Welcome to Sunday

Shutterstock 1409628977

2nd Sunday of Easter

Welcome to Sunday

Fr. Frederick Edlefsen

 

Good news rocks the apple cart.  Jesus’ resurrection delivers a new outlook.   It’s a consolation and a challenge.   

During this Easter Season (which lasts through Pentecost), honestly reflect on the pressures that weigh heavily on your life – considering what Christ’s resurrection promises.   What are the glimmers of hope in your life?   What are you afraid of?   Why all the pressure to overperform, to get everything “just right”?   Christ’s resurrection challenges us to reconsider priorities.

How do we spend Sundays?  Do we make Sunday a hopeful and enjoyable day?   After all, every Sunday is Easter.  Sunday Mass not just an obligation.   Avoiding mortal sin is not the upshot of the Third Commandment any more than avoiding penalties is the upshot of football.   Rather, the obligation to attend Sunday Mass is a Gift.  A re-translated Third Commandment might read something like this: “Thou shalt not burn thyself out on Sunday.”  I cannot think of a better way to blow-off work than to attend the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, listen to the Word of God, and receive Holy Communion.        

Bike riding is not about avoiding falls, but about enjoying the ride.  The Third Commandment is not about checking-off the “God box” but about the closeness of a loving and merciful God who makes the rest of the week worthwhile.  It’s about offering our lives to the Father through the “Paschal Mystery” (Christ’s death and resurrection), which is what happens at every Mass (even if you don’t like the priest).  Sunday Mass is a “peg in a sure place” (Isaiah 22:23) in an unanchored world which blows every which way but loose.   

Fear not wasting time with God.  “Be not afraid” (Matthew 14:27).   God wants humans to be happy and free.  Why do you think he delivered Israel from slavery?   He wanted his people to be free, not worn out.  The Third Commandment boils down to this:  Go to Mass and enjoy Sunday!  Have a “Sunday Kind of Love” (1946 pop song, credits Barbara Belle, Anita Leonard, Louis Prima).

Finding a work-life balance is not easy nowadays.  Nonetheless, life is fulfilled in love.   Welcome to Sunday.  Love, like life, grows on its own accord without effort on our part if we let it happen.    Let it happen on Sunday.    

 

Categories: 

More Stories

Gardening Day at Our Lady of Lourdes

Volunteers Beautify the Our Lady of Lourdes Campus
July 16, 2021

The "weeders" of OLOL's Garden Committee: Shawn, Kevin, Christina and Carole! Hala, who is not shown, helped too. We enjoyed early morning...Read more

Amber Waves of Grain

Reflections on the American Heartland By Fr. Frederick Edlefsen
June 24, 2021

My first car, a blue 1989 five-speed Ford Escort, passed westbound down a rural highway in north central Kansas. Warm summer winds swept over...Read more

Our Lady of Lourdes 75th Anniversary in the Catholic Herald

"Our Lady of Lourdes Church marks its 75th anniversary as Amazon-related developments spark parish innovations" By Kevin Schweers
June 14, 2021

When the second-largest company in the country says it’s bringing you up to 25,000 new neighbors, what’s a Catholic church to do? The answer...Read more

Subscribe to Blog