Tuesday, May 5, 2026

 

Tuesday of the Fifth Week of Easter

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

Most Americans are aware of Adolph Hitler’s false promise of peace to English Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain before World War II.  Far fewer realize that the United States government made a similar bogus promise to the Sioux Nation in 1868.  In the Treaty of Fort Laramie the U.S. government promised the Sioux a reservation that included the Black Hills.  Then, after gold was discovered in the Black Hills. Congress unilaterally abrogated that treaty.  The point here is not to condemn the United States, but to show how tenuous peace is among humans. 

For this reason Jesus tells his disciples in today’s gospel that the peace he gives is not like the world’s peace.  His peace is the shalom of closeness to God.  Its surety might be compared to the security a child feels sleeping between his parents.  Jesus can promise this peace because in dying to redeem the People, he carries out his Father’s will.

We should be wary of false promises of peace in our day.  A home in the country, a cruise in the Mediterranean, or a luxury SUV may turn into a nightmare.  But when we put our trust in God, we will not end disappointed.

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

 

Tuesday of the Octave of Easter

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

Invoking the Christmas song “White Christmas” now may be the jarring necessary to appreciate Jesus’ resurrection.  “White Christmas” became a hit during World War II when G.I.’s longed to be back home with their loved ones.  A white Christmas also represented Christian social values of faith, family, and community.  Going home for Christmas resembled what Jesus refers to in today’s gospel as ascending to “’my Father and your Father … my God and your God.’”

In Sunday morning’s second reading, the Letter to the Colossians exhorts Christians to “seek what is above, where Christ is seated …” and not what is on earth.  “What is above” is, of course, “’My Father and your Father.’”  It might be also expressed as the virtues which God engenders.  The heavenly virtues can also explain why Jesus tells Mary, “’stop holding on to me,.”  Mary and all Christians are no longer to seek earthly goals but heavenly ones.  Rather than pleasure, power, and prestige, they are to strive for peace, joy, and evangelical love.

The campus of our striving is where we live, work, and meet one another.  We endeavor not just to get to heaven but to make a heaven of  these habitats.  Such effort in the end will bring us to the place that has prepared for us.