|
Easter and BaptismFR. LEONARD M. PUECHSince baptism is a rebirth to a new life, a spiritual resurrection, it was most fitting that the Paschal Vigil be chosen for the administration of solemn baptism. This is the reason why during all the Easter octave, the liturgy alludes so often to baptism to remind the newly baptized, but also all of us, of what is baptism and of what it demands from all the baptized.
Since baptism is a rebirth to a new life, a spiritual resurrection,
it was most fitting that the Paschal Vigil be chosen for the administration of
solemn baptism. This is the reason why during all the Easter octave, the liturgy
alludes so often to baptism to remind the newly baptized, but also all of us,
of what is baptism and of what it demands from all the baptized. Before the
liturgical reform, every Sunday, during the aspersion of holy water preceding
the high-mass, all through Eastertide, we used to sing a beautiful antiphon, the

Vidi aquam: "I
saw water coming out from the right side of the temple, alleluia! And all those,
whom this water reached, were saved and will say: Alleluia, alleluia!" Then followed
a verse from Ps. 117: "Praise the Lord for he is good, for eternal is
he mercy." It contained a twofold allusion to Ezekiel and to Saint John and applied
their texts to baptism.
Ezekiel was a man of great visions. He describes one:
he saw a stream coming out from the right side of the future Temple, seen in a
series of visions, and it kept growing until it became a river, which it was impossible
to cross, teeming with fish, making every kind of fruit tree grow on its banks,
bearing abundant fruit in all seasons and flowing into the sea and making its
water wholesome (Ez.17,1-2). For his part Saint John insists (Jo.
19,34-35), that he saw blood and water coming out from the side of Jesus,
when one of the soldiers pierced it with a lance. This water, coming out from
the right side of the Temple, naturally suggested the water coming out from the
right side of Jesus, who said of his body: "Destroy this temple and in three days
I will raise it up again" (Jo.2,19). This water from the side of Jesus
was for many of the Fathers a symbol of baptism, figured also by the all-curing
and life-giving water described by Ezekiel, since it purifies from sin and bestows
grace, that we may bear abundant fruit spiritually (Jo.15,8). This was
the meaning of the beautiful Vidi aquam: the grace of baptism comes from
the Passion and death of Jesus, it purifies us and makes us spiritually fruitful.
The new liturgy has kept another text, which also was repeated in the divine
office all through Eastertide: "If you have risen with Christ, seek the things
that are above, where Christ is seated at the right hand of God. Mind the things
that are above, not the things that are on earth"(Col 3,1-2). For Saint
Paul baptism was a death to sin, a burial with Christ and a resurrection with
Christ to a new life (Rom.6,3-7). He reminds the Colossians what this
new life must be; they must no longer live for the things of the earth, their
desires and their thoughts must be for the goods of heaven, not for the goods
of the earth. We also need to be reminded that we have risen with Christ and that:
"If in union with him we have imitated his death, we shall also imitate him in
his resurrection" (Rom. 6,5). This is why the Church keeps repeating
to us: "If you have risen with Christ (through baptism) seek the things that are
above."

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Fr.
Leonard M. Puech, O.F.M. "Easter and Baptism." In Spiritual Guidance (Vancouver, B.C.: Vancouver Foundation of Art, Justice and Liberty, 1983), 244-246.
Republished
with permission of the Vancouver Foundation of Art, Justice and Liberty. THE
AUTHOR The late Fr. Leonard M. Puech wrote a popular column for
the B.C. Catholic from 1976 to 1982. Those columns were compiled and published
by the Vancouver Foundation of Art, Justice, and Liberty as the book Spiritual
Guidance in 1983. The VFAJL is interested in reprinting Spiritual Guidance.
Anyone who would like to contribute to this worthy cause please write: Dr. Margherita
Oberti, 1170 Eyremount Drive, West Vancouver, B.C. V7S 2C5. Copyright © 1983
Vancouver Foundation of Art, Justice, & Liberty
|