Warning: this post may start to sound like it’s more about
Easter than Advent. But could this be because the two are inseparably linked to
each other? Without having been born, Jesus couldn’t have died and risen.
Without having become human in the Incarnation, he couldn’t have paid the debt
of our sins. Gaudete Sunday in Advent is paralleled by Laetare Sunday in Lent—the
only two days of the year where the liturgical color is rose. (Gaudete and
laetare both mean “Rejoice! Be joyful!” in Latin).
For me personally, today is also difficult. My uncle and
godfather recently died, and today is the rosary for him, tomorrow the funeral.
My aunt’s dedication to the rosary during this difficult time left me with a
renewed appreciation of this beautiful prayer. I would like to interpret today’s
message of rejoicing in terms of the glorious mysteries of the rosary, which
are always prayed on Sunday.
The glorious mysteries can be seen as a meditation on our own
mortality and immortality. They begin with a climax: the Resurrection. Christ
conquered death. We hear this all the time. But this is the single most
hope-giving truth of the Christian faith. Christ didn’t just passively wake
back up again after having been dead for three days. He looked death in the
face and said, “Give me your best shot.” He didn’t just defeat death. He
accepted the worst that death could do to him, and proved it wasn’t really all
that much. He’s been there, done that. And that’s just the beginning.
After his Resurrection, Christ spent some time on Earth with
his disciples, and then he ascended into Heaven (the second glorious mystery).
Here begins the long period of physical separation, in which we are still
living today. Christ ascended so that he could send the Holy Spirit to be with
us (the third mystery) in a much more intimate way than he could have done
given the constraints of a physical body. These two mysteries show us that
physical separation is not complete separation. Those we love still exist—we
just can’t perceive them anymore with our five senses.
But even this is not the end of the story. We don’t have to “settle”
for a “merely spiritual” union, true as this union may be. The fourth glorious
mystery tells of the Assumption of Mary into Heaven, an event long held as true
by church Tradition. After her death/dormission, Mary was immediately taken
into Heaven, body and soul. Christ is the “first fruits of the dead (1 Cor. 15:20),”
but Mary’s Assumption makes clear that the resurrection of the body is for all
of us. Yes, we too will one day be in Heaven, soul and new, glorified body,
with Jesus and Mary and all those who have gone before us.
The final glorious mystery, the Coronation of Mary as Queen
of Heaven (hinted at in Revelation 12:1: “a woman clothed with the sun, with
the moon under her feet and on her head a crown of twelve stars”), prefigures
the grand finale of salvation history. In the Gospel of John, one of Jesus’s
last prayers before being arrested on the night of his Passion is this: “Father,
I desire that those also, whom you have given me, may be with me where I am, to
see my glory, which you have given me because you loved me before the
foundation of the world.” (John 17:24) When we get to Heaven, we, along with
all our loved ones, will see Christ face to face and share in his glory, and
his joy and ours will be complete.
This is why, as Christians, we can rejoice, even with horror
in our guts and tears in our eyes. This darkness is not the end.
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