+BARTHOLOMEW
By the Grace of God
Archbishop of Constantinople, New Rome
And Ecumenical Patriarch
To the Plenitude of the Church
Grace, Peace and Mercy
By the Savior Christ Risen in Glory
Dearly beloved brothers and children in the Lord,
Christ is Risen!
In sullenness, one day in the 19th century, humankind heard from the
lips of the tragic philosopher: “God is dead! We killed him! All of us
are his murderers … God will remain dead! What else are the churches
but tombs and graves of God?” And only a few decades later, we heard
from the lips of his younger colleague: “Gentlemen, I declare to you
the death of God!”
These declarations of atheist philosophers shook the conscience of
people. Much confusion ensued in the field of the spirit and of
literature, of art and sometimes even of Theology, where, especially in
the West, there was debate even about a “Theology of the death of God.”
Of course, the Church never had the slightest doubt that God had died.
This occurred in 33AD, on the hill of Golgotha in Jerusalem, in the
reign of Pontius Pilate, the Roman Governor of Judaea. After suffering
an unspeakable passion, He was crucified as a criminal and, at about
the ninth hour of the Preparation of the Passover, he said: “It is
accomplished!” and surrendered His spirit. This is an unquestionable
historical reality. The Only-begotten Son and Word of God, Jesus
Christ, the true God, died for our sake. After assuming everything
that we have: body, soul, will, energy, toil, agony, pain, sorrow, joy,
all things except sin, he finally assumed our greatest concern, namely
death – indeed, in its most cruel and humiliating expression, namely on
the Cross. To this point, we are in agreement with the philosophers. We
would even accept that the churches, the temples, are “the tombs and
graves of God.” Nevertheless … we recognize, experience and worship
this God who has died, as “a most life-giving dead.” Only moments after
that awful Preparation, in the morning watch of “the first of the
Sabbath,” on the day of the Lord, what occurred was the reason for
which the divine economy of the flesh, passion, cross and descent into
Hades took place. The Resurrection! And this Resurrection is an equally
unquestionable historical reality! This reality has immediate and
salvific consequences for all of us. The Son of God, who is at the same
time the Son of Man, was risen. God was resurrected together with all
of humanity that He assumed: in the Body that He received from the pure
blood of the Most Holy Theotokos as well as in His sacred soul. He was
risen from the dead, “resurrecting the whole of Adam in His
loving-kindness.” Christ’s grave, the “empty tomb” of Joseph, is
forever empty. Instead of being a grave for the dead, it is a memorial
of victory over death; it is a fountain of life! The spiritual Sun of
Righteousness has dawned “beautiful, as from a grave,” granting the
unwaning light, peace, joy, gladness, and eternal life. It is true that
the temples were the “tombs” of God, but they were empty tombs, filled
with light and replete with “the fragrance of life” and the smell of
Paschal spring, brilliant, splendid, adorned in glory and with
life-giving flowers of tangible hope. The death of God overturned the
powers of Hades; death itself was reduced to nothing more than a mere
incident introducing humanity from death to Life. The Churches, those
“tombs of God,” are the wide-open gates of divine love, the opened
entrance to the Bridal chamber of God’s Son, who “came out of the tomb
as from a Bridegroom,” while we faithful enter therein and “celebrate
the death of death, the annihilation of Hades, the beginning of a new,
eternal way of life; and, thus rejoicing, we offer hymns to the cause,
namely the only blessed and glorious God of our fathers.”
It is fortunate, then, that God died because His death became the
source of our life and resurrection. It is fortunate that there are so
many of His “tombs” throughout the world, so many sacred temples, where
each of can freely enter when we are in pain, tired, and in need of
consolation in order lay before God the burden of our suffering, agony,
fear and insecurity – namely, in order to become rid of our death. It
is fortunate that we have Churches of the crucified, dead, risen and
living Christ, where before the hopelessness of our time, the betrayal
of all idols, the “lowly gods” that have stolen our hearts, such as the
economy, the ideology, the philosophy, the metaphysics and all those
“empty deceits” of our “age of deception,” we can find refuge,
comfort and salvation.
From the Ecumenical Patriarchate, the Mother Church, which experiences
to the utmost the Passion, Pain, Cross, and Death, as well as the
Resurrection of Christ, we extend to all the faithful of the Church our
wholehearted Paschal greeting and blessing, together with the embrace
of our Lord Jesus Christ, who was risen from the dead and lives
eternally, granting life to all people. To Him be glory, might, honor
and worship, with the Father and Holy Spirit, to the ages. Amen.
Holy Pascha 2009
+BARTHOLOMEW of Constantinople
Your fervent intercessor before the Risen Christ

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