The
American TFP wishes a Blessed Easter to all!
Faith
in the Resurrection
By Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira
Three days after the piety of His followers
had buried Him in the tomb, Our Lord resurrected.
The Resurrection represents the eternal and
definitive triumph of Our Lord Jesus Christ, the complete defeat
of His enemies, and the strongest argument for our faith. Indeed,
St. Paul says that if Christ had not resurrected, our faith would
be in vain. All the foundations of our beliefs are based on the
supernatural fact of the Resurrection. Let us therefore meditate
on this lofty subject.
* * *
Much has been said… and many have smiled
about the reluctance of St. Thomas in admitting the Resurrection.
Perhaps there are some exaggerations about the
incident. However, we certainly have before our eyes today examples
of incredulity incomparably more obstinate than that of the Apostle.
Indeed, St. Thomas said that he needed to touch
Our Lord with his own hands before he would believe in Him. However,
upon seeing Him, he believed before he even touched Him.
Saint Augustine saw something providential in
the Apostle’s initial reluctance to believe in the Resurrection.
The Holy Doctor of Hippo says that the whole world was held in
suspense by the finger of Saint Thomas. By insisting upon touching
the wounds, he established a high degree of meticulousness as
the basis for believing. In so doing, St. Thomas’ action
guaranteed to all timorous souls in every age that the Resurrection
was truly an objective fact, and not the product of exuberant
imaginations.
The fact remains that at least Saint Thomas
believed as soon as he saw Our Lord. How many today see but don’t
believe?
For example, we see this obstinate incredulity
in face of the miracles verified in Lourdes. The miracles are
evident. There is a “bureau” that receives medical
testimonies in Lourdes using meticulous standards. Only instantaneous
cures are registered. Diseases cannot be of a nervous character
or curable by any process of mere suggestion.
Several things are required to prove that a patient
has a real disease. First, the patient must be examined by a doctor
before he enters the Grotto. Second, all the patient’s medical
records must be presented. Finally, the patient’s cure must
be verified by the same examination used to verify the illness.
Moreover, the cure is only really considered miraculous when the
illness does not return after much time.
How can one reject such proof? How many have
the nobility to act like Saint Thomas who, when placed before
the undeniable truth, knelt and blatantly proclaimed it? Our Lord
seems to multiply these miracles to the degree that impiety increases.
Yet is there anyone who has the courage to do a serious, impartial,
irrefutable study before he denies these miracles?
***
Christ Our Lord was not resuscitated, He resurrected.
Lazarus was resuscitated. He was dead. Somebody other than him,
namely Our Lord, called him from death back to life. However,
nobody resuscitated the Divine Redeemer. He did not need anyone
to bring Him back to life. He returned to life when He wanted.
That which refers to Our Lord has an analogous
application to the Holy Catholic Church. Throughout the history
of the Church, we frequently find times when all appears irremediably
lost. All the makings of a near catastrophe seem ready to destroy
Her Body. In these moments, however, something always happens
that keep Her alive against all the expectations of Her enemies.
A tranquil certainty in the power of the Church
to resurrect can be found at the feet of Our Lady. This tranquility
entirely stems from a supernatural spirit, and not from indifference
or indolence.
We have to consider that she alone kept her
faith intact when all circumstances appeared to prove that her
Divine Son was a total failure. The Body of Christ was taken down
from the Cross. Every last drop of blood and water had been shed
at the hands of His executioners. His death was not only confirmed
by the testimony of the Roman soldiers, but also His own followers
who buried him. An immense stone was put into place to seal permanently
His tomb.
All appeared lost, but Mary Most Holy believed
and remained confident. Her faith kept her so secure, serene and
normal during those days of supreme desolation just as it had
kept her in every other moment of her life. She knew that He would
resurrect. No doubt, not even the slightest one, tainted her.
Therefore at her feet, we should ask for and obtain a steadfast
faith and a spirit of faith. We should make of this request the
supreme ambition of our spiritual lives. She is the supreme mediatrix
of all graces and example of all virtues. She will not deny us
this special grace that comes from the Resurrection.
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