dropped, not just her water jar, but her whole earlier way of
life. It was a breakthrough.
It is hard
for us, Easter after Easter, to grasp the newness of the Easter event. We get
used to it. Yet occasionally you see a spark that lights up the scene. This
week. I watched a video interview on you tube with Amai Takura, composer of
many of our bast known Shona liturgical music. I learnt a lot about what she
has actually done but I was even more touched by how she did it. Her faith
bristled with life. Every sentence was an acknowledgement that her work was a
gift. Her part was to receive and do the hard work of crafting the gift into a
composition that resonated with people. Faith has broken through into her life
big time.
Early on in
John’s gospel we have the awful words: ‘though the light has come into the
world, people have preferred darkness’ (3:19). Easter is the proclamation of
opportunity, of choice. Every generation intuits this. Thomas could have
persisted in his stubbornness, his darkness – ‘unless I see …’ – but he didn’t.
He grasped the gift that was offered. That
is the joy of Easter; to lay hold of the gift that is ours, to allow it to
percolate into our being, to witness to the breakthrough in which we share.
‘Oh! That
you would break through the heavens and come down!’ (Is 63:19) That is exactly
what he did.
16 April
2023 Easter 2A Acts 2:42-47 1
Pet 1:3-9 Jn 20:19-31
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