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Fifth Sunday of Easter – Remain in me!

Acts 9:26-31; Ps. 22:26-28, 30-32; 1 Jn. 3:18-24; Jn. 15:1-8

Remain in me!  This is our Lord’s command today.  We remain in him by following his commandments.  There is a famous expression that says, “trust but verify”.  The way we verify that we remain in the Lord each day is by an examination of conscience.  Let us examine our word and deed against the commandments of the Lord and what fruit they bear coming “from the Spirit he gave us”, the Spirit of truth.

The Lord says, “remain in me” and “if our hearts do not condemn us” we will “receive from him whatever we ask, because we keep his commandments and do what pleases him.”  Sadly, there are many who follow their conscience and whose hearts do not condemn them but fail to keep God’s commandments.  We see this every day in the secular world who preach their own secular doctrine of agnosticism believing in a world without God.  We also see it in our own community among what is called “cafeteria Catholics” who are selective when it comes to following the teaching of the Church.  With one foot out and one foot in trying to have it their way is not remaining in the Lord. 

The teaching of the Church is the application of God’s commandments in our times on all the issues of life and death, justice and peace, good and evil.  It is not relative to each person’s individual conscience but to sacred truth.  While someone’s heart may not condemn them failure to fulfill the commandments in practice reveal a misguided conscience and the separation from the will of God.  This is the Lord’s teaching on faith without works is dead because they are not the works of the Spirit of God but a misguided faith. 

This is the lesson Saul teaches us when he was following his faith as a Jew zealous in following his beliefs by persecuting Jesus and his followers at the same time.  Saul was righteous in his heart until he encountered Jesus and all things changed.  We need an encounter with Jesus, the world needs an encounter with Jesus, and Jesus is ready for the encounter but he is waiting for someone to be bold in their faith, trust in the Lord and remain in him.  The disciples feared Saul, but Barnabas was brave taking charge of Saul revealing the work of Jesus through Saul and verifying his authenticity by his deeds.  A good examination of conscience can ask how our actions towards others are persecuting Jesus when we failed to love, to forgive, to give of ourselves and denied him what he desires of us. 

Today we recognize the tremendous fruit that came from Saul’s conversion to become Paul, God’s servant to the Gentiles.  Why was Paul such a good evangelist?  He did what the Lord commanded.  His obedience from the Spirit he received was joyful regardless of the risk to his own life.  When we remain in God, we accept the reality that there will be good times and bad times but our spirit of joy remains because he remains in us.  We can offer ourselves in all times for his greater purpose.  Even our suffering can bear fruit and bring others to the foot of the cross and remain in him. 

Finally, the Spirit of truth verifies that Jesus remains in us when we know how to pray, seek and ask.  The God who is “greater than our hearts and knows everything” remains waiting to give to his people the desires of what is good for the soul, what is pleasing to the Lord, and what will bear much fruit.  The Spirit of truth is a revelation of just how much God loves us when we remain in him, trust in him, and seek him.  Jesus entered into our humanity that we may encounter his divinity and remain in relationship with him. 

Every day we are in constant communication with each other over all kinds of things from what to wear, the weather, what to eat and what needs to be done but when do we stop to have a heart-to-heart conversation with each other?   Those are the talks we remember when our parents sat us down and felt it was important enough to stop all the other distractions and share from the heart something that really matters in life.  It may have been that car ride moment, sitting on the bar stool, taking that walk together but it still remains with you.  Those are “the talks” that still have an impact in our life.  Hopefully we are having those type of talks with our children because they will never forget how important it was to us.  That is the type of talk Jesus is waiting to have with us.  His talk will bring us to our knees but when we rise up, we will remain in him and he in us. 

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Fourth Sunday of Easter – The Good Shepherd

Acts 4:8-12; Ps. 118:1, 8-9, 21-23, 26, 28, 29; 1 Jn. 3:1-2; Jn. 10:1-18

The Good Shepherd has come, laid down his life for his sheep and raised it up again but not only his own life but his own people who died with him in faith and obedience to his word.  This is the good news of our Easter season that Jesus is the good shepherd and the God of the resurrection of the dead.  Recall how immediately after Jesus died “the veil of the sanctuary was torn in two…The earth quaked, tombs were opened, and the bodies of many saints who had fallen asleep were raised…they entered the holy city and appeared to many (Mt. 27:51-53)”. Jesus is raised indeed and so are his saintly people.  Jesus is the good shepherd of the dead who have come to life and of the living awaiting their mortal death.

Jesus is the good shepherd of those who hear his voice and turn to follow him.  Unlike sheep who are simply human creatures of this world, in the name of Jesus we are now called the children of God.  Often the question is raised to Catholics asking “why do Catholics baptize infants since they have no knowledge, cannot repent and no free will in the decision?”  In the early church baptism was given to complete families so if the head of the home accepted Christ not only was he baptized but so was his family and his slaves so this practice goes back to early Church history and tradition.  Baptism comes with the free gift of the Holy Spirit, that is the grace of God to enter the soul and be the light of truth, the good shepherd of the soul towards salvation. 

With the gift of the Holy Spirit comes the virtues including to grow in faith, hope, and love.  Who would deny their child this gift to get their life started in perfect sanctity open to hear the voice of the good shepherd as it faces the temptations of the world.  Without baptism the voice of the good shepherd is being drowned out by all the other voices of this world competing for its soul.  

As Jesus said to his disciples “allow the children to come to me for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these (Lk. 18:16).”  The good shepherd wants to enter our souls from the beginning of our life and remain with us all the days we are given.  The test of the good shepherd is less about us coming to him as it is to see if we can remain in him, something to ponder.  In the days that Jesus walked the earth many came to him but few remained with him because his teaching was hard to accept.  The good shepherd proved he was faithful unto death on a cross as he prophesized “I will lay down my life for the sheep”. 

Jesus gives us a tease in today’s gospel.  He speaks of having “other sheep that do not belong to this fold” but drops the topic only to proclaim that in the end “there will be one flock, one shepherd.”  Who are these other sheep?  One question that gets asked of Catholic Christians is whether only Catholics will go to heaven. It is also asked of other Christian denominations who profess to be the “true religion”.  Who belongs to the other flock is a mystery the Lord chose not to reveal.  

Consider first that for centuries the people of God were not “Christian”, they were not baptized in the name of Jesus yet in the transfiguration we see Elijah and Moses next to Jesus.  Consider also how many Christian denominations are now in existence becoming more divided than unified.   Recall what Jesus said his disciples, “For whoever is not against us is for us.  Anyone who gives you a cup of water…will surely not lose his reward (Mk. 9:40-41).  The mercy and love of God came that all may be saved but salvation is a process of purification of souls and God is not done with us yet, not with this world, not with all sinners, not with Christian believers as we struggle to carry the cross of our calling. 

What we carry with us is the promise that “what we shall be has not yet been revealed” but “we shall be like him”.  Today we are already called to live in the image of Christ the good shepherd, caring for those little ones, for the hungry and the poor, for our neighbor and the stranger.  Each according to our state in life has a cause given in which we serve the Lord transformed into the image of the good shepherd, Jesus the cornerstone by which we are saved. 

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Third Sunday of Easter – Lord, open our minds!

Acts 3:13-15, 17-19; Ps. 4:2, 4, 7-9; 1 Jn. 2:1-5a; Lk. 24:35-48

Lord, open our minds!  Today we see how the disciples were incredulous, amazed and joyful but still doubtful thinking that Jesus was a ghost.  Not only does he say “touch and see” but he eats a piece of baked fish for their benefit and for ours that we may believe in the resurrection of the dead.  Recall that Jesus before his death had already told them that he would suffer, die, and rise again but left to their own human reasoning their minds were closed to the reality in front of them.  Lesson learned is if we are left to our own human thinking we cannot advance in faith unless we believe in the work of the spirit asking our Lord to open our minds.  Faith is a revelation just as love is a process. 

Today we are his disciples, today we have Jesus before us in the Eucharist and yet left to our own human reasoning surveys report that only one-third of Catholics believe in the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist.  Faith is not blind, nor is it only at act of the mind, nor is it simply an act of the will.   Faith comes from uniting our will to the will of the Father when we pray for the Lord to open our mind to his revelation. 

For example, in today’s world the trend is to claim sexual identity by an act of the mind thus a person is male or female because they will to be one or the other.  I recall the story of Padre Pio who was told he willed to have the stigmata to which he responded to try to will growing horns and see if you can.  Our identity comes from God, made in his image ordained for God’s purpose.  During a Quincianera, I will ask the girl “who is (name)?”  Often, I get a blank look.  No wonder we are losing our youth to a disordered identity?  In order to know thy true self we must come to know the true God who created us.

Today we have many Catholics who don’t read scripture and the primary reason is they don’t understand what they are reading.  They don’t understand the context, the history, when to take it literal or allegorical or poetic so they read a little and soon give up.  Others may read it and come up with their own ideas and interpretations, sincere but sincerely wrong.  Thanks be to God that he gave us a Church that has already struggled through centuries guided by the Holy Spirit to open the minds of his appointed apostles and discern all that Jesus has revealed to his people.  Last week in the gospel we heard how Jesus appears to the disciple, breathes on them and gives them authority to build up the kingdom of God as his church. 

Thus, faith is a revelation coming from God when we seek him.  He will reveal to us with the same understanding he gave his disciples the spirit of truth.  The purpose of faith is not simply to believe but to act in faith.  Faith is not a treasure we hide but a call to love in faith.  Our act of faith is to love and love is a process.  The first act of love is repentance followed by faith that our sins “may be wiped away”.  The work of love for the disciples as priests is to forgive the sins of the repentant soul. 

When a couple gets married the vows taken are an act of faith and a promise to love each other in good times and in bad.  This promise of love is the start of the process of loving each other that each must work at for the rest of their lives.  It is not a feeling but a process of growing together, knowing each other, supporting each other and forgiving each other for the times we have failed to act in love.  For married couples the work of the Lord begins in the marriage and the Lord will often use one spouse to open the eyes of the other to God’s will but that is not an excuse to say “well God told me to tell you…”; that is not from God.  Just as parents have a responsibility to be instruments of God’s will to help open the eyes of their children to God’s truth.  God gives the domestic church at home its own authority to serve him in the process of loving each other. 

Some may say “I pray but I feel that the Lord does not hear me or does not answer me.”  When we pray, we are not to wait for a feeling or for things to turn out the way according to our will.  Prayer is about God’s will who knows best for our salvation.  Recall many decades ago the television series “Father knows best” with Robert Young in the 1950s.  In the middle of some conflict there was the voice of reason and authority that in the end was for the good of the whole not just the one.  Our God knows what is best even when we suffer our losses and are burdened by our cross. 

Recently a young woman of 32 died after several months of a terminal illness.  The small community where she was from rallied behind her and many prayers, sacrifices and masses and acts of charity we done for her.  There was great hope for a miracle yet in the end the disease ended her mortal life.  In times like these it is easy to question God and wonder why God did not answer all the prayers, did he hear them.  God heard every one of their prayers and her suffering brought many closer to God, and her witness of faith and courage as she made public her journey was evident by all who came to her funeral.  This is our faith, this is the work of the Lord to lay down our lives for each other, this is being a true witness in the image of Christ on the cross. 

Before the funeral mass started her husband got up and shared a brief testimony.  He stated that at the end the only thing keeping her alive was the continuous blood she was receiving.  At that point while still very much alert and understanding her circumstances she told him it was time to stop the blood transfusion and give the blood to someone else who could be helped.  Asking her if she understood that it would end her life, she simply acknowledged she was ready to “bring it on”.   The Lord had opened her eyes to something greater than this life, something her faith had grown even further by the love she gave and received in those last months of this life.  She opened herself to love and the love of God poured in through many and from God and all became one.  Let us open our minds and hearts to the love of God this day and in every way to follow the will of our Father who knows best.

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Second Sunday of Easter – Spirit is truth

Acts 4:32-35; Ps. 118:2-4, 13-15, 22-24; 1 Jn. 5:1-6; Jn. 20:19-31

From fear to the Spirit of truth.   The disciples were locked in spiritual fear that they were next to be arrested and killed after seeing how they crucified Jesus.  They were also physically locked in the upper room when Jesus appears to them with the words of courage “Peace be with you”.  Jesus frees them from their spiritual fear as he breathes on them the gift of the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of truth.  Are we locked in our fears in need of the Spirit of truth to set us free.  The Lord is here, he is risen ready to set the captives free. 

As parents we fear for our children anxious about many things yet our children belong to God.  Our children are a gift to raise up in the Spirit of truth and to set them free to serve their God given purpose.  We fear illness and disease as we age recognizing our own mortality yet even Jesus had to suffer a mortal death to rise again giving us the evidence of victory over death and the hope of eternity. 

We fear the powers of this world that seek to take our freedom and burden our lives claiming authority to rule over us.  Jesus tells Pontius Pilate he has no power over him reminding us that our kingdom is not of this world but resides in the Spirit of truth within and that freedom cannot be taken away.  We fear the evil that prowls about the world seeking the ruin of souls.  We have the power over evil, we are covered by the Spirit of truth, we live the sacramental life that receives Jesus body, blood, soul and divinity in the Eucharist and in the Holy Spirit.  Fear not!

When Jesus breathed on the disciples giving them the Holy Spirit it came with a mandate.  It wasn’t a gift for their indulgence or self adulation.  It was a gift of power and authority to serve God in the person of Christ with the sacramental duty to forgive sins in the name of Jesus.  As we recall Jesus had already instituted the Eucharist and the priesthood on Holy Thursday to be done in remembrance of the Lord but the disciples did not fully understand what their “call” to duty included. 

This was and is the new beginning of the people of God to be of one body that is of one Church.  This did not deny the past history of the law of Moses and the call to obey the commandments, it fulfilled it in a more perfect way.  It did not deny the priesthood but renewed it with Jesus as our high priest.  Jesus also did not write down one word but was the Word made flesh and by the gift of the Holy Spirit gave the disciples the spirit of truth so that his Church would carry his authority to forgive and retain. 

Why do we go to a priest to confess our sins?  It is the Jesus way in which having already recognized we have sinned we must now present ourselves in an act of obedience and humility to receive confirmation of the Lord’s forgiveness and complete the sacrament with act of penance to wipe away our sins.  The Spirit of truth if we are fully sorry for our sins is confirmed in not only in our words but also in our actions.  As Jesus said to the Leper in Mathew 8:4 who had been healed of the Leprosy to go and present himself to the priest to be examined of his healing and make an offering.  In forgiveness of our sins through the sacrament of confession we too must go and present ourselves to the priest to be examined and in our penance make a spiritual offering.

Thomas came to believe because he saw with his own eyes and so today our world is filled with many who walk in the shoes of Thomas unable to believe but more sadly unwilling to seek in order to believe.  The world is filled with people whose life is based on their mortal senses and have no desire to discover the God of their creation.  Instead, many turn to their own inner spirituality believing in their own creative thoughts, the human potential, and dismissing the Godly potential and promises of the divine. 

This is the day to receive the mercy of God and in his divine mercy to separate ourselves from the sin of the past and rise with Christ in the spirit of truth.  His is risen indeed so let us also rise with him to new life. 

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