Year
A
Second Sunday of Easter
Image
The
Easter Story
Points to note
This
Sunday’s story continues on from that of Palm Sunday. As such, it is recommended that you refer to
the leaflet for Palm Sunday. Where the
Passion story ends with Jesus being placed in the tomb, the Easter story picks
up from early morning two days later. What
happens in the intervening period remains in the realms of the mysteries of
faith.
The
setting of the story changes. The
Passion story was one of a long continuous heavy drama. The Easter story is one many short episodes
pieced together. The Passion story was
threaded into one flowing narrative. The
Easter story seems more chaotic, with few connections between the
episodes. Perhaps, the Passion story is
more reflective of God’s organised plan, while the Easter story is our story,
of the disorganised mortals who were our ancestors in faith.
The
mood of the story also changes. The
Passion story propels itself forward with by the force of its gripping
drama. If told well, the children should
be tensed but riveted at the end of it.
The Easter story moves quicksilver-like from one episode to
another. On the one hand, the shortness
of the episodes is more in line with the children’s attention span. One the other, the constant shifting in the
story line may prove detrimental. The
story-teller must be prepared to lengthen the more exciting episodes or drop
the less exciting ones.
The
end to the story is also crucial. The
Passion story ended on a sombre note, perhaps even a defeatist note. Even for those of us who know of the
resurrection round the corner, we can’t but help feel downcast when we hear of
Jesus entombed. The Easter story,
however, must end very positively. The
first bishops of our Church stand poised on the tidal wave of evangelising
fervour that will one day engulf much of the world. The end of the Easter story must paint a
picture of the apostles bravely facing the unknown future, a hostile world, but
also a great adventure about to begin.
Liturgy
As with Palm
Sunday, I will not set the exact wording of the story but will outline the
various episodes and indicated the parts that must be told in regular print.
Optional parts are in italics.
The Easter
story is basically contained in the last chapter in each Gospel (the last two
in Jn). You should read them for
yourself if you are not too familiar.
Note however that the sequence of stories in each of the Gospels is a
little different and you may have to work out the sequence into a unified
story. I have also included a few
apocryphal stories about the apostles I have found interesting. The only problem is when children ask where
you got the apocryphal stories from.
Well, you find your own answers to that one.
Easter morning: the empty tomb
Early Sunday morning when it was still dark, Mary
Magdalene went to the tomb. This is not Mary the mother of Jesus. She found the stone at the door to the
tomb rolled away, and looking inside, she saw that it was empty. She ran off to tell the apostles.
Peter and John went to the tomb. John
ran ahead of Peter and got there first but he let Peter enter before him. They saw it empty and remembered that
Jesus had told them that he would rise again.
Mary Magdalene and Jesus
Mary stood outside, weeping. When she looked in, she saw two angels who
asked why she was crying. She replied
that someone had taken her Lord away and she doesn’t know where they have put
him.
When she went outside, she met Jesus but did not
recognise him. Thinking that he was the
gardener, she asked where he had put Jesus.
Jesus called her by her name and she recognised Jesus. Quote
Jesus: My sheep know me. Jesus will always call us by our name, as he
did with Abraham, Samuel and the others.
But Jesus told her not to cling to him but to tell the others the good
news.
Discuss that if anyone had good news, wouldn’t they want to tell the
other people?
Mary ran off to tell the apostles the good news,
but nobody believed her!! Well, would
you? If someone were to tell you that
the chap who died last week was seen around, would you believe him?
Easter afternoon: the road to Emmaus
Two disciples went off on a journey to a nearby
town, Emmaus. Jesus came up to them but
they didn’t recognise him. Link this with Mary in the earlier
story. Jesus asked what they were
discussing and they told him about the crucifixion and the reports that he had
been seen but they were unsure about the reports. Jesus explained to them the passages in the
Bible about himself. When they arrived
at Emmaus, the two disciples invited Jesus to stay with them for supper. When he broke the bread, they recognised
him. Link
this with the words during the institutional narrative at mass, “Do this in
memory of me”. But he disappeared
from their sight.
Easter evening: Jesus and Thomas
That evening, the apostles were all gathered in a
locked room because they were afraid. Jesus
walked through the door and had supper with them. His first words to them were
“Peace be with you”, the same words we use at mass.
Thomas was not there that evening. When they told him about it, he refused to
believe “Unless I put my finger into the holes in his hands and my hand into
the hole in his side, I refuse to believe”.
The next Sunday, they were gathered likewise and Jesus walked through
the door again. Thomas fell at the feet
of Jesus and proclaimed him “My Lord and my God”, the first person to have
called Jesus God.
Stories of the Apostles
Jesus stayed with the apostles for forty days
before ascending to heaven. Ten days
later, he sent the Holy Spirit on them on Pentecost day. Greatly strengthened, the apostles went out
to the world and told them about Jesus. The following stories are not biblical.
The apostles
drew lots to see where they would go.
Peter went to Rome and became the first bishop of Rome. Once, when he was running away to escape from
soldiers, he saw Jesus walking the other direction. When he asked Jesus where he was going, Jesus
replied that he was going to Rome to be crucified again. Peter was so ashamed of himself that he ran
ahead of Jesus and was arrested. He told
the soldiers that he should be crucified upside-down as he was not worthy to be
crucified like Jesus.
Thomas was
chosen to go to India. He didn’t want to
because it was so far away. Jesus
visited him in a dream, but still he told Jesus, “Anywhere Lord but India”. The next morning, Jesus was at the harbour
and asked the captain of a ship if he needed a slave, pointing out to him
Thomas. The captain called Thomas over
and asked him if Jesus was his master.
When Thomas said yes, the captain said he had bought him and Thomas was
going to India. Thomas went and made many
Christians there.
Of all the
apostles, only John lived to an old age but in exile in the island of
Patmos. Andrew was crucified on an
X-shaped cross in Greece. James was martyred in Spain and Matthew in Ethiopia. Philip was crucified in Turkey. Bartholomew was whipped to death in
Armenia. Simon and Jude were killed for
the faith in Persia.
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