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<b style="margin:0px;outline:medium none currentcolor;padding:0px;font-family:georgia,"times new roman";font-weight:normal"><b style="margin:0px;outline:medium none currentcolor;padding:0px;font-size:18px;font-family:georgia,"times new roman";color:rgb(0,0,0);font-weight:normal;font-style:normal"><span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-size:18px;font-weight:400;line-height:inherit;text-decoration:inherit;font-family:georgia,"times new roman";font-style:normal"><b style="margin:0px;outline:medium none currentcolor;padding:0px;font-weight:normal"><b style="margin:0px;outline:medium none currentcolor;padding:0px;font-size:18px;font-family:georgia,"times new roman";color:rgb(0,0,0);font-weight:normal;font-style:normal"><span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-size:18px;font-weight:400;line-height:inherit;text-decoration:inherit;font-family:georgia,"times new roman";font-style:normal">Friends,
<span style="background-color:rgb(208,224,227)"><b> in today’s Gospel, the risen Jesus appears to his eleven disciples.</b></span> He
does not appear as a Platonic soul, a ghost, or a hallucination.
Instead,<span style="background-color:rgb(208,224,227)"><b> he can be touched and seen, has flesh and bones, and can
consume baked fish. Against all their expectations, a dead man had
returned, through the power of God, bodily and objectively from death. </b></span></span><br><br><span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-size:18px;font-weight:400;line-height:inherit;text-decoration:inherit;font-family:georgia,"times new roman";font-style:normal">Even
while insisting on this bodiliness and objectivity, we must not go to
the opposite extreme. <span style="background-color:rgb(208,224,227)"><b> It really was Jesus, the crucified, who had
returned from the dead. But he did not come back simply resuscitated to
the confines of ordinary space and time. He was not, in a word, like
Lazarus, the daughter of Jairus, or the son of the widow of Naim, all
people who had been
raised only to die again.</b></span><br></span><br><span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-size:18px;font-weight:400;line-height:inherit;text-decoration:inherit;font-family:georgia,"times new roman";font-style:normal"><span style="background-color:rgb(255,242,204)"><b>Instead,
Jesus’ body is transformed and transfigured, independent of</b></span> <span style="background-color:rgb(217,234,211)"><b>the
strictures of space and time</b></span>; it is, in Paul’s language,<span style="background-color:rgb(255,242,204)"><b> a “spiritual”
body. And the point is this: he has triumphed over<span style="background-color:rgb(234,209,220)"> death </span>and all <span style="background-color:rgb(234,209,220)">that
pertains to death</span>. </b><b>His resurrected body is a foretaste and promise of
what God intends for all of us.</b></span></span></b></b></span></b></b>
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