I have
very basic food in the house. I realize that as soon as I start looking for
something nice to prepare for Easter Sunday.
The Lord
is risen. It’s a time for rejoicing. Easter Sunday is the most important
holiday in the Christian calendar because Jesus’ resurrection is a fulfillment
of God’s promises to mankind.
I do not
even have dessert.
I look
through my ref and decide that it’s still going to be a one-viand meal, like it’s
been under the lockdown. I make bistek tagalog
for lunch and that’s it, with rice. That’s more than a lot of people have under
the lockdown, but I decide that we can do with a little more today.
I look
through my online sources and decide we will have pizza as a mid-afternoon
snack. Our favorite pizza place is closed so I try one that’s open, nearby and delivers.
It comes
after more than an hour and I have to go out to the village gate to get it, as
stipulated by the housing association as part of precautionary measures against
COVID-19.
Of
course, everyone is excited. NOW, it is Easter Sunday. Everyone is in a
celebratory mood, which slowly subsides when we open the box. It IS pizza, but
a gummy-looking one. Worse, it’s a gummy-tasting one. Our dog takes one sniff
and ambles off. The pup, always an adventurous one, jumps up for a morsel and
promptly spits it out.
We eat
it, of course. No one wastes food at this time.
The amount we paid for that pizza was about the cost of a meal.
Credit: Vatican Media/CNA |
I have no
quarrel with that. I just thought that a Mass in English or Filipino would be
easier to follow, especially since we’d already attended a Sunday Mass online
at St. Peter’s before this and found ourselves struggling with Latin.
Again, we
rely on our familiarity with the Mass to participate and respond, although in
English. We are grateful every time an English translation is provided. This
way, we are able to fully understand the Pope's call for solidarity in the face
of the “epochal challenge” posed by the coronavirus pandemic.
We stay
on for his Urbi et Orbi message and
hear him echo the hope in our hearts when he ends it with a prayer:
"May
Christ, who has already defeated death and opened for us the way to eternal
salvation, dispel the darkness of our suffering humanity and lead us into the
light of his glorious day, a day that knows no end."
Happy
Easter, everyone.