The
days and weeks that follow the Feast of Resurrection take on a different hue to
those that we have experienced walking with the Lord to
Jerusalem
.
From the dusty road to Emmaus to breakfast in the
early morning light by the shore of the lake, the Jesus we are shown transcends
that of earlier Gospel stories. It is a transformed Lord who has gone before his
companions into
Galilee
. It is this transformed message that as Christians all these
years later we are charged with following and showing to others.
The days ahead in the
UK
will no doubt be dominated by the forthcoming General
Election, when various political groupings, of both the Right and Left attempt
to persuade us that they have the vision for the next five years. Promises are
made and surety offered of a better future. After all the dust has settled,
compromises reached and a new government formed, we move on.
When it comes to Church governance we have to seek compromise on issues
that lend themselves to compromise. But how might they be defined?
Too often that is where the difficulties start, on what might we
compromise? The black and white
sharp edged issue can, so easily with the passing years, be shown to have a
blurred boundary that was not at one time evident.
The common thread of
Paschal time is the sharing of a meal, be it in the Upper Room, in the
village
of
Emmaus
or when breakfast is cooked on the shore of the lake. Even
the forgiveness of Peter is offered under the semblance of food, “feed
my lambs, feed my sheep”
It all emphasises the centrality of the Eucharist in
our journey of faith. And that is why the present crisis in vocations to the
priesthood is so serious. The Eucharist sustains us in good times and difficult
times. It is not a reward for good behaviour but food for a journey during which
we try achieve goodness.
It was reported in the Tablet last Thursday, 09
April, that one of the famous reporters of the Council, Robert Blair Kaiser, who
worked as the
Rome
correspondent for TIME has died.
http://www.thetablet.co.uk/news/1961/0/vatican-correspondent-robert-blair-kaiser-dies
Embedded within this report is his Tablet lecture
for 2012. It is well worth re-visiting, for he not only succinctly summarises
the years of the Council but also the movement and developments since. It is an
ongoing event and we are part of the continuing story.
END