Michael De Sapio
After all this time, can we say that we have truly come to terms with, truly absorbed the message of Easter and the full reality of the resurrection? Have we allowed them to transform our outlook on life?
“Can there really only ever be what there has always been? Can there not be something unexpected, something unimaginable, something new?” —Pope Benedict XVI, Jesus of Nazareth, Part II
17 P
The Resurrection, which we commemorate every Easter as well as every Sunday, is a mystery so immense that we have hardly come to terms with it, nearly 2000 years on. We pay lip service to the Resurrection in the Creed and at Eastertime, but for how many of us it the motivating mystery of our entire lives? St. Paul is clear on the matter: If Christ was not raised, our faith is in vain. The Resurrection is the mystery of the Christian faith. As Pope Benedict XVI has written, “The Christian faith stands or falls with the truth of the testimony that Christ is risen from the dead.”
But what was the Resurrection? It is so easy to allow our faith to go on auto-pilot, to coast on the familiar theological phrases and creedal formulas without any deeper reflection on what they mean, in their historical context and embodied reality. While I do not vouch for the fact, I have read claims that one third of Catholics do not believe in a bodily resurrection. This just as disturbing as (and not unrelated to) the widespread disbelief in the Real Presence. One can go to Sunday Mass, receive the sacrament of penance, pray the rosary and meditate on scripture on a regular basis—in short, do all the things that make for a healthy spiritual life—and yet still have an imperfect understanding of key truths. » Read More
https://theimaginativeconservative.org/2025/04/resurrection-true-renaissance-michael-de-sapio.html
The Resurrection: The True Renaissance
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