Living in the past gives us a false sense of control. It gives us an illusion of power. The world of today becomes so complex and so rapidly changing that we fear moving forward. We can’t keep up with the present pace and the demands that life makes upon us and so we retreat and seek shelter in a past that we can control in our minds. We can know the past and we are not surprised by its events for we have created them in our own memories and assigned them meaning. Even if they are painful, we are familiar with that pain. There is no sense of mystery in the past. We retreat from mystery because it frightens us with its unknowable characteristics. We can easily become locked into this upper room of the past and nostalgia, locking out anything that is new and therefore threatening. We develop a deep sense of doubt, suspicion, skepticism and cynicism for anything that might challenge the way that we think and perceive the world to be. The Risen Jesus has the power to pass beyond those locked doors and to bring us peace by our trusting in the newness of life.
The empty tomb of Easter morning is an enigma for us. We don’t know quite what to make of it. What it challenges is our thoughts about the finality of death and its ultimate power. When we are confronted by the empty tomb we are forced to conclude that death has been emptied of its power and that there is a “something more” here that is beyond our understanding. We must go beyond death to even begin to understand the implications of the empty tomb. The experience of death awakens within us a sense of doubt, fear and uncertainty. Doubt that is brought on by an intense experience or trauma, such as Thomas and the apostles experienced with the crucifixion and death of Jesus, can cause us to lose our sense of faith and to fall back only upon experience. Faith allows us to move forward but doubt consigns us to the past, to things that we have touched and that have deeply touched us. Jesus challenges Thomas not to cling to things of the past that he can touch but to move on into the future with a true belief and trust in the word of truth that the other disciples have shared with him. Through belief and trust in the word of truth that reveals to us that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, we “may have life in his name.” (Jn 20,31) Jesus truly is “the one who lives” (Rev 1,18), and who holds the keys to death, offering those keys to the apostles, who have the power to forgive sins through the Holy Spirit and become the living ones..
What is needed to move on into a future of hope? Our celebration of Divine Mercy Sunday gives us a key to moving forward in faith. The key is trust. “Jesus, I trust in you.” Trust opens the way to faith and to moving forward into God’s divine mercy. Trust allows us to leave justice behind and to make room for mercy. In trust we are able to open a way for the “new” of God to enter our lives. In trust we are able to make room for forgiveness. Trust in the divine mercy of God opens the way to freedom and allows us to move forward into a future of hope. We trust that God’s mercy will sustain us. Today is a new day, a day to be reborn, a day to enter more fully into God’s divine mercy. Trust in the Lord and move on.