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Daily reflections for Lenten Easter, written by Oblate Father Ron Rolheiser, OMI.
We live in difficult times. We’ve only to watch the news on any given evening. If there’s an all knowing, all powerful and all loving God who is Lord of this universe, his presence isn’t very evident on the evening news.
There’s violence all over the planet, fueled on every side by self righteous ideologies that sanction hatred, by self interest that lets the community fend for itself, and by a socially approved greed that lets the poor fend for themselves.
It’s fair and reflective to wonder, where is the resurrection in all of this? Why is God seemingly so inactive? Where is the vindication of Easter Sunday? These are important questions, even if they aren’t particularly deep or new.
They were the questions used to taunt Jesus on the cross. If you’re the Son of God, come down off that cross. If you’re God, prove it. Act now. For centuries they prayed for a messiah, a superman to come and display a power and a glory that would simply overpower evil. But what they got was a helpless baby lying in the straw. And when that baby grew up, they wanted him to overthrow the Roman Empire.
But instead he let himself be crucified. What the resurrection teaches is that God doesn’t forcibly intervene to stop pain and death. Instead he redeems the pain and vindicates the death. The resurrection of Jesus reveals that there’s a deep moral structure to the universe, that the contours of the universe are love and goodness and truth.
This structure, anchored at its center by ultimate love and power, is non negotiable. You live life its way or it simply won’t come out right. More importantly, the reverse is also true. If you respect the structure and live life its way, what’s good and true and loving will eventually triumph, despite everything.
Like a giant moral immune system that brings the body back to health, God lets the universe right itself the way a body does when it’s attacked by a virus. We don’t have to escape pain and death to achieve victory. We’ve only to remain faithful, good and true inside of them. God’s day will come.
About the author: Father Ron Rolheiser, OMI

Fr. Ronald Rolheiser, OMI, is a Roman Catholic priest and member of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate. He is a community-builder, lecturer, and writer. His books are popular throughout the English-speaking world and have now been translated into many languages. His weekly column is carried by many newspapers worldwide. Before this present position, he taught theology and philosophy at Newman Theological College in Edmonton, Alberta, for 16 years, served as Provincial Superior of his Oblate Province for six years, and served on the General Council for the Oblates in Rome for six years. From 2005 – 2020, Fr. Ron served as President of the Oblate School of Theology in San Antonio, Texas.
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