Sunday, April 19, 2026

 Third Sunday of Easter

(Acts 2:14, 22–33; 1 Peter 1:17–21; Luke 24:13–35)

Each year on this Third Sunday of Easter, we hear the account of an appearance of the risen Jesus. Today we are told of his encounter with two disciples on the road to Emmaus. I would like to take this opportunity to reflect on the nature of the resurrection, both of Jesus and of our own at the end of time. The resurrection is one of the central truths of the Christian faith. However, it is not as easy to understand as is often assumed.

To arrive at a proper understanding, we must clarify some misconceptions about the resurrection. Many people today regard the resurrection as a myth meant to say that Jesus lives on in the hearts of his disciples. Myths are stories without a historical foundation and whose purpose is to express a human truth. The “Tower of Babel,” for example, is a myth that attempts to explain the many languages of the world. This is not the case with the account of Jesus’ resurrection. Its historical foundations are well established: Jesus was crucified by order of Pontius Pilate, governor of Judea, when Caiaphas was the high priest. His resurrection took place on the third day after this event.

According to another mistaken idea, the risen Jesus was a ghost which some people saw briefly. This misconception makes Jesus similar to the prophet Samuel, whom Saul summoned from the dead to gain information about his enemies. But his disciples experienced the risen Jesus as a living person with whom they could share a meal.

A third false idea of the resurrection makes Jesus like Lazarus, whom Jesus resuscitated. But this concept also clashes with what the gospels tell us. Lazarus came back to life with a body like our own.  The body of the risen Jesus, on the other hand, has been transformed.  Jesus can pass through closed doors and appear and disappear suddenly.

There are several common features in these appearances that help us understand their nature. First, the risen Jesus is seen but not readily identified. The disciples on the road to Emmaus do not recognize him at first. When he appears to Paul on the road to Damascus, he is perceived as a bright light. As we said, his body has been transformed and is no longer subject to previous limitations.

Another characteristic of the risen Christ is that he communicates with those to whom he appears. His message can be challenging, as when he reproaches his disciples for not believing the women, according to the longer ending of Mark’s Gospel. But more often, he greets them with the word “peace.” This word in Hebrew is shalom and means much more than “hello” or “good morning”.  Shalom expresses the fullness of well-being. Then Jesus sends his apostles out to proclaim the Good News everywhere.

Finally, Jesus shares meals with those to whom he appears. In today’s Gospel, the disciples recognize him in the breaking of the bread, a gesture that recalls the Eucharist. He is continuing his previous practice of table fellowship as a way of expressing the intimacy of his love.

From all this, we can say that the resurrection represents a new level or mode of human existence.  It is a qualitative leap, similar to, in a sense, the one that occurred when primates evolved into human beings. The Risen One has a transformed body, and his love is no longer limited as it once was. During his earthly life, Jesus was could not reach everyone. Now, in his risen state, he not only reaches all but is able to embrace every man, woman, and child within himself. In this way, a new communion with God and with one another is established.

Our love is limited in more fundamental ways than that of Jesus. We cannot love without some degree of self-interest. This is not wrong until we seek our own satisfaction to the detriment of the other’s welfare. However, in the resurrection, our bodies will be transformed in such a way that the love for which they were created to show will no longer be merely one of sensual desire, or even only of friendship. Rather, our love for others will manifest the complete selflessness that characterizes Jesus’ love for his disciples. We will be able to love all people in a way unlike anything we have ever known.  We will be able to love others like God loves them.

Friday, April 17, 2026

 

Friday of the Second Week of Easter

(Acts 5:34-42; John 6:1-15)

The gospel calls Jesus’ feeding the multitude a “sign.”  It is a fair question to ask, “a sign of what?”  There are at least three levels of meaning for this sign. 

First, the feeding is a sign of human solidarity.  Jesus shares bread with the multitude because hunger hurts and humans must help each other alleviate it.  Second -- as Jesus will make clear in future gospel readings --  the feeding represents the Eucharist.  Jesus will give his body and blood so that his followers may become virtuous in him.  Finally, the feeding signifies God’s love for all.  As the gospel memorably puts it: “God so loved the world that He gave His only Son.”  The Father sent the Son so that humans might not perish because of their selfishness but have eternal life because of his sacrifice. 

The participants of Jesus’ feast want to make him king.  With similar impetus we worship Jesus as Lord.  But Jesus rejects such honors if those who propose them do not try to become like him.  The change requires more than imitation when it is convenient.  It demands following him faithfully so that our love is purified of egotism.

 

Thursday, April 16, 2026

 

Thursday of the Second Week of Easter

(Acts 5:27-33; John 3:31-36)

The words of today’s gospel are given without any indication of who spoke them.  They sound much like those that Jesus said to Nicodemus.  If we check the citation, however, we find that John the Baptist is speaking them to his disciples.  John is echoing what Jesus said in the gospel earlier this week and what the prologue tells us of the Word of God.

Jesus reveals to us the will of God.  He is not concerned with the things most of us bother with.  He does not speak of sports champions or beauty queens, how to make a million or how to get your children into a top-tier school.  Rather he speaks of selfless love willing to make sacrifices for the good of all.  Peter and the apostles exhibit this love in today’s reading from Acts.  They defy the Sanhedrin’s orders, not to rebel against authority but to carry out God’s command.  They risk punishment, even death, so that God’s love for the world in Jesus Christ may be made known.

We too should spread the word.  But at the same time let us reflect on it and live according to it.  No doubt, this means changes in what we think, say, and do.  As the Baptist implies in the gospel, doing so will give us eternal life.  

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

 

Wednesday of the Second Week of Easter

(Acts 5:17-26; John 3:16-21)

Holocaust survivor and Nobel laureate Elie Wiesel entitled the English edition of his memoir of Auschwitz Night. He used the word to symbolize the horror of a human population’s being corralled, isolated, enslaved, and exterminated.  Today’s gospel reveals God’s purpose of sending His Son to the world to save it from such darkness.

As much as “darkness” represents evil, “light” suggests divinity.  God’s first order of creation in Genesis is, “Let there be light.”  At the Bible’s other end, the Book Revelation describes the glory of God giving light to His renewed creation.  in the middle of the saga Jesus Christ, “the Light of the World,” exposes evil and facilitates growth in virtue.

Still basking in the light of the Resurrection, we recommit ourselves to Christ today. His spiritual guidance steers us away from the attractive power of darkness.  His love offered tangibly in the Eucharist nourishes us on the journey through a cloudy world to the fulness of light.

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

 

Tuesday of the Second Week of Easter

(Acts 4:32-37; John 3:7b-15)

“’How can this happen?’” Nicodemus asks Jesus in the gospel.  It’s the same question many would ask of the first reading.  How can people sell their houses and property and donate all the proceeds to the community? 

The Acts of the Apostles tells of Joseph’s generosity to illustrate the power of the Holy Spirit.  Under the Spirit’s guidance people put aside self-interest for the good of all.  It should be noted that the wholesale mutuality of the primitive Christian community is not perfect and does not prevail for long.  The story of Joseph’s selflessness is followed by the sober tale of a believer’s deception out of self-concern.  In the next chapter of Acts, the altercation between Greek-speaking and Hebrew-speaking disciples is related.  It may be concluded that the innocence of human nature is not restored by the Holy Spirit without an inclination to sin.

Christian shortcomings have caused scandal both in the world and within the community.  At the end of the Middle Ages the selling of indulgences by clerics gave rise to the Protestant Reformation.  Today many are reserved about receiving the sacraments because of the revelations of child abuse by clergy.  And certainly, Christians have been guilty of racial and religious bigotry over the centuries.  There is need for investigating these matters lest too severe judgments are made.  Yet repentance and penance are also in order.  It is not that the Spirit has abandoned the Church but that Church members have failed to follow its lead.  We must regularly turn back to the Spirit with sincere hearts.