He is Risen Indeed!
Dear Friends in Christ,
He is Risen! He is Risen Indeed!
That is an ancient greeting that Christians use during the Easter Season to greet one another. One person says, “He is Risen!” And the other responds, “He is Risen Indeed.” (Or, He is Truly Risen!).
During the Easter Vigil, the Church sings the following words: “The sanctifying power of this night dispels wickedness, washes faults away, restores innocence to the fallen, and joy to mourners. O truly blessed night, when things of heaven are wed to those of earth, and divine to the human.” Even though we are only at the very beginning of the fifty-day Easter Season, my heart spent all of Lent already crying out, “He is Risen! He is Risen Indeed!.”
I cannot adequately express what joy it brings to the priests of our parish that we were swamped by confessions this Lent. The world needs mercy. We need less harshness, less bitterness, less resentment, and less unforgiveness. We need less wickedness. The heart longs for forgiveness, for cleansing, for restored innocence, and for joy. It seems like an impossible wish list. The darkness that afflicts the world can seem indomitable. But what seems even more indomitable is death itself.
Today, however, we proclaim that Christ is risen from the dead. He defeated even death itself. And He comes back carrying with Him the remedy for all of us. He gives to us what seemed impossible. He opens the way for us to be free, to be innocent, to be forgiven, and to live a new life.
All Lent long people previously condemned by the twisted lie that there is no way forward, walked into the confessional. There, in the tribunal of truth, they humbled themselves before the Lord. And there, they encountered the Risen Christ. They encountered Mercy.
There are so many times as a priest hearing confessions I have thought, “If this one confession was the only thing I ever did as a priest, it would be enough.” To be an instrument of the Lord’s Mercy and a witness to Christ setting someone free is extraordinary. Every penitent sinner who receives sacramental absolution is a sign of the victory of Christ.
Easter may begin today, but its evidence is always around us, especially in the Sacraments. Every sincere confession and absolution that took place here this Lent could be described this way: “He is Risen! He is Risen Indeed!”
On behalf of priests, deacons, pastoral and administrative staff of St. Patrick Parish, I wish you extraordinary graces during this Easter Season and I thank you for being such a wonderful parish family. I feel very privileged.
He is Risen. He is Risen Indeed!
Fr. David Barnes
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