Making Things New
Great Vigil of Easter (Year A)
Genesis 1.1—2.4a; Exodus 14.10-31, 15.20-21; Ezekiel 37.1-14;
Romans 6.3-11; Matthew 21.1-11
St. Gregory’s, Long Beach
The Great Vigil of Easter is, from start to finish, the story of things being made new. Or making new things. Consider how we started the service—in the courtyard with the lighting of what is called the “New Fire.” A symbol of what is to come. The unfolding of the story of how Christ, through his resurrection, is the light of life who has been victorious in overcoming the darkness of sin and death. By the light of this New Fire we processed into the darkened church, as into a darkened and empty tomb. The light of this New Fire dispelling the darkness, just as the glory of Christ’s resurrection would have dispelled the darkness of his three-days’ tomb. But this story of new life made possible, made real, by the Risen Lord is not the beginning. Rather, this new life we celebrate this night is the culmination thus far of a series of things being made new. A mere sampling of which provide the scriptural framework that undergirds not only our Great Vigil celebration, but our very existence as God’s Creation.
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