“I’m too young to
die.”
That is the thought
that ran through Margaret’s head when she found out that, at age 35, she had
been diagnosed with an aggressive form of breast cancer. She thought of her
three young daughters, all under the age of nine, who needed their Mommy. And
she thought of her husband and all the plans they had made for their life
together. It would be a long, hard fight, but it was one she knew she had to
make.
The years of
treatment that followed were not easy. She endured surgeries and chemotherapy.
Just when they thought they had gotten all the cancer cells, another tumor
would appear. There were many times that she lost hope and wondered if it was
all worth it. For strength, she turned to her faith, praying the rosary,
reading the Bible and offering her sufferings up to God. Visits from her pastor
and get well cards from her daughters’ religious education classes reminded her
that she had not been forgotten by her parish.
Finally, after three
years, she was cancer free. As her hair grew back in and her strength returned,
she felt like a new woman. She returned to her parish for Mass for the first
time since her treatments began. It was Easter Sunday. She could not contain
her emotions as she sang, “Christ our Lord is risen today! Alleluia!”. More
than any other time in her life, she felt that Jesus was real, that He was
really alive, that He had really risen from the dead. Though she had always
believed it, this time she knew it and felt it with all her heart. Jesus was
really alive and living in her. She realized that she had been given a second
chance at living fully the life that God had intended for her.
Margaret now shares
her story with anyone who will listen. She wants others to know how much they
are loved by God and that we can overcome any obstacle through the power of the
Risen Lord. She is convinced that God saved her life for a reason, and she is
determined to take every opportunity to spread the good news of His unfailing
love and the new life that is ours through Jesus’ resurrection.
Sisters and brothers,
Jesus is really alive. He is in our midst as we gather to celebrate His
resurrection. He is not just a figure from the past, but a person who is living in you and in me through
the power of the Holy Spirit. He is a person we can encounter, whom we can know
and with whom we can have a relationship of love.
Life can be
difficult. We often feel alone or abandoned.
But through it all we have a God who gave His only Son to die for us.
Even more wonderfully, He raised Him from the dead to give us the promise of
everlasting life. Whatever challenges we may face in life, God is greater than
them all. And, if we trust in Him, He will see us through them all. When we
have finally persevered through it all, we can experience Jesus truly alive in
us as Margaret did after she endured her cancer treatments and as Mary
Magdalene and the apostles did after experiencing the horror of Jesus’ death.
When we have good
news, we cannot keep it to ourselves. We have to tell others so that they can
share our joy. That is what Mary Magdalene did when she found the empty tomb.
She ran off to share it with Peter and John so that they could see for
themselves. That is what Peter does in today’s first reading. He tells all the
people gathered in Jerusalem the good news that Jesus is alive and that by
believing in Him they can have the forgiveness of their sins. And that is what
we must do. We who experience a Jesus who is really alive - alive in His word,
alive in the Sacraments and alive in His Church - must share the good news with
others so that they can see for themselves and share our joy.
In the past, we have
not emphasized enough the need to evangelize our communities. Often, we have
thought that it was a task only for our priests, deacons and sisters. But we
are living in a different world. People do not come to church as frequently as
they did in the past. Many are losing any connection to a parish or even to a
faith tradition. More than ever, we need to bring the faith out into the world,
beyond the walls and boundaries of our parish church. We need to bring it out
into our families, our schools and our places of work. It is something that
each one of us, no matter what our
abilities, is called by God to do.
We would not walk
past someone who was starving without giving him something to eat. Yet we live,
work and socialize with people who are starving for hope and hungry to know
that there is a meaning to their lives. They are counting on us to share our
faith with them, to tell them the good news that Jesus is alive and active in
our midst.
It can sound scary.
But it is really as simple as sharing with others how God has worked in our
lives. We do not have to preach to others or act as if we have it all figured
out. It is just a matter of letting others know what Jesus has done for us and
that He can do it for them too.
We know that Jesus is
alive. We have heard Him speak to us in the Scriptures proclaimed to us every
Sunday. We have seen Him in the eyes of our brothers and sisters in faith. And
we have received Him in the Holy Eucharist which is His risen Body and Blood.
That experience of Jesus truly alive makes our hearts well up with a joy that
we cannot contain, a joy that must be shared with others until all the world
knows and believes that Jesus Christ is Lord!
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