For Mary
Magdalene, it ends with tears, disbelief, and then, a conviction that has
earned her the title, “apostle to the apostles.” What ends for her? It is what for centuries has been called the triduum—Latin for “three days.” It is the three days from Maundy Thursday to
Easter Sunday.
John 20
records how she goes to the tomb, and instead of finding the body of Jesus, she
is greeted by two angels. And when she does see Jesus—alive!—she mistakes him
for the gardener. After Mary realizes
the incredible, outrageous, and wonderful truth, the other disciples (the men)
refuse to believe her.
What’s been
going on for those three days? Why are
they the three days like none other?
What is
going on with the disciples? Surely they
have feelings of grief, anguish, and fear.
Perhaps there are voices of self-recrimination welling up within
them. “What were we thinking? How could we have believed him?”
Those three
days are an interim time like none other.
There were so many things they talked about. There were so many dreams. There was so much that they felt like they
could accomplish. Still, didn’t he make
that strange comment that they would do even “greater works”? (John 14:12).
This is a
model for interim time for all places and all seasons. It is a time for the birthing of dreams and
visions. It is a time for seeing a new
thing, for singing a new song. Still,
not everything gets done. Not everything
that we feel is important gets accomplished.
We might try some things, and then realize that they really aren’t what
we need. (At least, not now.)
And there’s
always the astonishing discovery of what we
were sure was dead coming back to life!
Your
partner on this Easter journey (the Easter season begins this year on the 20th
of this month)…
(The upper image is from www.overheardinthesacristy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/mary-magdalene.jpg,
and the lower one is from hergracedevata.blogspot.com/2011/03/mary-magdalene-high-priestess-of.html.)