Wednesday, May 1, 2024

(Optional) Memorial of Saint Joseph the Worker

(Acts 15:1-6; John 15:1-8)

On this Memorial of Saint Joseph the Worker, it is fitting that the gospel pictures God as a farm worker.  Jesus tells in his parable of the vine and branches that God prunes the branches of the grapevine so that they can produce more fruit.

Jesus has in mind the word of God when he cites God as pruning grapevines.  Scripture prunes by instructing and chastising so that its readers know God’s will.  It also encourages and consoles so that they do not fail when life demands hard choices.

The times seem to favor workers.  In recent decades they have been relieved of many back-breaking chores.  AIso, in the United States at least, a tight labor market and the ability to work at home give them more flexibility in choosing jobs.  But these factors do not relieve workers of the responsibility to do their jobs diligently for the good of society. As much as ever they need to refer to the word of God for inspiration and moral direction.  

Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Tuesday of the Fifth Week of Easter

(Acts 14:19-28; John 14:27-31a)

Toward the end of his letter to the Philippians St. Paul writes that he learned how to be satisfied with whatever he had.  He could endure hardship with equanimity because of his relationship with Jesus Christ.  This relationship of love brings the peace to which today’s gospel refers.

Believing that Christ will return to reward them, his disciples need not fret about persecution or worry about death.  They know that Christ will give them the fulness of life in eternity.  He suffered a worse trial than they have.  It resulted in his resurrection in glory as they will experience.

This same “peace of Christ” is ours by reason of faith.  Let us embrace the promise of the resurrection Jesus made to his disciples.  Doing so, we need not have undo concern about the vagaries of the world or the coming of death.

 


Monday, April 29, 2024

Memorial of Saint Catherine of Siena, virgin

(Acts 14:5-18; John 14:21-26)

One of St. Catherine of Siena’s modern biographers admits that he had trouble warming up to her.  He says in the introduction of his book that at first he was put off by her domineering style.  But in time, he continues, after carefully considering all that Catherine wrote and did, his attitude changed.  Like an early Franciscan critic who thought Catherine a fake, he turned into one of her avid followers. 

Reading her story, people of modernity readily dismiss Catherine as a fanatic.  Her self-imposed penances like not eating anything but the Eucharist seem extreme.  Her way of demanding from others what she saw as necessary appears rude and perhaps egotistic.  However, as a person learns the trajectory of her life and reads her book The Dialogue, she or he cannot but admire her.

We too may be bewildered by Catherine of Siena.  Her spirituality is as tough as the rigorist novice master’s.  She may have been naïve around the political power brokers of Italy. But we must admit that she had an ocean of love for God which itself is worth emulating.

 

Sunday, April 28, 2024

FIFTH SUNDAY OF EASTER

(Acts 9:26-31, I John 3:18-24; John 15:1-8)

Jesus is recognized now as in his time as a storyteller. As we know, his stories are called “parables”, which means comparisons. Jesus could compare spiritual concepts with everyday things to help people understand their meaning.

The richest parables like “the Good Samaritan” appear in the Gospel of Luke. The simplest comparisons to the sower are found in Matthew, Mark, and Luke. But what about the Gospel of John? Are there parabolas in it?

Yes, there are, but they are expressed differently. Instead of telling the story of the shepherd who leaves the ninety-nine sheep to search for the lost one, Jesus says in John’s Gospel: “I am the Good Shepherd.” We have another parable like that in the gospel today. Instead of talking about the need to bear good fruit as he says in the other gospels, Jesus says in John: “'I am the vine, you are the branches; He who abides in me and I in him, that one bears abundant fruit…’”’

It is not that just by staying in Christ that we, his disciples, produce much fruit. Jesus adds that the branches must be pruned by the Father. That is, we are formed with the word of God, the Scriptures, so that our works may be productive. Saint Catherine of Siena, whose feast day is celebrated tomorrow, can help us here with her profound understanding of the spiritual life. Although she had to teach herself to read, Catherine knew the Scriptures well. In her book The Dialogue she prescribes three virtues derived from the Scriptures with which we are pruned to bear fruit in abundance.

First of all, according to Catherine, the disciples of Christ have to cultivate sacrificial love or charity. Jesus tells the rich young man that such love for God and others is the way to eternal life. Catherine, always inventing parables of her own, compares charity with the life of the tree. She says that without this life the tree produces not fruit but only death.

Charity often appears as the patience that suffers without demanding recriminations. The soul that practices patience is united with Christ who suffered death on the cross without murmuring against his persecutors. The First Letter of Peter tells us: “When he was insulted, he did not return the insult, and while he suffered he did not utter threats; On the contrary, he entrusted his cause to him who judges rightly” (I Peter 2:23).

How do we cultivate sacrificial love? Catalina expresses the conviction that humility is the earth around the tree of the soul that nourishes love. It is the second virtue necessary to produce good fruit. Humility knows itself as nothing without God and recognizes God for His superabundant goodness. As Saint Paul writes to the Corinthians: "...we carry this treasure in earthen vessels, so that it may appear that the extraordinary greatness of the power is from God, and that it does not come from us " (II Corinthians 4,7).

It would be difficult to find someone with more humility than Saint Catherine herself. She often confessed that her sins were enough to entangle the entire world in injustice. She prayed: “O eternal Father! I accuse myself before you, asking that you punish my sins in this life.  And since I by my sins am the cause of the sufferings my neighbors must endure, I beg you in mercy to punish me for them.

Discretion, the third virtue necessary to produce abundant fruit, knows what things are due to God, self, and others. Without this discretion, God says in The Dialogue – the soul would be lost in pride, stealing God's honor and giving it to itself. According to Catherine, discretion indicates that we owe our neighbors a five-part debt: the affection of charity, humble and continuous mutual prayer, doctrine, the good example of a holy and honest life, and advice and help to achieve the health of their soul. At least the first item of the list reminds us of the words to Saint Paul in the Letter to the Romans: “Do no other debt than mutual love” (Romans 13:8).

Pursuing charity, humility, and discretion is asking a lot of us. We might ask: why do we want to produce good fruit? The answer comes from God in The Dialogue: This tree (the soul whose life is charity nourished with humility and using discretion) "yields the fragrance of glory and praise to my name, and so it does what I created it for and comes at last to its goal, to me, everlasting Life, life that cannot be taken away from you against your will."

Friday, April 26, 2024

Friday of the Fourth Week of Easter

(Acts 13:26-33; John 14:1-6)

Before the disciples were called Christians, they were known as members of the Way.  It is no mysterious title as Jesus calls himself “the way” in today’s gospel.

The way refers to the kind of life one must lead to be saved from the continual strife of this world.  Its fullness comes in the afterlife which many Jews in Jesus’ time believed existed.  The way conforms to faith in Jesus as God’s emissary and Son.  Faith, however, is always more than saying the right words.  It is sacrificing oneself in love for God and one’s neighbor.

Such love is costly.  One writer called it “a harsh and dreadful thing.”  Yet we should not doubt that following the way is worth any difficulty we endure.

Thursday, April 25, 2024

Feast of Saint Mark, evangelist

(I Peter 5:5b-14; Mark 16:15-20)

Today’s first reading was probably chosen because the passage cites a certain “Mark.” It was presumed for centuries that this Mark is the author of the third gospel.  But it could have been chosen because of its first line: “clothe yourselves with humility.”  After all, Mark’s is seen as the humblest of the four canonical gospels.

The gospel’s size is only about two-thirds that of Luke’s, the longest gospel.  It was also the first written and contains some inaccuracies and crudeness of composition.  Nevertheless, it more than adequately conveys the good news of Jesus’ ministry, passion, and resurrection from the dead.

Many of us can identify with the humility of Mark’s gospel.  We may often become tongue-tied or confused in thought.  These impediments will make proclaiming Jesus’ lordship difficult.  Nevertheless, God often uses people like us to preach the gospel by loving actions. 

Wednesday, April 24, 2014

Wednesday of the Fourth Week of Easter

(Acts 12:24-13:5a; John 12: 44-50)

Physician-assisted suicide looms as a major issue today.  Modernity has been able to extend life, but as people age, they become more helpless.  Rather than giving costly care, some societies have chosen to assist those with terminal illness and irreversible insanity to end their lives.

The practice conflicts with Jesus’ word.  He begs his disciples to offer one another sacrificial love.  He demonstrated what this meant when he washed their dirty feet.  Certainly this would include caring for the terminally sick and the mentally destabilized.  Those who will not accept this responsibility are condemned by Jesus’ word.

But can Christians expect those who do not value sacrificial love in these cases to accept a civil ban on assisted suicide?  We believe that it is the best public policy.  A prohibition on taking human life not only values all human life highly; it also guards against an erosion of reasons for life-taking until it becomes arbitrary.  The injunction against taking innocent human life has served societies well for millennia. There is no proportionate reason for abandoning it today. 

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Tuesday of the Fourth Week of Easter

(Acts 11:19-26; John 12:22-30)

In today’s first reading St. Luke, the author, states that at Antioch the disciples of Jesus were first called “Christians.” The name must have taken hold quickly and universally.  Luke probably wrote his gospel and the Acts of the Apostles in the eighties of the first century.  His matter-of-fact way of saying that Jesus’ followers Jesus were “Christians” indicates that it was a popular movement in Middle Eastern religion.

The term “Christ” comes from the Greek word meaning anointing. As Jesus says on his visit to Nazareth as recorded by Luke, he was anointed by the Spirit to bring good news to the poor.  His followers also were anointed by the Spirit to bring about a universal community of fellowship – very good news to people of goodwill.

It is imperative that we ask ourselves, are we faithful to the name “Christian”?  Do we sow seeds of justice and peace among those we encounter?  Some Christians – even among those who come to church regularly – often create strife and contention.  To be faithful to the one for whom we live we should strive to fair and reconciling so that people may come to Christ through us. 

Monday, April 22, 2024

Monday of the Fourth Week of Easter

(Acts 11:1-18; John 10:1-10)

“Growing pains” occasionally affect children in their sleep.  They cause some to wake up in the night with discomfort in their legs.  Since researchers have not found an underlying cause for these pains, they are named for growth, a phenomenon associated with children.  In the first reading we find the early Church afflicted with its “growing pains.”

One of the great issues for the Church in its first decades is whether to accept non-Jews into its fold.  Non-Jews are not gentiles who become Jews through circumcision and eating kosher but gentiles who refuse to accept Jewish customs.  Since Jesus was a Jew, could gentiles follow him without living as he did?  This is the critical question.  In the reading from Acts today Peter defers to none other than the Holy Spirit for an answer.  He explains to the Jerusalem inquisition that he baptized Cornelius’ household upon seeing that they manifested the gifts of the Spirit.

Today the Church has other issues to deal with.  We can easily name a few – homosexual couples, the care of the sick in “permanent vegetative states,” the possibility of ordaining women to the diaconate, etc.  Too often differences on these questions create fragmentation and suspicion.  Like Peter we should turn to the Holy Spirit for guidance.  This means that we recognize that what is most authentically Christian is the primacy of charity.  On some issues change may be impossible for reason of consistency with tradition and coherency with established teaching.  Even here, however, there is an imperative to treat the people who are involved with respect.

 

Sunday, April 21, 2024

FOURTH SUNDAY OF EASTER

(Acts 4:8-12; I John 3:1-2; John 10:11-18)

As always, today’s mass readings are interesting. I say “always” because they are the “word of God” that instructs, comforts, and challenges us. All three readings have to do with names. In the reading from the Acts of the Apostles Peter says that the sick man was healed “in the name of Jesus of Nazareth.” The gospel reports that Jesus gives himself the name of “Good Shepherd.” In the second reading the priest John calls himself and the community he tends “sons of God.” It is worth investigating the relevance of these names to our lives today.

In the Bible a name is supposed to reveal a person’s essence. Abraham, we remember from a reading a few Sundays ago, means “father of many nations.” Eventually largely through Jesus Christ Abraham has become the spiritual patriarch of people in all parts of the world. It is apt that the name of the Son of God is “Jesus”, derived from “Joshua” which means “savior”. Jesus saves the world from its sins.

However, the disciples recognize in Jesus someone more than a savior. They treat the name “Jesus” with the respect that Jews reserve for God. We remember how God revealed his name to Moses at the burning bush as “I am who I am.” According to medieval theologians, this name indicates that God is the source of all being. Rabbis for almost two thousand years have said that God’s name is so sacred that it should not be spoken with the human voice. For this reason Jews to this day replace the name in the Bible with something more general like “the Lord.”

In the New Testament Saint Paul says that “at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven, on earth, and under the earth” (Phil 2:10). This phrase indicates that from only a few years after the crucifixion, Christians considered him to be of the same stature as God. The fact that the first Christians baptized in the name of Jesus also indicates its transcendent importance.

Calling on the name of Jesus, the apostles performed feats like healing the paralytic in today's reading. It has been noted that the only time in the entire New Testament the name “Jesus” is used without any other appellation occurs at the crucifixion in the Gospel of Luke. We all remember how the so-called “good thief” says to the Lord: “Jesus, remember me when you come to establish your Kingdom.” And he receives perhaps the most reassuring response in all history: “I assure you that today you will be with me in paradise.”

In the gospel Jesus gives himself another name, the “Good Shepherd.” This name suggests that Jesus would give his life to save his people from the marauders. Of course, he did exactly this.

In the second reading, the priest John proposes a name for his readers. He says, “My brothers, we are now children of God…” We should consider ourselves parts of this family. We are made “children of God” by being baptized in the name of the Father, Son, and Spirit. Like other children of God, we are destined to be like our older brother, Jesus. Like him, we should not be reluctant to ask God for help: Father, Son, or Holy Spirit.

We may have difficulty believing. This age of self-assertion blinds many to the reality of God. We must call on God to help us continue believing in Him as the Creator who loves us. We may also be overwhelmed with worries about sick family members or other problems. Likewise, we have to call God by name. Be it “Father”, “Jesus”, or “Holy Spirit” he is always ready to attend to our prayers.

Friday, April 19, 2024

Friday of the Third Week of Easter

(Acts 9:1-20; John 6:52-59)

For over fifty years dialysis has extended the lives of countless patients with compromised kidneys.  Like the kidneys, dialysis purifies the blood of contaminants that would bring about death if unchecked.  The gospel reading today tells how the Flesh and Blood of the Eucharist similarly extends the spiritual lives of Christians.

The matter has always been controversial as the opening phrase indicates: “The Jew quarreled among themselves…” The Reformed Church split with the Catholic Church largely over this issue in the sixteenth century.  By accepting that Eucharistic bread becomes the Body of Christ and Eucharistic wine becomes his Blood, the Catholic Church sees partaking in this food and drink as nourishing the eternal life planted in Baptism.  Without this enrichment, the baptized person is likely to lose the faith, hope, and charity initially imparted by the Spirit.

We must take care not to trivialize the Eucharist.  The Church calls us to partake of it every Sunday so that Christ’s life might grow within us.  We should no more skip Mass than a kidney patient should skip dialysis.

Thursday, April 18, 2024

Thursday of the Third Week of Easter

(Acts 8:26-40; John 6:44-51)

Humans often take signs very seriously.  If you cross a red light in front of the police, you will pay dearly. The sign of Baptism should carry such weight.  It is more than an indication of the soul being cleansed from sin.  Like with the exchange of marriage vows, it indicates that the baptized has committed him or herself to God.  St. Paul described the dynamic of Baptism as dying and rising with Christ to a new life of grace.

In the reading from Acts the Ethiopian could not become Christian without undergoing the Baptismal ritual.  He could have read Isaiah day and night without committing himself to Jesus Christ, whom the prophet describes in the verse given in the reading.  To prove to himself and to the world that he intends to follow Christ, he must be baptized.

Our times, worried as we are about exceptions, have tended to downplay the ritual of the sacraments.  We need to take another look at them.  We should find in every sacrament a deep commitment to Jesus.  He gave us the sacraments to assure his everlasting presence to us.

Wednesday, April 17, 2024

Wednesday of the Third Week of Easter

(Acts 8:1b-8; John 6:35-40)

People sometimes call a subject worth pondering “food for thought.” Jesus presents his teaching in today’s gospel in this way.  His words are not only worth pondering but, even more cogently, bid one’s following.

This is the first part of the great “Eucharistic Discourse” of John’s gospel.  In the second part Jesus’ references to the “Bread of Life” will reveal him as Eucharistic food. The two – wisdom and food – are meant to complement one another.  As the Word of God in the first part of the Mass gives perspective to the sacrifice and sacrament of the second part so Eucharistic wisdom and food go together.

In trying to understand how Jesus is present in the Eucharist, some have considered the bread as a symbol.  For them the bread inspires thoughts of love and fortitude.  However satisfying this idea is to modern sensibilities, it is not what the gospel teaches. Especially John’s gospel instructs that Jesus is physically present in the bread and wine.  When we consume these elements worthily, we become part of him. We too have conquered sin and will live eternally.

Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Tuesday of the Third Week of Easter

(Acts 7:51-8:1a; John 6:30-35)

In today’s gospel Jesus makes one of his “I am” statements.  As God revealed His name to Moses as “I am who am,” Jesus reveals himself here as God who nourishes His people for eternal life.

Jesus calls himself “the bread of God.” By this he means more than the Eucharistic food.  He is speaking of himself as the word of God that instructs, comforts, and chastises if necessary so that the people follow his righteous ways.  The words of Second Isaiah are at the front of his mind: “For just as from the heavens the rain and snow come down…giving seed to him who sows and bread to him who eats so shall my word be that goes forth from my mouth… (Is 55,10-11a).

Jesus Christ, the Word of God, feeds us both physically and spiritually.  We can count on him.  As Stephen calls out to Jesus as he is being stoned, let us call to him in our every need.  We will find it much more productive than fretting about “bad luck” or even single-minded calculating about what we are to do.

Monday, April 15, 2024

 Monday of the Third Week of Easter

(Acts 6:8-15; John 6:22-29)

Saints Peter and Paul seem to dominate the Acts of the Apostles.  Yet the story is not primarily about them.  Much less does is it dominated by the work of the apostles as a whole.  Above all, the Acts of the Apostles features the Holy Spirit.  The one whom is to be called the Third Person of the Blessed Trinity is at work throughout the story.  He develops the Christian community and moves its center from Jerusalem.  The Spirit, not Paul or chance, brings the gospel to Rome.  From there it will be dispersed throughout the world. 

Stephen has been chosen for the work of the apostles precisely because he has the Spirit.  Jesus once promised that the Spirit will enable his disciples to defend themselves (Luke 12:12).  In today’s passage the Spirit is seen performing this task.  Stephen’s preaching with the Spirit surpasses the arguments of his interlocutors.  Resenting his mastery, the defeated debaters go to the authorities to silence Stephen.  The Spirit does not spare Stephen martyrdom, but he gives him a unique reputation.  No other person in Scripture is said to have “the face of an angel.”

We have received the same Spirit.  He moves us to speak the truth including that of our own shortcomings.  The Spirit, most of all, enables us to make sacrifices for the benefit of others.  In doing the latter, we too will have - to some extent at least - “the face of an angel.”

Sunday, April 14, 2024

THIRD SUNDAY OF EASTER

(Acts 3.13-15.17-19; I John 2:1-5; Luke 24:35-48)

Perhaps you have noticed how the Old Testament is not used in masses during the Easter season. Now the Church highlights readings from the Acts of the Apostles or the Apocalypse where in the masses of the rest of the year readings from the Pentateuch, the prophets, or other writings of the Old Testament appear. This year we read from Acts six Sundays in a row!

Today's reading focuses on the preaching of the apostles. Peter and John have just cured a paralytic. The people are amazed by the miracle when Peter speaks up to explain how it was done. Under the influence of the Holy Spirit, he speaks up boldly. He says it was done in the name of Jesus whom his hearers handed over to Pilate for execution. He then moderates his tone by giving a pretext. He says that the Jews did not know what they were doing when they sought Jesus’ death.

However, the Jews still must repent. Peter says, in effect, that it was their pride that prevented them from recognizing what they were doing. Their exaggerated trust in their leaders prevented them from seeing the truth that Jesus taught and the goodness he showed. Peter might have added that they did not resist the lust for violence, which remains in the human heart as a primitive impulse. His call to conversion includes the dozens of ways in which humans fail to do God’s will: disrespect for the Almighty, greed, lust, lying, etc.

We need to hear Peter's sermon as directed to us as much as to the Jews. Although we have the Holy Spirit to help us, sometimes we fail. The attractions of fortune and fame that we see in notorious criminals like Pablo Escobar or scandalous Hollywood stars drive us to betray the virtues that our mothers and fathers taught us. Instead of obeying the voice of God in our consciences, we ignore it. We think we are limited only by civil law and, even then, by the police's ability to catch us doing something criminal.

Peter's call is no different from that of Jesus Christ. Neither threatens us with the fires of hell. Rather, they both want us to know the infinite mercy of God. He is not going to scold us for having sinned but rather gift us for having finally discerned the light of truth. It is true that those who insist that they do not care about God will be left in the darkness. There they will experience the remorse of having chosen the fantasy of self-aggrandizement over the love of God.  But the real shame is what will be missed.

Saint Augustine lived for himself until one day he looked into a Bible he found. By chance he opened the book to where Paul writes: "...no more excesses in eating and drinking, no more lust and debauchery, no more quarreling or envying. Instead, put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and do not worry about satisfying the desires of the flesh." Later Augustine had to admit how he barely achieved life's greatest treasure. He wrote in his Confessions: "Late did I love you, Beauty so ancient and so new, late did I love you! And you were inside me and I was outside ...You called me and cried out, and broke my deafness; you shone and shone, and cured my blindness; you exhaled your perfume, and I inhaled it, and now I long for you; I tasted you, and now I feel hunger and thirst from you; you touched me, and I longed for the peace that comes from you.

Perhaps we are not as great sinners as Saint Augustine in his youth. But it is true that most of us think so much of ourselves that we forget the goodness of God. We have to repent of this pride in order to know his love.

Friday, April 12, 2024

Friday of the Second Week of Easter

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

Today’s readings from the Acts of the Apostles features a Jew who however unwittingly speaks on Christ’s behalf.  Gamaliel was a Jewish sage and teacher of the law.  St. Paul proudly states later in Acts that Gamaliel instructed him (22:3).  Gamaliel demonstrates earthly wisdom when he tells the Sanhedrin to free Peter and the other apostles.

Gamaliel reasons that the Christians are either from God or not.  He says in effect, that If they are from God, they cannot be stopped.  And if they are not, they will die under their own weight.  Rather than possibly offending God, Gamaliel says that it would be better to leave the Christians alone. 

Gamaliel’s human wisdom, however, is surpassed by the divine wisdom of the apostles.  They first rejoice with the experience of having suffered for the sake of Jesus.  And then they defy the temporal rulers in order to tell others about Jesus.  We should want to both cultivate Gamaliel’s earthly wisdom and more earnestly seek to develop the apostles’ divine wisdom.

Thursday, April 11, 2024

Memorial of Saint Stanislaus, bishop and martyr

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

The Gospel of John is said to be dualistic.  This means that it sees all reality in terms of being either good or bad without mixing the two.  Today’s reading reflects this dualistic understanding.  The one who comes from heaven, of course, represents all that is good while the one from earth is completely bad.

Reality is not so tidy.  Good things can come from earth as well as heaven.  Genesis says that after He created the heaven and earth, God called his work “very good.”  Sin, however, has compromised the good of the earth.  It has never been all bad, but always in need of some redemption.  This has been accomplished through the passion, death, and resurrection of God’s Son.  Now humans are saved from corruption through belief in Christ’s salvific work.  They must not only say that they believe in Jesus but live their belief by obedience to his teachings. 

All the saints have shown submission to Jesus.  St. Stanislaus testified to Jesus’ truth by opposing the unjust wars and the immoral acts of the Polish king.  For his opposition, the king murdered Stanislaus. Although there are different versions of this story, Stanislaus is still honored as Poland’s first native born saint.

 

Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Wednesday of the Second Week of Easter

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

In today’s reading from Acts the Sanhedrin wants to put the apostles on trial.  In the end, however, their own members are being tried.  As the gospel says, one either believes in Jesus and has eternal life or disbelieves and is condemned.

John’s gospel paints everyone black or white.  There are no shades of gray.  Because the evangelist’s message is urgent, he does not take time to account for middle-roaders or exceptions.  Probably more than a few Sanhedrin members think that they are doing what is right in stopping the apostles from preaching “Jesus is Lord.”  They might have taken offense with Jesus’ claim he knows better than other rabbis the will of God.

We must take care in assessing blame.  Often it is difficult to decipher another’s intention.  However, rather than making quick judgments, we should pray for those whom we find offensive.  They are likely to reveal their true motives sooner or later.  Then we will better evidence to make a true evaluation.

Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Tuesday of the Second Week of Easter

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

Jesus explains to Nicodemus the movement of the Spirit in today’s gospel.  He says that it moves the reborn person to act in new ways.  She no longer lives for herself but for others.  She loves without expecting anything in return.  She also takes delight in seeing others growing free, loving, and wise.  The Spirit has assured her of God’s infinite love.  This kind of person makes up the community of disciples described in the reading from Acts.  Each member supports one another.  The result is that everyone has all that is necessary to live in peace.

Communal experiences of mutual love are frequently tried and sometimes they last for years.  Often they end as members are drawn away by different personal needs.  However, monasteries have been able to preserve communal harmony for centuries.  They often draw high-minded people who respond well to the promptings of the Holy Spirit. 

We may not live in communities as mutually supportive as that of the Christians in Jerusalem after the resurrection. Nor are we likely to join a monastery.  Nevertheless, we are being moved by the Holy Spirit to live less individualistically, more communally.  We feel the urge to share time and material possessions with those in need.  We also are prompted to move beyond our fears and desires to assist others.  In these ways we show ourselves to be born from above with heaven as likewise our destiny.

 

Monday, April 8, 2024

 Solemnity of the Annunciation of the Lord

(Isaiah 7:10-14.8:10; Hebrews 10:4-10; Luke 1:26-38)

Pro-life advocates have helped everyone see the importance of today’s feast.  In calling attention to the fact that an embryo and a fetus is a human being, they make us aware that the Incarnation took place with the virginal conception of Jesus.  Without taking away from the importance of the birth of Jesus, today we celebrate his becoming human.

Christian theology has always underlined the appropriateness of this event.  God might have decreed humans free from guilt with the blood of the cross.  But if He saved humans in that way, we would have taken for granted the debt that our sins have created.  We would also have underestimated the extent of God’s love.  In God’s becoming human on this feast of the Annunciation, we know God more intimately than spouses of sixty years.  He has taught us how to derive the most from life. 

Mary responded to the news of the Incarnation with words of submission.  We should do the same.  Let us be servants of the Lord and do all that he tells us.  We won’t be overburdened but will have the joy of knowing Jesus. 

Sunday, April 7, 2024

Second Sunday of Easter, Divine Mercy Sunday

(Acts 4:32-35; I John 5:1-6; John 20, 19-31)

The readings today probably sound familiar to us. Every year on this second Sunday of Easter we hear the gospel of St. Thomas doubting the resurrection of Jesus. Also every year we listen to a portion of the Acts of the Apostles that tells of how the early community of Jerusalem lived. Today we are going to focus on that community, trying to understand why it is included with the resurrection story.

Along with Jesus' death on the cross the New Testament emphasizes his resurrection from the dead. St. Paul writes to the Corinthians that he preached to them “first of all” both cross and resurrection. It is not only because the resurrection of Jesus gives us hope of overcoming death that the Church proclaims it “first of all.” It is also because the resurrection has made us better people. The Acts of the Apostles bears testimony to this in stories of the first Christian community (although this name "Christian" was not yet used) of Jerusalem.

Today's reading from Acts says that the community “had one heart and one soul.” The time is just a little after the resurrection, ascension, and the coming of the Holy Spirit in the history of Luke, the writer of both the third Gospel and Acts. Luke means that these events impacted the believers in the resurrection so much that they changed their attitude and actions. Four new behaviors can be noted from these changes. First, they prayed for each other using new prayers like the “Our Father.” Second, they gathered in their homes to “break bread” making present the sacrifice of Jesus on Calvary that justified them despite their sins. Third, they heeded the teachings of the apostles which explained how Christ fulfilled the Scriptures and prescribed the appropriate response to him. Finally, they lived communally, sharing their resources so that no one had too much or too little. Luke uses the Greek term koinonia for this quality that draws so much attention today.

Koinonia means communal friendship or communion. Along with the sharing of resources the New Testament indicates two other ways of having koinonia. The different communities of Christians recognize the legitimacy of each other. Paul says in his Letter to the Galatians that when he and Barnabas managed to convince the apostles that the uncircumcised members of the communities they formed were truly Christians, they receive the hand of koinonia from Peter, James, and John. Today Pope Francis has tried to achieve koinonia especially with the Orthodox churches but also with Protestant communities.

Another dimension of koinonia is the sharing of resources among people and communities. Many times in his letters Paul refers to the collections he made among the Greeks for the Christian community in Jerusalem. Today we call this type of support “solidarity.” Possibly the Jerusalem community was having economic problems because its way of sharing resources was not working well. Anyway, Acts reports difficulty with sharing almost from the beginning. It tells of one couple who committed fraud by not submitting all the payment they received from the sale of a property as they indicated they would do.

The attraction of greed and other vices remains in our hearts. The Holy Spirit who has come to us with the ascension of Jesus will help us resist it, but we must always ask for more assistance from the Lord. The recent film “Cabrini” shows how with determination and prayer one can overcome even more challenging adversaries.

Our celebration of the Lord's resurrection has given us the grace to change vices into virtues. Let us believe in this event with all our hearts.  Let us also never fail to ask for more help from the Lord Jesus.  Finally, let us strive to be better people everyday.

Friday, April 5, 2024

Friday within the Octave of Easter

(Acts 4:1-12; John 21:1-14)

Ken Untener was bishop of Saginaw, Michigan, for twenty-four years.  He was a gifted preacher with a fine sense of humor.  More importantly, he was dedicated to the service of Christ’s flock.  A number of years ago a book of his homilies was published posthumously.  It was entitled My Name Is Ken and I Will Be Your Waiter a Long, Long Time.  The name of Jesus might be substituted for Ken to understand today’s gospel.

Like a waiter, Jesus provides food for his guests.  He will be serving his disciples until the end of time.  His food will nourish them so that they might go out and tell others about God’s love.  In today’s gospel his food is bread and fish, the same that he fed to the multitudes on the hills of Galilee.  These are symbols for his very self – his body and his spirit – that sustain his disciples in hardship and bring them true happiness.

As we come forward to receive Jesus’ body and spirit, we identify with Christ’s disciples.  We should also identify with them by telling others of Jesus’ ever-gracious care.

 

Thursday, April 4, 2024

Thursday of the Octave of Easter

(Acts 3:11-26; Luke 24:35-48)

During the years of Communist rule in Russia the peasants were controlled by local commandants.  Once the commandant of a village gathered the people for a lecture on the benefits of Communism.  After speaking for a long time, the commandant gave the parish priest an opportunity to say something in response.  He told the priest that he might speak no more than five minutes.  The priest said that he wouldn’t need so much time.  Standing before the people, the priest said, “The Lord is risen.” The people duly responded, “Yes, he is truly risen!” The priest sat down after making a more than satisfactory rebuttal to the commandant.

In today’s first reading Peter speaks in a similar vein to the people who witnessed the cure of the paralytic.  He says that the man was not healed by any inherent power of his but through invoking Jesus’ name.  He then boldly accuses the people of delivering Jesus for execution.  But, he says, they may be forgiven the sin if they too invoke Jesus’ name. 

The Lord is waiting for us to call on his name in faith.  He will come to our aid when we are in need.  More important than that, the invocation of his name in faith will prepare us for eternal life.

Wednesday, April 3, 2024

Wednesday of the Octave of Easter

(Acts 3:1-10; Luke 24:13-35)

The account of the disciples on the road to Emmaus is often read as a parable of life.  Young people frequently flee Jerusalem, a symbol of faith and holiness.  They are tired of rules and self-criticism; they want to have fun. 

By God’s grace they may meet someone like Jesus who will listen to their needs and point out how they misunderstand the Christian faith.  It is not about self-restriction but about freedom.  Christ came to free humans from the tyranny of sin and the oblivion of death.  He wants his followers to love one another – not looking for another’s faults but assisting his or her development.

In the end those who left Jerusalem go back.  They have come to realize that the happiness they seek is not in the pursuit of their own pleasure.  Rather, it is found in knowing and caring for the good people who make up Christ’s Church.

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

 Tuesday in the Octave of Easter

(Acts 2:36-41; John 20:11-18)

Mary Magdalene’s name is not on St. Paul’s list of those to whom the risen Lord appeared.  But Paul says that Christ appeared to all of the apostles of whom Mary Magdalene should be included.  By command of the Lord himself in today’s gospel, she is to announce to the disciples that Jesus is about to ascend to the Father.

Saints like Catherine of Siena have received apparitions of the risen Lord.  We may not have seen him, but we should not discount the possibility of his speaking to us in our conscience.  Franz Jägerstätter, the Austrian farmer who refused to take a loyalty oath to Hitler, and Thomas More were two men whose consciences told to say only the truth.

Like Mary Magdalene, we are called to announce the resurrection to others.  Like Jägerstätter and More, we are also called to stand by the truth.  The Lord wants us to announce the resurrection by always telling the truth.