Freepik - Lord Jesus leads the souls out of Hades
On Holy Saturday, the world seems quiet. The cross stands still. The tomb is sealed. It feels as though everything has ended. But in truth, something hidden and powerful is unfolding; something the eyes cannot see.
Underworld
When Jesus died, He did not simply rest in the tomb. As the Church teaches, He descended to the “underworld”. This was not a place of punishment, but the realm of the dead, often called Hades or Sheol. This was the place where all who had died before Him waited, because the gates of heaven had not yet been opened.
Into this silence, Christ entered. Not as a victim, but as a victorious Saviour. In death, He carried ultimate power and authority, as the very Son of God.
Breaking down the gates
The early Christians loved to describe this moment vividly: Christ breaking down the gates of Hades, shattering what had held humankind captive since the fall. Death had seemed like a prison with no escape. Now, the One who is Life itself had walked straight in and liberated the captives, vandalizing the gates on the way.
In doing so, Jesus confronted the power of sin and death at its root. What we sometimes describe as “taking power from satan” means this: the hold that evil had over humanity - the fear of death, the separation from God - was broken. Death was no longer the final word. It was no longer a locked door, but a doorway Christ Himself had passed through and transformed.
Awake, O sleeper
Christ did not go from thence alone. Jesus went to call those who had waited in hope: Abraham, Moses, David, and countless others. Tradition speaks of Him reaching out His hands to Adam and Eve, lifting them up, as if to say: “Awake, O sleeper, and rise from the dead, and I will give you light.” They must have been so relieved that the nightmare of their own making was, at last, over.
The harrowing of hell
This is what we call the Harrowing of Hell; not destruction for its own sake, but liberation. A rescue. A moment when Christ fills even the depths with His Presence. There is now no place where His Love cannot reach.
Quiet victory
So Holy Saturday is not empty after all. It is filled with quiet victory. While the world waits in silence, Christ is at work in the deepest darkness, turning defeat into triumph.
This speaks to us, too. Because there are moments in our lives that feel like Holy Saturday; times of waiting, grief, or silence, when God seems absent. Yet this mystery reminds us: even when we cannot see Him, Christ is present and active, bringing life where we thought there was none.
CLOSING PRAYER
"Lord Jesus,
in the stillness of this holy night,
when the world waits in silence,
help us to trust that You are at work
even in the hidden places of our lives.
Descend into our darkness,
lift our fears, and break the chains that bind us.
Fill us with quiet hope,
and lead us from waiting into joy,
from sorrow into the light of Your Resurrection.
Amen."

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