Empty Tomb. Full Hearts.

Published on 20 April 2025 at 00:13


Our deacon, in one of his homilies, once invited us to place our hurts, failures, and quiet heartbreaks on the altar during the Offertory—when the bread and wine are brought forward to be lifted to heaven during the consecration—and to ask God, in His mercy and great love for us, to replace them with His peace and joy, so we can go about our lives with hopeful hearts. Yes, I’ve been doing it ever since!

This belief rooted in faith and trust in the risen Lord, is that perfect invitation to surrender our burdens: the wounds we carry, the temptations we battle, the disappointments we still hide at the coming of Easter.  

It’s in that sacred moment at Mass, and Easter itself, and any day in between  that we don’t simply offer gifts of bread and wine, but ourselves, too, and any brokenness as well and weariness that we carry. That in itself is the essence of it.

 

Who's with me?



This is why if we have those tangled mess of things we can’t untangle, but are there in the back of our heads, such as those that keep us up at night, and without fail steal our joy—this Easter, let's offer them up believing in His apart abundant mercy. Without a doubt He will receive them, after all Easter has been dubbed as “The Great Exchange!”

Indeed! Easter is all that—The Great Exchange! Christ' death for our salvation!


So, let's prepare to ask Him to take what is wounded in our beings and exchange it for what is whole. For Him to take sorrows of this world and replace it with peace. For Him to receive humanity's weakness and pour in His courage and strength. For Him to flood our empty hearts with generosity. And for Him to lead us to where we can find solace.

Why? Because that is exactly what Easter reveals: the God who is ever ready to accept our offering, no matter how messy or insignificant, and transforms it with His love.



And, not to forget that at the cross, Jesus took on every burden we’ve ever carried—even those we've already forgotten but unconsciously still carry the weight of them, and every shameful thought, every broken promise, every sin, every wound—so, in His resurrection, He didn’t just rise alone. He brought with Him the promise that all things can be made new.


There's so much to love Easter then, right? This is why we are called to REJOICE! We need to understand that it is the story of hearts unburdened, chains loosed, hope reborn. It’s the assurance that what we place in God’s hands will not be wasted. Divine, isn't it?

 

So, if we haven't yet pondered deep into what Easter morning is about—yes, it's the rolling of stone, but it rolls back despair, doubt, and death itself. Yes, Jesus finished the battle. He has the last laugh. He has the final say. He finished but God sure isn’t yet finished with the world. Not with you. Not with me.



So, on days when it seems we're at the end of our rope, when hope is wearing thin, when the struggles seem to be winning—that's when the battle is almost won. So, if we truly are the believers we profess to be, with hearts occupied by His presence, then surely Easter isn’t just a day on the calendar. It’s Jesus cheering us on to stay the course. Because the reality is, a great exchange is happening every day—countless times a day. Let’s live like the tomb is empty and the throne is occupied.

 

So this Easter, we shouldn't hold back. Offer it all—our joy, our sorrow, our confusion, and every longing there is. Lay it at His feet. Trust Him with the exchange. Come, let us adore Him!

 

Because the tomb is empty.
Because He is risen—and He still receives what we bring.

 

And in return, He gives us Himself.


He is risen. And so are we. This is why we call ourselves the Easter people! Amen.πŸ™πŸ™πŸ™

Now is your turn to share your stories ingrained with a heavenly touch. Shoot me a message, I’d love to hear your thoughts

Many Blessings!



Create Your Own Website With Webador