Wednesday, December 16, 2015
Youcat commented through CCC – Question n. 106 - Part II.
(Youcat
answer - repeated) There are no proofs for the Resurrection of Jesus in the
scientific sense. There are, however, very strong individual and collective
testimonies by a large number of contemporaries of those events in Jerusalem.
A deepening through CCC
(CCC 641)
Mary Magdalene and the holy women who came to finish anointing the body of
Jesus, which had been buried in haste because the Sabbath began on the evening
of Good Friday, were the first to encounter the Risen One (Mk 16:1; Lk 24:1; Jn
19:31, 42). Thus the women were the first messengers of Christ's Resurrection
for the apostles themselves (Cf. Lk 24:9-10; Mt 28:9-10; Jn 20:11-18). They
were the next to whom Jesus appears: first Peter, then the Twelve. Peter had
been called to strengthen the faith of his brothers (Cf. 1 Cor 15:5; Lk
22:31-32), and so sees the Risen One before them; it is on the basis of his
testimony that the community exclaims: "The Lord has risen indeed, and has
appeared to Simon!" (Lk 24:34, 36).
Reflecting and meditating
(Youcat comment) The oldest written testimony to
the Resurrection is a letter that St. Paul wrote to the Corinthians around
twenty years after Christ’s death: “For I delivered to you as of first
importance what I also received, that Christ died for our sins in accordance with
the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in
accordance with the Scriptures, and that he appeared to Cephas, then to the
Twelve. Then he appeared to more than five hundred brethren at one time, most
of whom are still alive, though some have fallen asleep” (1 Cor 15:3-6). Paul
is recording here a living tradition that was present in the original Christian
community two or three years after Jesus’ death and Resurrection, when he
himself became a Christian — on the basis of his own
staggering encounter with the risen Lord. The disciples took the fact of the
empty tomb (Lk 24:2-3) as the first indication of the reality of the
Resurrection. Women, of all people, discovered it—according to the law of that
time they were not able to testify. Although we read about the apostle John
that he “saw and believed”(Jn 20:8b) already at the empty tomb, full assurance
that Jesus was alive came about only after a series of appearances. The many
encounters with the risen Lord ended with Christ’s Ascension into heaven.
Nevertheless, there were afterward and there are even today encounters with the
living Lord: Jesus Christ lives.
(CCC Comment)
(CCC 642)
Everything that happened during those Paschal days involves each of the
apostles - and Peter in particular - in the building of the new era begun on
Easter morning. As witnesses of the Risen One, they remain the foundation
stones of his Church. The faith of the first community of believers is based on
the witness of concrete men known to the Christians and for the most part still
living among them. Peter and the Twelve are the primary "witnesses to his
Resurrection", but they are not the only ones - Paul speaks clearly of
more than five hundred persons to whom Jesus appeared on a single occasion and
also of James and of all the apostles (1 Cor 15:4-8; cf. Acts 1:22).
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