Reflection: If God has the power to do anything, why did he invent Easter Saturday?
On the Friday, Jesus died, and the disciples must have felt like their whole world had crumbled. They had left everything and followed him, devoting themselves to his teaching. And then it was gone. They must have felt a mixture of things from devastation, bewilderment, disappointment, grief, sadness, abandonment and fear.
Then nothing. It was the Sabbath. They rested.
God could have fast forwarded the story to stop their suffering, but he waited. I wonder if the way they felt was a bit like what St John of the Cross refers to as the dark night of the spirit, which represents the great letting go of all we hold onto in life to the point where we die a spiritual death. A parallel process is going on here. One is in the death of Jesus on the cross, and the other, a deep spiritual death in the disciples. This process is not one that can be rushed. It has to be patiently traversed so that we totally and completely die to ourselves. It takes time.
Perhaps that is why God does not step in straight away to fix things for the disciples or for us when we are in pain. There is something quietly happening in the waiting. A great letting go, where it is God and not us that is working for transformation. When this process is complete, we are ready for Easter Sunday. The redemption of our suffering.
Prayer: God, I don’t understand why you don’t just step in and fix things when they go wrong. Waiting is painful and I don’t want to do it. If some good can come out of it, I pray that you would work in my life, and give me patience to wait until redemption comes. Amen.