Today, Holy Saturday, there are no “readings of the day,” but those of us attending the Easter Vigil will have more than enough Scripture to make up for it. Hearing the readings, we will see a beautiful picture of our salvation won for us in the Paschal Mystery, the apex of human history. This salvation was planned for us from the beginning of time. The readings of the Easter Vigil take us from the creation of the world through the Fall, the wanderings of the Israelites, the promise of the New Covenant, and the Incarnation and Resurrection.
This is a unique opportunity to recognize the providence of God. God had always planned to become man: He knew that we would fall, and He intended to draw us into an even greater reality than that of the Garden of Eden. The Fall did not “surprise” God. He created all things knowing what it would mean. He knew exactly what would unfold, and knew that He would bring good out of it all.
We can hear the wonders of God at the Easter Vigil and still doubt about God’s preparedness, or His competence: Why would He have created Adam and Eve for them to fall, or made Abraham’s descendants into a great nation for them to constantly break faith with Him? Why would He set up a new and definitive covenant knowing that there would be many who would spurn it? If He knew that this would happen, why did He allow it?
The glory of Easter gives us a glimpse into this, a glory at once confusing and illuminating. We cannot fully grasp the meaning of the death of Jesus Christ. It is hard to understand why God would want to suffer if He could have just created the world differently. But the Resurrection is difficult to argue with. The glory that Jesus shows us we can attain is blinding, more than we could ever deserve.
We may not understand why or how, but God did not make a mistake in ordering the world in the way that He did. The Vigil readings show us that He created a mosaic, full of striking turns and flashes of color that coalesce into something beautiful.
By David Dashiell