Our Sunday Visitor

A new creation

Last Updated Monday, July 16, 2012 8:27:21 AM

A new creation

Out of the darkness of the tomb, the New Adam — who is ‘the light of men’ — arose in glory

By Carl E. Olson - OSV Newsweekly, 4/8/2012

Olson

“Let each of us consider how different the history of humanity would be and how different our lives would be if there had been no redemption and no Resurrection,” wrote the French Dominican theologian Réginald Marie Garrigou-Lagrange (1877-1964) in “Our Savior and His Love For Us” (TAN, $21). 

Consider what it would have been like if Mary Magdalene, arriving at the tomb, had found Jesus’ cold, still body. Imagine how the disciples, knowing that Jesus remained dead, would have lived the rest of their lives: broken, confused, bitter, scattered. The winds of time and the dust of history would have mercilessly eroded the once promising and startling landscape promised by Jesus of Nazareth. 

How different would our lives be? I don’t think we can even begin to fathom the answer. We cannot, I suggest, start to comprehend the darkness that would envelope the world and our lives if the Resurrection was not a real event. 

The Gospel of John begins with the famous prologue, which describes the Incarnate Word as “the light of men” who “shines in the darkness,” bringing life to a world confused and, well, clueless. The theme of darkness and light continues throughout John’s Gospel. 

When Mary of Magdala “came to the tomb early in the morning,” it was “still dark.” Whatever light existed was on the far edges of her vision — until she “saw the stone removed from the tomb.” Then she ran. What had been a morning of mourning was suddenly the dawn of the eighth day, the day of Resurrection. “The seventh day completes the first creation,” notes the Catechism of the Catholic Church, “The eighth day begins the new creation. Thus, the work of creation culminates in the greater work of redemption. The first creation finds its meaning and its summit in the new creation in Christ, the splendor of which surpasses that of the first creation” (No. 349). 

The new creation came, as it were, from Christ’s birth out of the womb of the earth. “Just as Christ was born from his mother’s inviolate virginal womb,” wrote St. John Chrysostom, “so too he rose again from the closed tomb. As he, the only-begotten Son of God was made the firstborn of his mother, so, by his resurrection, he became the firstborn from the dead.” Just as the first Adam was shaped by the Creator from the dust of the earth, the new Adam was raised by the Father from the dust of the earth. The early Church Fathers reveled in these connections, not because such language was clever but because it was a real means of approaching and communicating the mystery of the Resurrection. 

Another example: “On this day paradise is opened by the risen one,” wrote St. Hesychius of Jerusalem in the fifth century, “Adam is restored to life and Eve is consoled.” St. Peter, in his sermon in Acts 10, explained that the new Adam was “the one appointed by God” to judge the souls of men and to grant salvation to those who placed their faith in him. And St. Paul described how those “raised with Christ” are now able to share in the gift of eternal, heavenly life. “When Christ your life appears,” he wrote, “then you too will appear with him in glory” (Col 3:4). 

Without the Cross, there is no glory. Without the Resurrection, there is no life. Without Easter, we’re history.

Carl E. Olson is the editor of IgnatiusInsight.com.

Please note: Comments left online may be considered for publication in the Letters to the Editor section of OSV Newsweekly.

 

blog comments powered by Disqus

Advertisements
Return to top
 

Bookmark and Share

Print Friendly and PDF

Advertisements

Catholic Faith Resources | For Catholic Parishes | Order OSV Products | RSS | Advertise | About Us | Contact Us | Jobs
Copyright © 1996-2013, Our Sunday Visitor, Inc.  All rights reserved. Copyright information | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy