EASTER -The Enterprise is Exploration into God

Fr. Brian Murphy • April 14, 2025

 His people

On Easter night, he entered the upper room to the amazement of his people, and breathed the Holy Spirit upon them.  With that breath the renewal of creation began. For centuries God had been preparing for this renewal through his deepening relationship with his chosen people, Israel.


Long ago, he took a tribe of slaves out of oppression in Egypt. Then he led them through the desert for 40 years in which these wild spirits gradually made covenant with him, because they saw his mighty deeds. It was his right hand alone that brought them victories. Remember how Joshua and Hur held up Moses’ arms in prayer to bring them victory over the Amalekites? The walls of Jericho tumbled down as they processed around them praising him. He led them to conquer city after city, becoming skilful warriors. But it was by God’s “right hand and arm” that they gained victories “because he loved them”. (Psalm 44). That was an amazing time.


Then they settled and cultivated the land, became farmers and gradually their civilization grew, they started recording their history in books. But it was also a long period of centuries in which he stopped feeding them like babies – they had to grow up. They struggled to  stop inventing their own religion, and slowly learned to deal with the real God in the way he demanded. All their worst vices came out and they had terrible times of crisis, but after two thousand years, there were enough of them ready to receive the Messiah. Jesus, the Son of God became flesh.


After Jesus had ascended to Heaven, they assumed their new name “Christians”. It was time to bring all people into Israel. He stunned them with spiritual victories as they converted the Roman Empire and assimilated the wisdom of many cultures especially the Greeks.


As they continued their journey of converting new peoples throughout the world, holiness flourished alongside depravity, all the worst vices came out and they struggled each in their day with evils within themselves.


A great Christian culture developed. Its fruits were: human rights, university learning, universal education, the founding of hospitals, science and democracy to name a few. But that too was a preparation stage from which the next development is to take place. God’s renewal of creation is progressive not static.


What is the next development in God’s plan? In a prophetic poem, Christopher Fry writes:


Thank God our time is now when wrong
Comes up to face us everywhere,
Never to leave us till we take
The longest stride of soul men ever took.

Affairs are now soul size.
The enterprise is exploration into God.
Where are you making for? It takes
So many thousand years to wake…  (The Sleep of Prisoners)


Our own day and age.

God is leading us into a new age. He has enabled an explosion of development in the sciences, which can be used for wonderful human development or for destruction. Real development will only come if humanity manages to grow up. We have to face the depravity and brokenness of the human heart. Like Israel claiming the Promised Land, we will only achieve maturity through the "right hand and arm" of him who loves us.


And he has been busy preparing his people for the new age of grace. In the West, the cradle of Christianity, he is changing his Church. From being the powerful formers of culture, he has made us weak almost to the point of irrelevance. This was so that we would radically depend on "his right hand and arm", not on our selves, which is always a temptation when times are going your way.


We are diminished in size, but growing in holiness. We are now to come before him to intercede, and believe that the walls of mankind's inner Jerichos will fall. "Affairs are now soul size". He is calling us to recognise our royal priesthood which requires us to intercede more profoundly. That means a greater life of prayer - the "exploration into God".


God’s donkeys

In making us more humble he is enabling us to be better agents of his will wherever and however he shows it to us. This will usually takes the form of fulfilling humble tasks. It is in these that we will be refined and grow into agents of refining humankind like gold.


Our King comes riding on a donkey. Not a pretty animal, stubborn, sounding like a fog-horn, designed to pull and carry heavy loads. No one writes songs about donkeys. But there is a cross marked on its back, and for millennia it has carried our aged, infirm, pregnant mothers and precious children. It is the humble servant of the King.


And how humble our King is! We are his donkeys today, bringing him to a hungry world through offering him all our works and prayers, the “spiritual sacrifices” St Peter spoke of (1 Peter 2:5).


We must never underestimate the immense power of this prayer of intercession. When we open ourselves to God in prayer, we journey into his mysterious, ineffable being. Our understanding fails to grasp him, but a knowing grows in our hearts. That knowing is that undefinable activity called love, and love will never be satisfied until everything is bonded finally with God, and all creation is renewed.


The Holy Spirit is the hidden agent in the Trinity, the catalyst and choreographer of this love which fills the universe. He is bringing the universe into the wholeness and holiness of the Trinity. We are his chosen collaborators. The name of this God-charged phenomenon is Church.


Through his Church, God is gathering all creation into communion

As people today rightly claim their freedom to take responsibility like adults, traditional communities have become fractured and new so-called ‘communities’ are springing up in social media. They are virtual and far from virtuous, lacking the richness of physical touch. But the fracturing of communities founded on flesh and blood  is preparation for the emergence of 'communion', which is how the Holy Spirit  transforms human communities. 


As our hearts grow in the prayer of loving our Father, love and responsibility for others become more active and spreads, and the world itself is gradually changed. This is the dynamic we have to understand. There is a great difference between natural human communities and the communion which is the fruit of the Spirit.


At Easter his people first met the risen Lord and they remembered how he told Martha “I am the Resurrection and the Life”? He didn't say "I am risen",  but "I am resurrection". It is not just Jesus who rose two thousand years ago, it is us along with all creation that are in the process of rising from the dead with him. It is the death of selfishness and disharmony.


He is “The Life” and is among us. Through Church, humanity is increasingly being drawn into that life. Expect greater penetration of the Holy Spirit who generates harmony.

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