Saturday, April 4, 2026

EASTER VIGIL

April 3, 2026

Saints Matthew and Mark, Barrington, R. I.

 

Romans 6:3-11

 

I’ve long found the Easter Vigil the most exciting and powerful service of the entire Church year. Maybe you agree, or else you wouldn’t be here this evening.

 

It’s one of the most ancient Christian liturgies we have on record. By the third century, it was firmly established as the Church’s annual occasion of administering Holy Baptism. While practices varied from place to place, the typical pattern was for adult converts to prepare for baptism for three years or more. During this period, they were called catechumens. The forty days before Easter—which gradually evolved into that we now know as the season of Lent—were a final period of intensive instruction in the essentials of the faith, as well as fasting and prayer undertaken by the whole Church together with and on behalf of the catechumens.

 

Finally, between sunset and sunrise on Easter Eve, a long vigil service would take place, lasting many hours. (What we’re doing this evening is a highly abbreviated and streamlined version of that.) Over the centuries, various ceremonies evolved to punctuate the stages of this liturgy: kindling new fire; lighting the Paschal Candle; chanting the Exultet; proclaiming the Easter Alleluia. 

 

From the earliest days, however, the liturgy’s core comprised three basic components: first, a lengthy service of readings from the Old Testament, each anticipating Christ’s death and Resurrection; second, the administration of Holy Baptism; and third, the celebration of the Eucharist, at which the newly baptized would receive Holy Communion for the first time. 

 

From the beginning, then, the Great Vigil was the annual occasion of Holy Baptism – although eventually Baptism ceased to be confined to Easter and was administered at other times of the year. (Over the years, I’ve administered a number of adult baptisms at the Easter Vigil, although I generally encourage scheduling infant baptisms at some other time, such as a Sunday morning in Eastertide.) 

 

In any case, I want to emphasize that this pairing of Holy Baptism with the Easter celebration was neither accidental nor arbitrary, but deliberate and intentional. To see why, we need look no further than our Epistle for this evening, from Saint Paul’s Letter to the Romans, Chapter 6, verses 3 through 11.

 

Here, the Apostle describes Baptism as a kind of virtual participation in Christ’s death and Resurrection. “Do you not know “that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death. Therefore we have been buried with him by baptism into death, so that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, so we too might walk in newness of life.” 

 

It’s a remarkable passage. Here, baptism appears as a symbol not only of washing and cleansing but also of death by drowning. And Paul is saying that this enacted sign of death-by-water becomes for Christians the means of participation in Christ’s own death and burial. In other words, Christ saves us not merely as external beneficiaries of, but rather as virtual participants in, his crucifixion and entombment. And the vehicle by which we share in his death and burial is none other than Holy Baptism.

 

It’s not just that Christ pays the price of our sins on the cross as a kind of divine bookkeeping transaction. Instead, through baptism, we participate in Christ’s death, so that, as Paul writes, “we might no longer be enslaved to sin. For whoever has died is freed from sin.” In the background here is the ancient idea that a slave is a slave only for this life. In death, the slave gains freedom from the former master. So, by dying with Christ in Holy Baptism, we gain liberation from sin’s mastery over our former lives.

 

As if that weren’t enough, however, there’s more! Through Baptism, we participate not only in Christ’s death but also in his Resurrection from the dead. We share in his risen life. This sharing is both a future and a present reality. On one hand, Paul writes, “If we have been united with him in a death like his, we shall certainly be united with him in a resurrection like his.” That’s the future aspect: the hope of resurrection glory on the last day. But in the meantime, Paul writes, “The death he died, he died to sin, once for all; but the life he lives he lives to God. So you also must consider yourselves dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus.”

 

In other words, through Baptism we enjoy an anticipatory foretaste of the life of the world to come, making possible new lives in this world marked by faith, hope, love, joy, self-giving, and service. As Paul puts it, we were buried with Christ by baptism into death, so that “we too might walk in newness of life.” 

 

Holy Baptism is thus the link between that first Easter Day two millennia ago, and our life together in the Church today. The Easter Vigil liturgy commemorates not only Christ’s victory over death, but also our death to sin, and our resurrection to new and eternal life in him. On this most holy night, then, we fittingly renew our baptismal commitment, and we celebrate the power of Christ’s resurrection in our lives today.

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