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If ever there was a group that needed faith and trust in God and his promises, it was the first followers of Christ. They truly lived in unprecedented times. They saw with their eyes and touched with their hands the Word made flesh. They witnessed Jesus miracles, saw him die on the Cross and encountered him after he rose again.
We may wrongly imagine that faith came easily to these first Christians. Yet, it is difficult to grasp how astonishing Christs resurrection really was for his first disciples. The Apostles could not have invented the story of the resurrection since it seemed impossible to them (Compendium, 127). They needed faith and trust in God no less than we do!
After all, the resurrection of Jesus was not merely a resuscitation; it was different from the miracles Jesus performed to bring the dead back to life. Like those miracles, Jesus resurrection was an event in history, and the marks on his hands and side attest to the fact that his risen body is that which was crucified (Compendium, 129). Nonetheless, the Resurrection was an event that goes beyond history. By rising from the dead, Jesus brought our humanity into the glory of God.
Scripture reveals that Jesus, risen from the dead, could appear to his disciples how and where he wished and under various aspects (ibid). Thus, Mary Magdalene thought Jesus was the gardener until he spoke her name (John 20:11 ff). Similarly, the two disciples on the road to Emmaus did not recognize the risen Lord as they walked along; their eyes were opened when they recognized him in the breaking of bread (Luke 24:13 ff). Finally, the Apostles, locked in the Upper Room out of fear, were amazed when Jesus stood in their midst (Luke 24:36 ff).
While these appearances and others after Christs resurrection brought joy to the disciples, they also caused deep wonderment, fear and confusion. After all, in the Resurrection, the disciples encountered the awesome work of the Holy Trinity. As the Compendium explains: The three Persons act together according to what is proper to them: the Father manifests his power; the Son takes again the life which he freely offered (Jn 10:17), reuniting his soul and his body which the Spirit brings to life and glorifies (Compendium, 130).
In a very real sense, there was no road map for the life of faith that the first followers of Christ were called to embrace. The Resurrection surpassed all God had promised of old. To be one of these first disciples was certainly a challenge, the likes of which we can scarcely imagine. To be sure, the disciples fully came to grasp all this only after they had received the Holy Spirit.
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