Alleluia dear brothers and sisters! As the response to the psalm this morning puts it: “This is the day the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad.” Indeed, the Church celebrates the next one week as a single day of Easter! It does so because, alleluia, this is the day above all days! The day when, alleluia, it was shown as fact that death is no longer the final barrier of human life. Our Lord Jesus Christ, who rose from the dead, demonstrated His glorified body to his disciples, and ate and drank with them, gave us bodily and undeniable proof of this fact. And this fact changed the lives of his friends altogether! No longer were they afraid of what the power and principalities of the world could do to them because they knew that something greater and bigger was in store for them. To rephrase a little saying:
Sticks and stones may break my bones,I shall not die, but live,
But the power of the world will never hurt me.
It was this knowledge of life after physical death that, as we heard in the reading from the Acts of the Apostles today, gave the apostles the power to go out throughout the world and proclaim the Good News, such that not social ostracism, nor torture, nor martyrdom could dissuade them anymore. Bear in mind that every single apostle of Our Lord, except St. John the evangelist, died a martyr. They did not fear this bloody end because, as the psalm sings today, they knew that:
I shall not die, but live,
and declare the works of the LORD.
This knowledge of life after death, this faith in the resurrection, should animate our own lives and the way we live it. In this matter, St Paul in the second reading has some very useful advice:
Brothers and sisters:
… let us celebrate the feast,
not with the old yeast, the yeast of malice and wickedness,
but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth.
A friend of mine was recently bemoaning the fact that he all he sees is wickedness and malice growing in Goa – and he was referring to the growth of this yeast among Catholics. It pained me to agree with him, because this is the sad fact of Catholic life in contemporary Goa. We may come to Sunday mass, we may go to a variety of devotions, but after all of that is done, our ways are often wicked and malicious as we try to get ahead in the wicked and malicious world that we live in. And this is just for those who fulfill the external obligations of being a Catholic. What of those who bear Catholic names, profess themselves as Catholics but do not in fact practice the faith?
My dear brothers and sisters, the task of the Catholic is to be the yeast of sincerity and truth. As I contemplated this fact sometime ago the following verse from St Paul’s letter to the Galatians (5:9) came to mind:
A little yeast leavens the whole batch of dough.
My dear brothers and sisters, it is not uncommon for us Catholics in Goa to moan (and mourn) as in this verse from the book of Daniel (3: 37-38):
For we, O Lord, have become fewer
than any other nation,
and are brought low this day in all the world because
of our sins.
In our day we have no ruler, or prophet, or leader,
no burnt offering, or sacrifice, or oblation, or
incense,
no place to make an offering before you and to find
mercy.
Indeed, this was once my own attitude, until I realized, that in fact, we do have a ruler, a prophet and prince. We have a sacrifice and a place to make offering. That ruler, prophet and leader is Our Risen Lord Jesus Christ, who is Himself the sacrifice and the altar of sacrifice. And he has assured us that we are the leaven. And it is for this reason, to show His power, that he permits us to be a minority in Goa today.
The Catholic has been in a minority in Goa since at least the nineteenth century when the New Conquests were added to the Old Conquests. And yet, despite all this time, it is clear that what is good in Goa comes from the goodness of Christianity. The gentleness, and honesty, of its people is the result of the Christian virtues that were practiced and became the social norm. The little yeast was able to leaven the whole batch of Goan dough.
This is, unfortunately, no longer the case because in many ways, we, who are obliged to bring goodness to the whole of Goa, have resigned ourselves to worldly thinking. We now believe that we need to accommodate ourselves to the wickedness that we see around us. My dear brothers and sisters, the message of Easter is that Christ will triumph in the end, when He comes in glory. If we are to triumph with Him, and live forever in our glorified bodies, it is necessary that we must not accommodate ourselves to the world, but empty ourselves every day. Doing what is good, doing what is right, doing what is just, bringing beauty to the world around us, because as St. Peter says “He commissioned us to preach to the people.” If you fail in your practice of the faith, go confess, because as Saint Peter assures us “everyone who believes in him will receive forgiveness of sins through his name.” And then, with the grace you have received through absolution, start again. Being the yeast your life may be one of constant martyrdom, but like the apostles, at the end of your life here on earth, you will be able to say:
I shall not die, but live,
and declare the works of the LORD.”
Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia.
(A version of this homily was first preached at the parish church of Our Lady of the Rosary, Fatorda on Easter Sunday 20 April 2025.)
(Image reference: “Adoration of the Mystic Lamb” from the Ghent Altarpiece, Hubert and Jan van Eyck, mid-1420s – 1432, St Bavo's Cathedral, Ghent.)