2nd Sunday of Easter A 12 April 2026 Expectant faith
It was one thing to rise from the dead. Jesus then had another task to perform, and that was harder – to convince people, including even His disciples that He had indeed risen!
The last chapters of each of the four gospels give accounts of the kind of resistance He met. The apostles just could not believe it; they were not used to things going that right.
We are so accustomed to bad news that when we hear the good we are inclined to doubt it. What’s the catch, we might say.
Our world is in many ways hostile to the faith, and this can affect us. We still have the faith but it is harder to flourish when surrounded by negative factors, such as ridicule, scepticism, denial, persecution etc.
Even those who had been with Jesus for years still had trouble believing His word, though they had seen so many miracles.
Jesus told His disciples He would rise (Mk 8,31), so why did they not believe it?
The disciples believed, but not yet enough. They were too much accustomed to the world of death to be ready for resurrection.
Now they had more life in their midst than they could handle. They were joyful, but needed a new way of grasping things.
For our part, are we thinking resurrection? We are in the same position as those first disciples. We need to build up our faith, our expectancy of God's marvellous actions in our midst.
And as always when we need something big it is from God that our help will come.
Jesus gave His followers a necessary lift. He appeared to them over and over until it finally sank in.
He does the same for us, not with appearances, but evidence of His goodness in our midst.
Much of it comes through the saints, canonised or not, who have given witness by their lives of the truth of the Resurrection. They have gone out into the cold wind of resistance in all its forms, and kept the flame alight.
We share in the Resurrection of Christ, firstly by coming to faith in Him, then by acting according to His teaching, then also by receiving Him sacramentally.
The apostles reached a level of identification with Christ such that even the shadow of Peter would heal the sick (Ac 5, 15-16) or contact (Ac 19,11-12) with handkerchiefs, aprons, of Paul.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
One thing the apostles had to do was organize the Church,
sending people here and there, esgtablishing new dioceses and parishes (as we
would call them now). All one Church, just getting bigger.
It means that disciples come and go from different necessities, which means sometimes sad farewells, as more and more varied needs musdt be attended to.
Thus, in this parish we have reached a need for some re-positioning, and this always means some sadness, but of course some new friendships can be made, and life goes on. In our case resurrection life.
We are destined to meet again, in Heaven if not before.
In our particular case the moves are not so dramatic, all being in the same city.
But near or far, we are always bound by our link with Christ. We are at one with all who are at one with Him.
1 Th 5, 11 Therefore encourage one another, and build each other up. Just as in fact you are doing.’ That’s what we will do, by God's grace.