This is the archetypal liturgy of the whole Church year. It consists
            of four parts: (1) the service of light with the Easter
            proclamation; (2) the Liturgy of the Word; (3) the Liturgy of
            Baptism; (4) the Liturgy of the Eucharist.
            
            The origins of the light service are probably pagan, and their
            Christian meaning is uncertain though strangely moving. It is
            perhaps well, therefore, that it is recommended that this ceremony
            be performed outside the church, and suggested that other ceremonies
            more adapted to the culture of a particular region may be
            substituted. (Some Anglicans carry out the ceremony of the new
            fire after the prophecies, so that its kindling
            marks the transitus of the Messiah.)
            
            The Easter proclamation focuses upon the three main themes of the
            vigil service: the deliverance of Israel in the Exodus (“This
            is the night when you first
            saved our fathers”); the baptismal
            deliverance of the new Israel (“This is the night when
            Christians everywhere ... are restored to grace”); the
            resurrection of Christ (“This is the night when Jesus Christ
            broke the chains ...”).
            
            Seven readings from the Old Testament and two from the New Testament
            are assigned to the Easter Vigil. Some may be omitted if
            circumstances warrant it; however, it is recommended that three
            selections from the Old Testament be read before the epistle and
            gospel. The third reading from Exodus about the escape through the
            Red Sea should always be used, as the rubrics advise.
            
            
Reading I: Genesis 1:1 – 2:2 (long form); 1:1, 26-31a (short form)
            It is appropriate to read the story of the first creation on the
            night that celebrates the inauguration of the new creation. The
            Genesis story is not to be read as historical narration. Its
            importance is proclamatory: God is the source of the whole creative
            process; it depends at each moment on God.
            
            Human beings comprise the one species selected by God to bear
            God’s image, to have an I-thou relationship with the source
            of all being. The reading of this story further points toward the
            new creation and restoration of the divine image, which had been
            defaced by sin.
          
Responsorial Psalm: 104:1-2a, 5-6, 10, 12-14, 24, 35c; or 33:4-7, 12-13, 20, 22
            Psalm 104 is a hymn of praise to God for his works in creation. The
            dominant theology of the Spirit in the wisdom literature
            (“the Spirit of God fills the world”) stresses the
            work of the Spirit in the created order.
            
            By contrast, the New Testament concentrates almost exclusively on
            the eschatological work of the Spirit. The pneumatology of the New
            Testament is conditioned by its Christology.
            
            When the psalmist speaks of the “renewal” of creation
            through the Spirit, he is probably thinking of no more than the
            renewal of nature at springtime.
            
            But in Christian use it can be reinterpreted to mean the
            eschatological renewal of creation, a renewal of which the Church is
            the first fruits. 
            
            Psalm 33 is in part a hymn praising God for his creative activity, a
            theme that is highlighted in the second stanza of the present
            selection.
            
            When this stanza speaks of God’s creating the universe by his
            word, it is thinking of the Genesis story that has just been read:
            God created the world by saying, “Let there be light,”
            etc.
            
            In later development the word of God was hypostatized (Wisdom of
            Solomon, Philo), and finally in the Fourth Gospel it was identified
            with the Logos, which thus eventually became the second Person of
            the Blessed Trinity.
          
Reading II: Genesis 22:1-18 (long form); 22:1-2, 9a, 10-13, 15-18 (short form)
            Special interest attaches to the Genesis 22 reading because already in Jewish tradition the
            “binding” of Isaac was associated with the Passover.
            The story was expanded to bring out, among other things, the
            following points: Isaac freely consented to die as a sacrifice, and
            his sacrifice was vicarious, available for the sanctification of
            humankind.
            
            The Isaac story was therefore ready for the early Christians to use
            as a type of Christ’s sacrifice, which exactly what Paul does
            in Romans 8:32. There are even suggestions in Judaism that Isaac’s
            reprieve was a kind of death and resurrection, thus making it
            eminently fitting for use at the Easter Vigil.
            
Responsorial Psalm II: 16:5, 8-11
This psalm is used on the thirty-third Sunday of the year in series B, where it is a direct response to the proclamation of Christ’s resurrection. Here it is a response to the binding of Isaac, in which the Church Fathers saw a type of Christ’s resurrection.
Reading III: Exodus 14:15 – 15:1
            The Exodus reading is the most important reading in the whole
            series, an importance underlined by the requirement that this
            passage must invariably be used. It appears that its use on this
            occasion goes back to the earliest days of Christianity and was
            probably taken over from the Jewish paschal liturgy.
            
            The crossing of the Red Sea is the supreme type of Christ’s
            death and resurrection, and of the Christian’s dying and
            rising again with him in baptism (see 1 Cor 10:11).
            
Responsorial Psalm III: Exodus 15:1-6, 17-18
            This, the Song of Moses, is the most famous of the Old Testament
            psalms outside the psalter. Opinions have varied as to its
            antiquity. Earlier critics supposed it to be a much later
            composition because of its apparent references to later history; but
            recently it has been thought to have originated not long after the
            settlement of Canaan (the Song of Miriam, in Ex 15:21, is thought to be actually contemporary with the Exodus). 
            
            Perhaps the solution is that there was a primitive nucleus to which
            stanzas were added later as history unfolded. We can well imagine
            its being used liturgically in the ancient Passover celebration, all
            through, it presumes the Canaanite idea of warfare as a sacred
            function.
            
            The historical situation in which Second Isaiah delivered his
            prophecies was Israel’s impending return from Exile in
            Babylon. Much of the language used to describe this return was drawn
            from the language used to narrate the earlier event of the exodus
            (see especially Is 40:1-5).
            
            Since the exodus came to be regarded as a type for, and a quarry of
            language for the description of, the Christ event, it is natural
            that the language of the return from exile should be similarly
            used.
            
            Christ’s death and resurrection are the church’s
            return from Babylonian captivity as well as her exodus from Egyptian
            bondage.
            
            In this passage the image of Yhwh’s marriage with Israel is
            picked up from the book of Exodus and reapplied to the exile. In the
            Exodus, God had first taken Israel as a young bride; in the exile,
            he had cast her off like a “wife of man’s
            youth.”
            
            But this was only for a brief moment. Now, in his great compassion,
            Yhwh is taking her back. (Note the frequency  of the word
            “compassion,” a key word in the gospel record of
            Jesus’ deeds.)
            
            Another image appropriated in this passage is that of the Flood. The
            exile is like the Flood, with Israel as a storm-tossed ark. Again,
            the Flood and its abatement provide an image for speaking about the
            Christ event (see 1 Pet 3:20-21).
            
            A third picture is that of the restoration of the city of Jerusalem,
            rebuilt with precious jewels. This imagery is also taken up in the
            New Testament and applied to the consummated kingdom, and therefore
            already mirrored in the life of the earthly Church.
            
Responsorial Psalm IV: 30:1, 3-5, 10-11a, 12b
In origin, this psalm is the thanksgiving of an individual for deliverance from death (see first stanza and refrain). Already in Israel, when it was taken up into the hymnbook of the temple, this psalm would have acquired a more corporate meaning, and in Christian usage it celebrates the paschal transitus from sorrow to joy: “Weeping may tarry for the night, but joy comes with the morning” (second stanza), and “Thou hast turned for me my mourning into dancing” (third stanza).
            This reading is an invitation to the eschatological banquet
            anticipated in the paschal Eucharist: “Come, buy and eat!
            Come, buy wine and milk” (Is 55:1). It is the feast of the new covenant (Is 55:3) with the messianic king (“my steadfast, sure love for
            David,” Is 55:3).
            
            In this banquet the presence of  Yhwh is near (Is 55:6) and available for participation—but on one condition:
            penitence and the reception of pardon for sin (Is 55:6-7).
            
            For this moment all of our Lenten devotions, our going to confession
            and receiving absolution, have been preparatory; all these exercises
            are gathered up into this reading. God’s ways transcend all
            our ways (Is 55:8). God calls into existence things that do not exist, and gives
            life to the dead (Rom 4:17).
            
            God has raised Jesus from the dead and has raised us from the death
            of sin to the life of righteousness (see the epistle). In the
            mission of Christ, God’s word did not return to him empty but
            truly accomplished that which God had purposed in sending it (Is 55:11).
            
Responsorial Psalm V: Isaiah 12:2-3, 4, 5-6
            Although this passage (the first song of
            Isaiah, Ecce, Deus) occurs in
            Proto-Isaiah, its spirit is more akin to Deutero-Isaiah. It
            celebrates the return from exile as a second Exodus and is a new
            song, patterned on the original song of Moses, as the close verbal
            parallelism between the third stanza and Exodus 15:1 shows.
            
            As in the fifth reading, we have here the same fourfold pattern:
            exodus/return from exile/Christ’s death and resurrection/the
            foundation of the Church and our initiation into it through baptism
            and the Eucharist.
            
Reading VI: Baruch 3:9-15, 32 – 4:4
            This passage is typical of the way in which the later Jewish Wisdom
            literature adapted the earlier prophetic teaching about salvation
            history. The old language of salvation history survives: “Why
            is it, O Israel, why is it that you are in the land of your
            enemies?”—language that is reminiscent of the exile
            and of the hymns of Deutero-Isaiah.
            
            But the exile is no longer located in a geographical Babylon; it has
            become exile from the true knowledge of heavenly wisdom. Wisdom is
            here equated with the Torah, or Jewish Law, and at the same time
            hypostatized or personified.
            
            The phrase “she appeared upon earth and lived with
            humankind” (Bar 3:37) is especially interesting for the student of the New Testament,
            for it shows how the wisdom speculations of pre-Christian Judaism
            provided the language and thought-patterns in which the New
            Testament formulated its faith in the Incarnation (see Jn 1:14). The earlier appearances of Wisdom are now consummated in
            Christ.
            
            The inclusion of such Wisdom literature among the readings for the
            Easter Vigil is a salutary reminder that the images of Egyptian
            bondage and Babylonian exile are now to be taken figuratively.
            
            They are descriptions especially applicable to modern men and women,
            for they speak of alienation from God, a sense of God’s
            absence. This was one of the elements of truth behind the
            “death of God” theology that was in vogue in the 1960s
            and ‘70s.
            
Responsorial Psalm VI: 19:8, 9, 10, 11
            Psalm 19 falls into two distinct halves, perhaps indicating the
            combination of two different psalms. The first half is a nature
            psalm and praises God for his gift of sunlight. The second half,
            beginning with Psalm 6:7, praises God for the gift of the light of his law.
            
            Today’s selection is taken from the second half and follows
            appropriately upon the reading from Baruch, since wisdom and law
            (Torah) are closely akin, if not identical.
            
            The refrain highlights the truth that the Lord has the words of
            everlasting life. The word of God is his self-communication.
            
            This self-communication was present in creation, in Israel’s
            Torah, but above all in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus
            Christ, the Word-made-flesh, as the Johannine prologue puts it,
            thereby meaning the whole history of Jesus.
            
            The words of everlasting life are therefore spoken supremely in the
            death and resurrection of Christ. This is God’s final word to
            humankind, his final act of self-communication, which is the source
            of “everlasting life,” authentic existence.
            
Reading VII: Ezekiel 36:16-17a, 18-28
            This is another passage that speaks of the return from exile in
            Babylon (and other countries—see Ezekiel 36:24). Ezekiel, like the earlier prophets, understands the exile as
            punishment for Israel’s sin (Ezek 36:19).
            
            The return, therefore, must be accompanied by an act of
            purification: “I will sprinkle clean water upon you ...
            ” (Ezek 36:25), the gift of a new heart (that is, one that is sensitive to the
            demands of God’s law), and a new spirit (Ezek 36:26).
            
            Christian faith sees all these purposes fulfilled, not in the
            return, but in the death and resurrection of Christ, whose benefits
            are made available by baptism with its accompanying ceremonies (the
            sprinkling of water and the gift of the Spirit).
            
            The use of this psalm (Psalms 42 and 43 are really one psalm) at the
            Easter Vigil is a very ancient tradition. It was originally an
            individual lament. The psalmist is staying by the springs of the
            Jordan at the foot of Mount Hermon, lamenting his absence from
            Jerusalem and from the worship at the temple.
            
            Taken in its liturgical context here (recall the former use of Psalm
            43 in the priest’s preparation before Mass), the psalm
            expresses the worshiper’s sense of God’s absence and
            his/her longing to participate in the liturgy and to be restored to
            the presence of God. 
            
            Psalm 51 may serve as the Responsorial Psalm when baptism is not
            celebrated at the Easter Vigil. A different selection of verses from
            this psalm as used on the first Sunday of Lent (in year A).
            
            The first stanza picks up the reference to the “new
            heart” of Ezekiel 36:26. The psalm forms a fitting conclusion to our Lenten devotions.
            Participation in the Eucharist is the supreme moment when we partake
            in the forgiveness of sins that has been made available by the
            Christ-event.
          
            This Epistle marks the decisive turning point in the vigil service.
            Here we move from the Old Testament to the New, from type and
            prophecy to fulfillment (hence the rubric that the altar candles be
            lit at this point).
            
            The basic significance of the vigil service lies in the experience
            of this turning point. This is the transitus, the
            passing from darkness to light, from death to life, from bondage to
            freedom, from the old age to the age to come.
            
            This transition, accomplished in our baptism, is possible for us
            because Christ made it first. But it has to be renewed
            constantly.
            
            Note that the verbs that speak of our dying with Christ are in the
            past tense (that was accomplished once for all in baptism), while
            the verbs that speak of our resurrection are hypothetical and
            future, and depend upon our moral obedience.
            
            Our dying to sin with Christ has to be renewed constantly by a daily
            decision (see 1 Cor 15:31a).
            
Responsorial Psalm: 118:1-2, 16-17, 22-23
            Selections from this psalm are frequently used in the Easter season.
            With its reference to the rejection of the stone and its subsequent
            elevation to be the chief cornerstone, this was perhaps the earliest
            Old Testament passage that the primitive community applied to the
            death and resurrection of Christ.
            
            It was the basic Old Testament passage for the
            “no-yes” interpretation of the death and resurrection:
            the death of Jesus as Israel’s (and all humanity’s)
            “no” to Jesus, and the resurrection as God’s
            vindication of him, his “yes” to all that Jesus had
            said and done and suffered during his earthly life.
          
            The nucleus of historical fact behind this tradition is that Mary
            Magdalene (and other women? Their names vary; only Mary Magdalene
            figures in all accounts) visited the grave of Jesus on Sunday
            morning, and claimed to have discovered it empty.
            
            We cannot get back behind the women’s testimony. All we can
            do is to take their report at their word, as the first disciples
            did.
            
            For the disciples and Peter welcomed their report as congruous with
            the conviction they had formed (in Galilee, as we should maintain)
            as a result of the appearances.
            
            The community then shaped the women’s report into a vehicle
            for the proclamation of the Easter kerygma by means of an angelic
            message (Mark mentions a “young man,” but his white
            clothing is generally understood to suggest an angelic figure).
            
            This, of course, is not historical description but theological
            interpretation. The women’s response was a typical biblical
            reaction to an epiphany—fear, wonder, and silence.
            
            To this traditional account Mark has added an element (Mk 16:7) that somewhat dislocates the story (cf. Mk 14:28, a complementary addition from the evangelist), but serves to
            point to the appearances in Galilee, first to Peter and then to the
            Twelve.
            
            Why does Mark make these additions and yet does not relate the
            appearances? In my opinion, he could not do so because he had no
            appearance stories available in his community. All he knew was the
            tradition that the risen One appeared first to Peter, then to the
            Twelve (see 1 Cor 15:5), and he indicated this by his addition of Mk 16:7 to the angelic message.
            
            Why did Mark do this? Because it is in the Easter revelation that
            all the misunderstanding of the disciples, so emphasized by Mark, is
            cleared up—their forsaking of Jesus and, in the case of
            Peter, denying him.
            
            The disciples are finally restored and commissioned to proclaim the
            gospel (Galilee in Mark’s symbolism means the place where the
            proclamation of the message begins; see Mk 1:14-15).
          
 
          




