Pope John Paul II's Easter Homily
Transcript from... Vatican Website
URBI ET ORBI MESSAGE
OF HIS HOLINESS POPE
JOHN PAUL II
Easter Sunday, 15 April 2001
1.. “In the Risen Christ all creation rises to new life.”
May
the Easter proclamation reach all the peoples of the
earth
and may all people of good will feel themselves
called to an active role
in this day which the Lord has
made,
the day of his Resurrection,
when the Church,
filled with joy,
proclaims that the Lord is truly
risen.
This cry which burst forth from the hearts of the
disciples
on the first day after the Sabbath
has
spanned the centuries and now,
at this precise moment of
history,
renews once more humanity’s hopes
with the
unaltered certainty of the Resurrection of Christ,
the
Redeemer of mankind.
2. “In the Risen Christ all creation rises to new life”.
The amazed surprise of the
Apostles and the women
who rushed to the tomb at sunrise
today becomes the shared experience of the whole People
of God.
As the new millennium begins its course,
we
wish to hand on to the younger generation
the certitude
that is basic to our lives:
Christ is risen and in him
all creation rises to new life.
“Glory to you, O Christ
Jesus,
today and always you will reign”.
We are
reminded of this faith-filled hymn,
which we sang so
many times during the course of the Jubilee
praising him
who is
“the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the
last,
the beginning and the end” (Rev 22:13).
To him
the pilgrim Church remains faithful
“amid the world’s
persecutions and God’s consolations” (Saint
Augustine).
She looks to him and has no fear.
She
walks with her gaze fixed on his face,
and repeats to the
men and women of our day
that he, the Risen One,
is
“the same yesterday and today and for ever” (Heb 13:8).
3. On that tragic Friday of the Passion,
which
saw the Son of man
become “obedient unto death,
even
death on a cross” (Phil 2:8),
the earthly phase of the
Redeemer’s life came to a close.
Now dead, he was
hurriedly placed in the tomb,
at the setting of the sun.
A singular sunset!
The ominous darkness of that hour
signaled the end of the “first act” of
creation,
convulsed by sin.
It seemed like the victory
of death, the triumph of evil.
Instead, while the tomb
lay in cold silence,
the plan of salvation was
approaching its fulfilment,
and the “new creation” was
about to begin.
Made obedient by love even to the extreme
sacrifice,
Jesus Christ is now “exalted” by God,
who
“has bestowed on him the name which is above every name”
(Phil 2:9).
In this name every human life recovers
hope.
In this name human beings
are freed from the
power of sin and death
and restored to Life and to
Love.
4. On this day heaven and earth sing
out
the ineffable and sublime “name” of the Crucified One
who has risen.
Everything appears as before, but in fact
nothing is the same as before.
He, the Life that does not
die, has redeemed every human life
and reopened it to
hope.
“The old has passed away,
behold, the new has
come” (cf. 2 Cor 5:17).
Every project and plan of this
noble
and frail creature that is man
has a new
“name” today in Christ risen from the dead,
for “in him
all creation rises to new life”.
The words of Genesis are
fully fulfilled
in this new creation: “Then God
said:
‘Let us make man in our image,
after our
likeness’” (Gen 1:26).
At Easter, Christ, the new Adam,
having become “a life-giving spirit” (1 Cor
15:45),
ransoms the old Adam from the defeat of death.
5. Men and women of the Third Millennium,
the
Easter gift of light
that scatters the darkness of fear
and sadness
is meant for everyone;
all are offered
the gift of the peace of the Risen Christ,
who breaks
the chains of violence and hatred.
Rediscover today with
joy and wonder
that the world is no longer a slave to the
inevitable.
This world of ours can change:
peace is
possible even where for too long
there has been fighting
and death, as in the Holy Land and Jerusalem;
it is
possible in the Balkans, no longer condemned
to a
worrying uncertainty that risks
causing the failure of
all proposals for agreement.
And you, Africa, a continent
tormented
by conflicts constantly threatening,
raise
your head confidently,
trusting in the power of the Risen
Christ.
With his help, you too, Asia,
the cradle of
age-old spiritual traditions,
can win the challenge of
tolerance and solidarity;
and you, Latin America, filled
with youthful promise,
only in Christ will you find the
capacity and courage
needed for a development respectful
of every human being.
Men and women of every continent,
draw from his tomb, empty now for ever,
the strength
needed
to defeat the powers of evil and death,
and to
place all research and all technical and social
progress
at the service of a better future for all.
6. “In the Risen Christ all creation rises to new life”.
From the moment when your tomb, O Christ, was found
empty
and Cephas, the disciples, the women,
and “more
than five hundred brethren” (1 Cor 15:6)
saw you
risen,
there began the time in which the whole of
creation
sings your name “which is above every other
name”
and awaits your final return in glory.
During
this time, between Easter
and the coming of your
everlasting Kingdom,
a time like the travail of giving
birth (cf. Rom 8:22),
sustain us in our dedication to
building a more human world,
a world soothed by the balm
of your Love.
Paschal Victim offered for the salvation
of the world,
grant that this commitment of ours will not
falter,
even when weariness slows our steps.
You,
victorious King,
grant to us and to the world
eternal
salvation!