For All the Days In Between
Today is unusual. It is the Saturday of what Christians celebrate as Holy Week.
To be particular about today here in SoCal, we are having warmth and sunshine, a relief from the clouds,
rain, and cold my wife and I faced this week when we traveled to Seattle.
Spring is here in abundance. Yet this Saturday is one that I usually think of
in the way I think of myself. It is a day “caught in-between.” Today, this one
Saturday, is the between time, for it falls between Good Friday, the day of the
death of Jesus, and Easter Sunday and His resurrection. It is a day when
nothing seems to happen. It is a day between days.
In a way, it is a unique
day, a day of deep sorrow, a day of shocked grief and fear of the end. For Christians all over the world, it is also a day of waiting, mainly because the day is shot through with the light of Easter. But in another way, perhaps because of the feeling of living in the after effects of loss, it reminds me of so many days I
experience during the rest of the year.
Growing
up Catholic, I learned to think of the Saturday between Good Friday and Easter as a time for silence, but a silence that
does not necessarily lead to meditation. It seemed as close as I might get to the Zen idea of nothing.
Throughout
the world-wide church, many people try to re-enact the events that have come to
shape this week. In their re-enactments, they try to experience the profound sense
of hope, expectation, fear, and loss that the first followers of Jesus must
have felt after the arrest, trial, torture, and death of their leader. This is
admirable, and some years I have tried to do this. The trouble for me is that I
always catch myself faking it too much, and I just have to stop and admit that
I now live in what I call the “happy after time,” the time of Jesus’
resurrection from the dead. The result is that now, even trying to celebrate
the “in-between” of Saturday, after death and before resurrection, seems enlightened
and infiltrated with what I now understand is the next part of the story.
The
best I can do is a kind of silent reflection on what it must have been like to
suffer so much in a world that saw that suffering, the kind that Christ suffered, as the ultimate scandal. If you were there and you were a Greek, you would have considered it the worst shame, something you wouldn't wish on your worst enemies. .
I
guess, though, that I also see one more lesson to be gained from this “in-between”
time as I reflect and write about it, and that is this:
Though
it is true that the church is living year around in the Easter belief that
Christ has overcome sin and conquered death, and Easter itself is a time of
celebration, it is also true that the story is not finished yet. In a sense, we
are all still living in the time before the coming resurrection of the dead. In
a sense, we are still waiting and wondering, and no one really knows for
certain how long we will do this. We rejoice, but we also suffer. We overcome
battles with our own sin, but we also still fail. The Scottish writer and
preacher George MacDonald once wrote that “Christ suffered and died not that we
wouldn’t have to, but so that our suffering would be more like his.” That is
the difference that I see today—between the way I used to suffer before Easter
and the way I suffer now, in light of it.
The
difference seems to be the presence now of hope.
Try as I might, that is what I sense today, in between. May you have this the rest of the year.
4 Comments:
Thanks for this reflection, Tom. It's easy to pretty much skip over Saturday in the Easter tradition. I had not read that George MacDonald quote, but it is powerful.
Thanks, Joe. I even have forgotten what the church has named this Saturday to be. I know Good Friday and Easter Sunday, but what is Saturday? I agree about the George MacDonald quote. It has been instructive to me during many seasons.
This is a wonderful meditation and essay. During Holy Week this year I was also blogging and meditating on some of what you have written! I LOL'd with understanding your comment about "I usually think of in the way I think of myself" -- indeed and yes! This has also been a year I have spent reading NT Wright and he is quite helpful in understanding in a "useful" way the 1st century Jewish and Hellenistic cultures and the historical Jesus -- and then with a neat little paradigm shift -- helping reality break through on our Christian beliefs today and where we have sort of hit the slippery slope and kept sliding. I think your comments on The Saturday speak well to that part of our current dilemma as believers. A good nudge which we all need -- I in fact need daily. You are a delightful writer -- I must ashamedly confess I am finally now finishing up Pretexts -- gearing up for the Fall FWS. Great. Thank you for as you say on p.17,your ideas, and words that "have been said by someone a lot smarter than Jane Tawel"! Hope all is well with you and yours.
Thanks, Jane. I'd love to read some of your blogging and insights on this subject. Glad you will teach this fall.
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