Apr 24, 2009
I remember watching anxiously on television while Pope John Paul II was dying. He had been the only Pope I ever knew; his face was the face of the Church for me. I remember feeling such joy for him when he died, because it was the vigil of Divine Mercy Sunday, the feast he so loved.
Of course, I never quite understood the idea of Divine Mercy Sunday. We make it through the 40-day period of Lenten prayer, fasting, and almsgiving, cap it off with the Sacred Triduum, and then we enter into the celebratory Easter Season. So important is Easter that it extends for eight days—eight days celebrating the resurrection and the victory over sin and death. But then suddenly our liturgical cycle calls us once again to repentance, to confession, to meditating on Divine Mercy pouring forth from the pierced side of Christ on the Cross. We were just celebrating the Resurrection, and suddenly we return to Calvary. This is a little confusing to me. Perhaps last Sunday you were confused too.
While I was in the Holy Land for Easter break, I had the opportunity to take a quick trip to the Sinai Peninsula. Mount Sinai is identified in the Book of Exodus as the place where Moses received the Ten Commandments. After we crossed the border into Egypt, our driver took us past stunning sienna cliffs rising abruptly from the Red Sea to the winding road that climbs into the craggy outcroppings of the alien Sinai wilderness. This drive was both fantastic and disturbing. The terrain is completely inhospitable. It consists entirely of rocky mountains, sand, and sun. As we drove, we passed through no less than three sandstorms; thankfully, none were serious.
After the first hour of driving, we reached the high plateau, and the beauty of the rugged mountains gave way to plains of sand and merciless turf, still wholly without vegetation. It was in these large flat areas that I imagined the thousands of Israelites passing on their way to the Promised Land. I began to understand why in Exodus they were always complaining. Almost immediately after escaping the Egyptian Pharaoh through the miraculously parted Red Sea, the Israelites grumbled: “Would that we had died by the hand of the Lord in the land of Egypt, when we sat by fleshpots and ate bread to the full; for you have brought us out into this wilderness to kill this whole assembly with hunger” (Ex 16:3). In response to their groaning, God provided manna from heaven. The Israelites complained again, looking for drink, and Moses struck the rock at Horeb, water gushing forth. Again and again, the Israelites complained about their situation, and again and again the Lord provided, his mercy overflowing upon them as they made it through the wilderness to the Promised Land.