Sunday, April 24, 2022

Divine Mercy Sunday


Today, the Octave of Easter has been given the special designation Divine Mercy Sunday by Pope Saint John Paul II. The Gospel of John celebrates this theme magnificently. As it opens on a Sunday, Jesus has been killed by the authorities and has been in the tomb since Friday evening. The disciples have entombed themselves behind the locked doors of the Upper Room, unable to move, like dead men for fear of the Jews. It seems to them that all is lost. The man Jesus in whom they had placed all their hopes has been crucified. Suddenly, in the midst of these seemingly dead men, Jesus appears with a greeting and message of “Peace.” This is a message completely contradicting the chaos they feel caught up in. Peace is the tranquility of order: the divine order. When Jesus perceives the joy in their hearts at recognizing their Lord, he reiterates his greeting in a way that makes it not only a greeting but also a commission. “Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, so I send you.” He then breathes into them not just life, but the new life. As God at the First Creation breathed life into Adam, so now at the New Creation the new Adam, the God-Man Jesus, breathes the new life into his disciples and so also into all of us who call on the name of Jesus. We all share in the new life of the Spirit, the breath of God, through the glorious resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.

For many of us, the experience of God's mercy in raising us up to the new life in the Spirit comes in a way that more resembles that of St. Thomas, the Apostle, who hadn't made it back to the Upper Room in time. At the Last Supper Thomas had asked Jesus about the way Jesus was going. Jesus replied that He himself is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. Perhaps Thomas in his despair was lost in the thought that Jesus had turned out to be nothing but a dead end. His misery would eventually bring him back to his brothers' company, at least. St. Thomas and our father St. Bernard had much in common, especially the need for Divine Mercy. St. Bernard's doctrine of Divine Mercy Misericordia being attracted to our misery miseria was one that we tended to forget in later centuries of Jansenism. In a sermon to his monks, Bernard realistically describes himself as follows: “burdened with sins, enveloped in darkness, enslaved to pleasure, tormented with desires, dominated by passions, filled with delusions, always prone to evil, easily accessible to every vice, in a word, full of all shame and confusion.” We should not dismiss this as humble self-deprecation---this is what Bernard had discovered about himself in faithfulness to the admonition “know thyself.” The wonder of it all is that Bernard then discovered that in the light of God's grace, he could have mercy upon himself, as it were. This, in turn, inspired him to have mercy on all his brothers in their misery. And this opened him even more to a knowledge of the Father of Mercies. He discovered that Mercy's natural home is our misery. That is the destination to which it rushes like the wind, like the breath of God.

In the sixty-first sermon on the Song of Songs, Bernard parallels his own experience of God's mercy with that of the apostle, Thomas—Thomas who is told by Jesus, “Put your finger here and see my hands, and bring your hand and put it into my side, and do not be unbelieving, but believe.” Bernard writes, “But as for me, whatever is lacking in my own resources I appropriate for myself from the heart of the Lord, which overflows with mercy. And there is no lack of clefts by which they are poured out. They pierced His hands and his feet; they gored his side with a lance. And through these fissures, I can suck honey from the rock... I can taste and see that the Lord is good. The nail that pierced him has become for me a key unlocking the sight of the Lord's will. Why should I not gaze through the cleft? The nail wound cries out that God is truly in Christ, reconciling the world to himself. The iron lance pierced his soul, and his heart has drawn near so that he is no longer one who cannot sympathize with my weaknesses. The secret of his heart is laid open...that mighty mystery of loving is laid open, laid open to the tender mercies of our God...Where more clearly than in your wounds does the evidence shine that you, Lord, are good and forgiving, abounding in steadfast love? No one shows greater mercy than he who lays down his life for those who are judged and condemned. My merit, therefore, is the mercy of the Lord.”

We now approach the Eucharist, the sacrament of the Lord's mercy poured out for us for the forgiveness of our sins. Having encountered Divine Mercy in the sacrament, may we have mercy on all we encounter in our ordinary, obscure, and laborious lives. I would like to close with the final words of St. John Paul II's homily at the canonization of Sr. Faustina. He writes, “the message of divine mercy is also a message about the value of every human being. Each person is precious in God's eyes; Christ gave his life for each one; to everyone the Father gives his Spirit and offers intimacy. This consoling message is addressed above all to those who, afflicted by a particularly harsh trial or crushed by the weight of the sins they committed, have lost all confidence in life and are tempted to give in to despair. To them the gentle face of Christ is offered; those rays from his heart touch them and shine upon them, warm them, show them the way and fill them with hope. How many souls have been consoled by the prayer, 'Jesus, I trust in you!'”

Photograph of the weeping cherry outside the Abbey reception room by Charles O'Connor. Today's homily by Father Luke.