Rev Michael Cavanagh +353 (0)87 160 6312
So the commandment is a challenge. To love those who betray you. Those who jeer. Those who wield the whips embedded with flint, hammer in the nails, pierce your side.

A Meditation for the First Sundy of Easter 2026

provided by the Revd. Barbara Irrgang-Buckley

… and I do not know where they have laid him.

Christ is risen! The Lord is risen indeed. Alleluia!

Hymn 271 – sing along if you like, see text below

1

Jesus Christ is risen today, alleluia! alleluia!

Our triumphant holy day, alleluia!

Who died once, upon the cross, alleluia!

Suffer to redeem our loss, alleluia! alleluia!

3

But the pains that he endured, alleluia!

Our salvation have procured, alleluia!

Now above the sky he’s king, alleluia!

Where the angels ever sing, alleluia!

2

Hymns of praise let us sing,

Unto Christ, our heavenly king,

Who endured the cross and

Sinners to redeem and save,

Collect for Easter Day

Almighty God, through your only-begotten Son Jesus Christ
you have overcome death and opened to us the gate of everlasting life:
Grant that, as by your grace going before us you put into our minds good desires,
so by your continual help we may bring them to good effect;
through Jesus Christ our risen Lord who is alive and reigns with you
and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

Gloria – enjoy listening to Vivaldi’s Gloria in Excelsis

Reading from Acts 10: 34-43

Gospel according to John 20: 1-18

Reflection
Early on the Sunday morning (‘the first day of the week’) after the Crucifixion, before dawn, Mary Magdalene, who has been a witness to Christ’s death and burial, comes to the tomb and finds that the stone has been rolled away. Initially it seems she is on her own, for she alone is named. But later she describes her experiences using the word ‘we,’ which indicates she was with other women. In the Eastern Orthodox tradition, these women are known as the Holy Myrrhbearers (Μυροφόροι). The Myrrhbearers are traditionally listed as: Mary Magdalene, Mary, the mother of James and Joses, Mary, the wife of Cleopas, Martha of Bethany, sister of Lazarus, Mary of Bethany, sister of Lazarus, Joanna, the wife of Chuza the steward of Herod Antipas, and Salome, the mother of James and John, the sons of Zebedee, and Susanna, although it is generally said that there are other Myrrhbearers whose names are not known. Mary and these women run to tell Saint Peter and the other disciple (presumably Saint John the Evangelist) that they suspect someone has removed the body. The ‘other disciple’ may have been younger and fitter, for he outruns Saint Peter. The tidy way the linen wrappings and the shroud have been folded or rolled up shows that the body has not been stolen. They believe, yet they do not understand; they return home without any explanations. But Mary still thinks Christ’s body has been removed or stolen, and she returns to the cemetery. In her grief, she sees ‘two angels in white’ sitting where the body had been lying, one at the head, and one at the feet. They speak to her and then she turns around sees Christ, but only recognises him when he calls her by name. Peter and John have returned without seeing the Risen Lord. It is left to Mary to tell the Disciples that she has seen the Lord. Mary Magdalene is the first witness of the Resurrection. All four gospels are unanimous in telling us that the women are the earliest witnesses to the Risen Christ. In Saint John’s Gospel, the Risen Christ sends Mary Magdalene to tell the other disciples what she had seen. Mary becomes the apostle to the apostles. The word apostle comes from the Greek ἀπόστολος (apóstólos), formed from the prefix ἀπό- (apó-, ‘from’) and the root στέλλω (stéllō, ‘I send,’ ‘I depart’). So, the Greek word ἀπόστολος (apóstolos) or apostle means one who is sent. In addition, at the end of the reading (see verse 18), Mary comes announcing what she has seen. The word used here (ἀγγέλλουσα, angéllousa) is from the word that gives us the Annunciation, the proclamation of the good news, the proclamation of the Gospel (Εὐαγγέλιον, Evangélion). Mary, in her proclamation of the Gospel of the Resurrection, is not only the apostle to the apostles, but she is also the first of the evangelists. In the Western tradition of the Church, we seem to have contemplated the cross and then moved to the empty tomb. At times, the deep joys of the Resurrection have often been overshadowed in the Western Church by the way of the Cross, as though the Cross leads only to death. But what happened in Christ’s resting place, during the time in his tomb? The Orthodox Church thinks more than the Western about what happened while Christ’s body lay in the tomb, and it is remembered as the time during which he visited those who were dead. We are reminded God reaches into the deepest depths to pull forth souls into the kingdom of light. It reminds us also of what we are unable to comprehend – let alone take to heart as our own – the creedal statement about Christ’s descent into Hell – ‘He descended into Hell.’ The Early Church taught that after his death Christ descended into hell and rescued all the souls, starting with Adam and Eve, who had died under the Fall. The Harrowing of Hell is intimately bound up with the Resurrection, the Raising from the Dead, for as Christ is raised from the dead he also steps down into the depths to bring up, to raise up, those who are dead. The Harrowing of Hell carries us into the gap in time between Christ’s death and resurrection. In Orthodox icons of the Harrowing of Hell, Christ stands on the shattered doors of Hell. Sometimes, two angels are shown in the pit binding Satan. And we see Christ pulling out of Hell Adam and Eve, imprisoned there since their deaths, imprisoned along with all humanity because of sin. Christ breaks down the doors of Hell and leads the souls of the lost into Heaven. He descends into the depths of our sin and alienation from God; and by that he connects all that is lost and sinful with the radiance of divine goodness, joy and light. It is the most radical reversal we can imagine. Death does not have the last word, we need not live our lives entombed in fear. If Adam and Eve are forgiven, and the Sin of Adam is annulled and destroyed, who is beyond forgiveness? We can ask ourselves this morning: Is my hell in my heart of my own creation? Is hell in my mind, in my home, where I live and work, in my society, in this world? Is hell the nightmares from the past I cannot shake off, or the fears for the future when it looks gloomy and desolate for this planet? But is anything too hard for Christ? Where are the depths of my heart and my soul – where darkness prevails, and where I feel even Christ can find no welcome? I cannot produce or manufacture my own salvation from that deep, interior hell, hidden from others, and often hidden from myself. Christ breaks down the gates of Hell, of the place of death, the place where God is not, he rips all sinful humanity from the clutches of death. Let us not hesitate, let us ask him to take away all that denies life in us, whether it is a hell of our own making, a hell that has been forced on us, or a hell that surrounds us. Can we accept that Christ reaches down to lift us up with him in his Risen Glory? Now let us enjoy and embrace the brightness, the radiance and lightness, the singing and celebrating of Easter. Fully aware that we are Easter People, an Easter People. Christ died, descended, ascended and rose again for me, for you, for us, for all humanity. As the beginning of a new creation. Alleluia!

Music – Hallelujah: Christ ist erstanden.  Enjoy listening.

Music – Hymn 276 – Majesty, workshop His Majesty

a slightly different version. Sing along, the text is in the video – or relax and enjoy.

And finally, you might enjoy listening to Bach’s Easter Oratorio, BWV 249

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