Alleluia, Christ is Risen. Surrexit Alleluia.
Picture the scene: a middle-aged lady has spent years
following faithfully in her master’s footsteps. She has travelled all over the
globe spreading the Gospel of Christ to different people and nations. She has
faced tyrants and chieftains, lords and kings in her bid to reveal the love of
Christ to all she meets. After her exile from Jerusalem, where the Christian Church
was being persecuted, she finally ends up in modern day France and her journey
continues. She becomes an active missioner and preacher, before retiring to a
cave and living as a hermit in old age.
It was less than a century after this that Donatello carved a
statue of Mary Magdalene in polychrome wood – a picture of which we can see in
our pew sheets. Notice how he casts her as an ascetic hermit, gaunt and old but
still on her front foot and full of energy.
The story of Mary Magdalene’s missionary endeavours cannot be
proven, but there is evidence to suggest that Mary did die in France. The only
other evidence we seem to have of her life after Jesus’ resurrection is the statue
that Donatello carved of her. Her relics now placed in various chapels
dedicated to her name – many in France itself. But, the details are not
important, because the overarching rhythm of this story fits perfectly with what
we know of her from the Gospel accounts.
We know that Mary was often one of the first people to
recognise Christ – she was the first person through her actions to show how
Christ’s teaching had positively affected her. We know that she was attentive
to His teaching and dedicated to His cause. We know that she followed Him to
the cross and then was the first person to see Him rise. We know that Mary left
the tomb and the place where she encountered her risen Lord in confusion and
joy and went off to tell the other disciples. And the way this story is told,
we get the impression that she danced all the way.
If Donatello’s depiction of Mary is to be believed, and there
is no reason why it shouldn’t be, Mary, very advanced in years, could not stop
spreading the word of Christ. She could not stop striding, best foot forward,
to do the work of her Lord and continue that ‘dance’ that her Lord called her
to. All who recognise the resurrection of Christ end up partaking in this same
dance, it would seem.
In Luke’s Gospel story detailing the walk to Emmaus, we are
told of two very solemn fellows making their way to meet their friends. They
have dropped their heads in despair and they are dragging their feet, which now
feel heavier than ever. It feels to them as if this journey may never end. They
had placed such great expectation upon Jesus, he had given such purpose to
their lives - and now he was dead and all hope seemed to be lost.
Then they are joined by a person they do not recognise, but
they value the opportunity to retell all that they had seen and that Jesus had
done. They do not know they are talking to Christ and He does not tell them,
because he recognises that they need to be brought slowly towards the truth.
Through the scriptures, He begins to reveal to them the true
interpretation of recent events. We now begin to get a sense that the two
followers are becoming less morose and despairing. By the time they reach their
destination, the two disciples are positively dancing, and yet they still do
not recognise that it is the risen Christ who has done this for them. Only when
Christ shares the Eucharist with them do they recognise Christ for who he truly
is. And with that Christ departs from them, leaving them to perform the dance He
has given them to do - job done!
But, of course, the dance does not stop there. This dance
continues with us today. Every Sunday morning in our Eucharistic celebration,
the risen Christ continues to make himself known to us, just as he did to his
disciples at the end of the Emmaus road.
And having shared His divine offering with Him, we then depart to
continue His dance in the here and now. Everyone is invited to this dance and,
long before we recognise the full truth of the resurrection for ourselves, we begin
slowly tapping our feet. Then we find ourselves working for the good of others,
radiating a joy and a loving kindness that is difficult to characterise. We get
involved in all kinds of activities on behalf of Christ’s Church and we feel a
deeper desire to attend divine worship more regularly as the resurrected Christ
slowly reveals himself to us, just as he did to those disciples on the road to
Emmaus. Our feet stop tapping, just as our bodies begin to groove and bop, sway
and rock.
Eventually the truth of the resurrection is revealed to us in
all its radiating magnificence. A truth that cannot be explained by human
faculties, but which will be revealed at the time of Christ’s choosing. It
cannot be proven or uncovered by scientific endeavour or empirical evidence,
but only through faith, goodwill and the grace of God.
Recently in Egypt, a group of archaeologists uncovered some
of the earliest forms of chocolate in a tomb of one of the great Egyptian Pharaohs.
Until this find, it was considered that chocolate, in the form that we have it
today, was a relatively recent invention. An example of this chocolate find can now been seen in the
British Museum. They have called it Pharaoh Rocher.
Ecclesiastes tells us that ‘there is nothing new under the
sun’. And every time we forget this pearl of wisdom we are brought back down to
earth with a bump. Christ’s resurrection is as real today as it was 2000 years
ago and it will continue to be true 2000 years from now. Christ is the Lord of
the dance and He calls the tune. All we have to do is allow ourselves to feel
the rhythm.
In the words of the great Baloo the Bear from Disney’s Jungle
Book; ‘Come on Baggy, get with the beat!’
Amen
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