To hear the Audio reflections of Sunday, May 1, 2016 click HERE
Saturday, 30 April 2016
Sunday, May 1,2016 - Fifth Sunday of Easter - Are we living out the message of love?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 15:1-2, 22-29; Rev21:10-14, 22-23; Jn 14:23-29
A priest was invited to a meal by
one of his parishioners during the season of Lent and on a Friday. He sat down
at table and was surprised when most of the dishes placed in front of him
contained meat. He remarked to the parishioner that they were in the Lenten
season and, even more significant, that the day was Friday and meat could not
be eaten. The parishioner replied, “Do not worry, father. I sprinkled some holy
water on all the meat, baptized it, and called it fish.” Did the meat become
fish? Did the priest eat the “meat”? Was he guilty of sin if he did eat? Was
the parishioner making a joke of the whole Lenten season? These are questions
for which we find responses in the readings of today.
Christianity was never meant to
be a religion of rules and regulations. More than once, Jesus encountered
people who had made rules and regulations ends in themselves. And, more than
once, indeed often, in his responses to such people, he would ask that the
focus be on love rather than on law, that it be on the person rather than on
the rule, and that it be on the heart rather than on the body. Yet, it seems
that, more and more, we continue to focus on the external rather than on the
internal.
This is evident in the first
reading of today when, a few years after the death and resurrection of Jesus,
the first Christian community is debating about what makes a Christian and a
disciple of Jesus. However, even as they debated, they realized that this is
not what Jesus had intended at all. The Spirit inspired them to change their
focus to the internal, to the heart. This is the same spirit that Jesus
promised the disciples in the Gospel text of today. This Spirit is the Spirit
of Jesus and so, will not teach something different from what Jesus taught.
Rather, the Spirit that Jesus sent, and continues to send, will reinforce and
confirm all that they have been taught by Jesus. By listening to this Spirit of
freedom, they will be empowered to keep the word spoken to them and enable
Jesus and the Father to make a home with them. The word spoken to them by Jesus
was not a set of rules and regulations. The word spoken to them was not a list
of commandments. The word spoken to them was not, primarily, a word about the
law. It was always, with Jesus, a word of love. This is why the gift that Jesus
leaves with the disciples is the gift of peace, which means wholeness and well
being. The focus of the gift is the heart.
Since this is so, the Book of
Revelation, in the second reading of today, can speak of the apostles as being
the foundations of the new Temp0le and of God and Jesus being the Temple. There
are no bricks and no walls that make up the new Temple. It is a Temple which
has as its cornerstone, Jesus himself. This new Temple will not need external
light. It will not even need the sun and the moon. Jesus will be all the light
that the Temple needs.
Why is it that, almost from the
“foundation” of Christianity, and continuing even today, the Church has focused
on externals and on what constitutes and does not constitute sin? There could
be a variety of reasons for this. The core reason, however, seems to be that,
like Jesus was misunderstood so often in his lifetime, he was misunderstood
also after his death and resurrection Instead of being content with living out
the message of love, the Church became more interested in converting others to
Jesus. Instead of showing, in and through the reality of love, what it meant to
be a disciple of Jesus, the Church focused, on merely proclaiming the word.
Instead of concentrating on Jesus and his Spirit, the Church shifted the focus
to everything else. We moved our gaze away from the crucified Jesus and risen
Christ.
What must we do to bring back
this focus? What must we do? Only one response is required: the response of
love. As Jesus lived out throughout his life, and in the face of all
opposition, the reality of unconditional and absolute love, so we, as Church,
are called to do so today. We need not concern ourselves so much with numbers
and statistics, but with living out the message that Jesus brought. We need not
concern ourselves with external conversions, but must focus more on the
conversion of the heart. We need not worry so much about eating or not eating
meat and fish and thus, what goes in, but must concentrate instead on what
comes out from within. Then, that Temple, which John speaks about in the second
reading of today, will become a reality. Then, its light will be the glory of
God and the Lamb. Then, the Spirit that Jesus sent, and continues to send even
today, will not be stifled and will be
free to transform our lives and the lives of those we encounter and so, win
them over to love.
Friday, 29 April 2016
Audio Reflections of Saturday, April 30, 2016
To hear the Audio Reflections of Saturday, April 30, 2016 click HERE
Saturday, April 30, 2016 - How often has your comparison with what others have led you to feel jealous of them? Will you realize that you can be the most contented person if you so decide today?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 16:1-10; Jn 15:18-21
These verses of the Discourse on the Vine and the
Branches focus not on the relationship of Jesus and the disciples, like the
earlier verses did, but on the relationship of the disciples with the “world”.
Here, the word “world” is used to represent, not the physical world, but those
who are opposed to God’s revelation in Jesus.
The challenge of love will be truly encountered when
the community faces the “world”. The “world” will hate the disciples because of
their relationship with Jesus and because they live out his teachings. If the
disciples want the world to love them, they must give up the teachings of
Jesus. However, because they have been chosen by Jesus and set apart from the
“world”, they too, like Jesus, will have to endure the “world’s” hatred.
The disciples must realize that following and
obeying Jesus, as servants obey their masters, will lead to persecution. What
has happened with Jesus will be repeated in the disciples’ lives. While the
authority of the one sent is the same as the sender, it is also true that the
response to the one sent will be the same as the response to the sender. Those
who do not accept the word of truth, spoken by God in Jesus, will indulge in
persecution. Those who accept the word will respond by living out that word in
their lives. Rejection of the disciples
means rejection of Jesus because it is Jesus who sends them. Rejection of Jesus means rejection of God who
sent him.
In a world in which the resonating message is to
“have more”, it is not always easy to speak and live Jesus’ message to “be
more”. Those who do this are labeled as crazy and out of touch with reality.
Possession of things has so possessed us that we do not even realize that, most
of the time, it is things that possess us rather than the other way round. We
are held by the things we want to possess and they will not let us rest. Often,
it begins with a small possession and then goes on to something bigger and soon
gets so big that we lose control of ourselves and who we are. Our identity is linked
with what we have and what we have achieved. In a situation like this, we need
to take stock and decide when enough is enough. We need to ask ourselves
whether we will live our lives moving from one possession to the next, often
not even having the time or energy to enjoy what we possess.
Thursday, 28 April 2016
Friday, April 29, 2016 - Have you received Jesus’ gift of unconditional love? Does this show in your sharing of that love?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts15:22-31; Jn 15:12-17
The first verse of today’s reading repeats the love
commandment of 13:34 ,
which there, was referred to as a new commandment. This love is expressed in
the most perfect of ways in the willingness to go to one’s death for the sake
of a friend. The disciples are indeed friends of Jesus, as has been manifested
in their keeping his command to love. It is important to note that Jesus is not
placing a condition for friendship here (you can be my friends only if…);
rather he is stating what and who the disciples are (because you are my
friends, you do what I command).
The friendship that the disciples share with Jesus
is grounded in love. This means that Jesus keeps back nothing from his disciples
and reveals to them all that they need to know. His primary revelation to them
has been of God as a loving and compassionate Father.
It is Jesus who has taken the initiative in calling
and choosing the disciples and this fact reinforces the idea of grace. It is
not one’s effort that can earn discipleship but the grace of God which, when
received, results in one living out the call to discipleship. The living out of
the call is not merely a once for all act, but something that is done
constantly and with perseverance. This will ensure that the effects of their
love are abiding and lasting. The last verse of today, with its reminder to
“love one another”, forms an inclusion with the first.
The relationship that we share with God because of
Jesus is one of sons and daughters. We are Jesus’ brothers and sisters, even
friends. This is because he has given us everything in all its fullness. He
held nothing back, not even his own self. The manifestation of this self
giving, which began with the incarnation, was completed and continued on the
cross, and through his resurrection and ascension. He continues to give, even
today. However, the giving is only one side of the story. Without a receiver,
the gift has no value. This is why, while the grace of God given as a gift in
Jesus is first, our reception of that gift is as important if the act of giving
is to be completed. We show that we have received this gift when we, like
Jesus, also dare to reach out in love. When we speak an enhancing word, perform
a loving action, behave a little less selfishly, and a little more selflessly,
then the gift is given and received, again and again.
Wednesday, 27 April 2016
Audio Reflections of Thursday, April 28, 2016
To hear the audio Reflections of Thursday, April 28, 2016 click HERE
Thursday, April 28, 2016 - How often has fear ruled your actions? Will you dare to act from love today?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts15:7-21; Jn 15:9-11
The love which the Father has for Jesus is the same
love that Jesus has expressed and shown for his disciples. It is a love that is
unconditional, a love without end. It is not merely a verbal expression, or an
emotion, but a love that is shown tangibly and in every action that Jesus
performs. The disciples have to act in the same manner as Jesus in order to
make this love visible. There is only one commandment and that is the
commandment to love. If the disciples keep this commandment, it will result in
their being like Jesus, their master, who before them, revealed God’s love for
the world.
Keeping the commandment of Jesus is thus not a chore
or burden but done willingly because one has experienced this love first. The
outcome of this sharing and manifestation of love is unbounded joy.
The word “love” has been a word that is used so
often that it has been abused. We speak of our love for the good things of
life, and of our love for the members of our family, and of our love for God in
the same breath. “I love mixed vegetables” we might tell our spouse and, in the
next breath, say “I love you”. Love is not primarily an emotion; it is not even
a feeling, but reality. As a matter of fact, the only reality is love. Fear,
which is regarded as the opposite of love, is not real, it is only an illusion.
If there is fear, there cannot be love, and where there is love, there is no
fear (1 Jn 4:18 ). While
Paul gives a beautiful definition of love in 1 Cor 13:1-9, my own definition of
love is simple, but not simplistic. “In love, there is no “I””.
Tuesday, 26 April 2016
Wednesday, April 27, 2016 - Do I consider myself as part of the vine or do I regard myself as an individual branch? How will I show that I am part of the vine?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts15:1-6; Jn 15:1-8
John 15:1-17 are the verses for today and the next
two days. These verses contain the final “I am” sayings in the Gospel (vv. 1,
5) and introduce the central metaphor of this unit: the vine and its branches.
Jesus uses, in the first verse of Chapter 15, a common symbol of the world at
that time: Vine. While in 15:1, the relationship with Jesus and the Father is
stressed, in 15:5, when the metaphor is used again, Jesus does so in the
context of his relationship with his disciples. Thus, the focus of the metaphor
is interrelationship. If God is the vine dresser, Jesus is the vine and the
disciples are the branches. All three are required for the production of fruit.
God, as the vine dresser, is the origin or source
and, because Jesus comes from the Father, he is the true vine. God acts in his
capacity as vine dresser and does what is best for the vine. Those branches
that do bear fruit are pruned and those that do not, are cut away. This means
that those of the community who express their union with Jesus by acting it out
in works of love are pruned, whereas those who do not show their faith in
action are cut off. The disciples have been given an insight into how they must
remain in the vine, through the words that Jesus has spoken to them and through
the loving actions that he performed, symbolized in the washing of the feet.
They must learn from these actions and realize that, without abiding or
remaining in Jesus, they can do nothing. Their own power or effort will never
be sufficient for the works they have to perform. These can only be done if
accompanied by the grace that Jesus gives.
“I am the vine, you are the branches” in 15:5 is not
a repetition of what was said earlier. Rather it stresses the relationship of
the community with Jesus. Without the vine, the branches are nothing. Mutual
indwelling will result in bearing fruit. If a branch decides that it wants to
live apart from the vine, it is in effect asking for death. Life apart from the
vine is not possible for any branch.
Mutual indwelling is not merely with a single branch
and the vine but with all the branches in the vine with one another. This unity
of the branches among themselves will result in fruit bearing. This unity will
also be a witness for the world and the glorification of the vine dresser: God.
When people see the works of the disciples, it will lead them to glorify the
Father.
All too often Christianity has been understood as a
religion that has only the individual dimension. The communitarian dimension
has been neglected. This is seen in so many of the Sacraments (which are both
individual and communitarian) being treated and regarded as private devotions.
The approach of many Christians has often been: My God and I. This approach is
to misunderstand Christianity and all that Jesus stood for. The metaphor of
today makes explicit that mutual indwelling is at the heart of the preaching of
Jesus, and that Christianity, while it surely has an individual dimension, just
as surely has a communitarian dimension. I am, as a Christian my brother’s and
sister’s keeper. Their joys and sorrow, their trials and tribulations, their
successes and failures, have to be as real to me as my own if I am to be a
Christian in the true sense of the word. The Christian does make an individual
commitment and choice to follow Jesus but he/she makes it in and through a
community.
Monday, 25 April 2016
Audio Reflections of the Reflections for April 26, 2016
To hear the Audio Reflections of the Reflections for April 26, 2016 click HERE
Tuesday, April 26, 2016 - When adversity knocks at your door do you open with dread and fear or hope and courage?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts14:19-28; Jn 14:27-31
A new promise is given to the disciples. This is
first occurrence of “peace” in the Gospel of John. Peace here does not mean
simply a wish, but must be seen as a legacy or bequest that Jesus leaves behind
for the disciples. This peace that Jesus gives is not merely a sense of
security, not merely the end of conflict and strife, but it embraces every
aspect of a person’s life. This peace makes the weak strong and the
fainthearted brave. It is a wholeness which makes one courageous to face all
the trials and tribulations of life without getting overwhelmed. It is a peace
which gives them the strength to face every kind of adversity with equanimity
and faith.
Even as he offers this gift to them, Jesus reminds
them of his departure because this is what God wills and it must come to pass.
It is a reality that cannot be avoided and the peace given to them must make
them able to accept it. The disciples must accept this reality, not out of
resignation but, with an active joy. The reason for this joy is that Jesus goes
to the Father after having completed the work given to him. It is the Father
who has sent Jesus and given him the work to do - the work of making the Father
known to the world - and now, after completing it thoroughly, Jesus goes back
to where he has come from.
The foretelling of the events is Jesus’ way of
preparing the disciples for what is to come and also to reveal to them that
Jesus continues to go to his departure willingly and knowingly. It is not as if
some unseen hand or “fate” is responsible for what is to come. Since what will
happen fits in with God’s plan for Jesus and the world, Satan is never in
control. He cannot have any power over Jesus. Jesus does what he does willingly
and in obedience to the will of the Father..
The event of the death of a loved one sometimes shatters
our world. We find it difficult to cope with the loss and wonder if the God we
believe in really is a God of unconditional love. Does our God really care what
happens to us? If he does, then why did he let this misfortune befall us? Where
is he when we need him most? Why does he not answer? The answers to these
questions are provided by Jesus in the Gospel text of today. He tells his disciples, and us, to rejoice at
such happenings because they fit in with God’s plan for us and the world. We
may not be able to see this plan at first glance, like the disciples were not
able to see it when Jesus spoke it to them, but we also know that Jesus’ words
are true because of his resurrection and ascension and because of the
transformation in the lives of his disciples because of these events. We have
to continue to dare to believe.
Sunday, 24 April 2016
Audio Reflections of the Feast of St. Mark
To hear the Audio Reflections of the Feast of St. Mark click HERE
Monday, April 25, 2016 - St. Mark, Evangelist - Mark wrote a Gospel to communicate his experience of Jesus. How will you communicate your experience of Jesus to others today?
To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Peter 5:5-14; Mk 16:15-20
The second
Gospel was written by St. Mark, who, in the New Testament, is sometimes identified
with John Mark. Both he and his mother, Mary, were highly esteemed in the early
Church, and his mother's house in Jerusalem served as a meeting place for
Christians there.
St. Mark
was associated with St. Paul and St. Barnabas (who was Mark's cousin) on their
missionary journey through the island of Cyprus. Later he accompanied St.
Barnabas alone. We know also that he was in Rome with St. Peter and St. Paul.
Tradition ascribes to him the founding of the Church in Alexandria.
St. Mark
wrote the second Gospel, probably in Rome sometime before the year 65 C.E.;
and possibly for Gentile converts to Christianity. Tradition has it that Mark
was the interpreter of Peter. This seems to be confirmed by the position which
St. Peter has in the Gospel of Mark.
The Gospel
reading for the feast is from Mk16:15-20. Most scholars today regard Mk 16:9-20
as an addition to the original ending of Mark at 16:8. A number of reasons are
put forward for this view. The first is that Mary Magdalene is introduced in
16:9 as if she is being mentioned for the first time. However, Mark has mentioned her before
(15:47; 16:1). Second, there is no mention of a Galilean apparition in these
verses, though one is explicitly promised in 16:7. Third, these verses are a
combination, in summary form, of the post resurrection appearances of Jesus in
the other Synoptic Gospels, in John, and in the Acts of the Apostles.
The text of
today begins with the command of the Risen Lord to the disciples to proclaim
the Good News to all nations. The disciples are challenged to go beyond their
fear and with confidence trusting in the power of the Lord. The Lord will
accompany them everywhere and their witness will draw all peoples to the Lord.
The enemy
of faith is fear. However imperfect our faith, and however many times we remain
silent when we should testify to the gospel, we can always return to the Lord.
None of us can get so far away from Jesus that we cannot be touched by God’s
healing presence. Jesus continues to use each of us even in our weakness to be
his messengers of the good news that, in him, God loves everyone.
Let the
feast of St. Mark be for each one of us an opportunity to live out our faith
and inspire others and draw them to the Lord.
Saturday, 23 April 2016
Audio Reflections of Sunday, April 23, 2016
To hear the Audio Reflections of Sunday, April 23, 2016 click HERE
Sunday, April 24, 2016 - Fifth Sunday of Easter - “The Fire that Kindles Other Fires”
To read the texts click on the texts:Acts 14:21b-27; Rev21:1-5a; Jn 13:31-33a; 34-35
The 35th General
Congregation of the Society of Jesus was held at the beginning of the year
2008. In Decree 2 titled “The Fire that Kindles Other Fires,” a line reads
thus: “Our lives must provoke the questions, “Who are you that you do these
things…. and that you do them in this way”? Through this the members of the
Society of Jesus are exhorted to “manifest especially in the ceaseless world of
noise and stimulation – a strong sense of the sacred inseparably joined to
involvement in the world.” These words can well be used as a summary of the
challenge of the Gospel text of today.
The background to the verses of
the Gospel text is the episode in which Jesus washes the feet of his disciples.
It is a gesture that is not merely symbolic, or a lesson in humility, but a
prophetic gesture. Jesus is showing through this prophetic act not what his
disciples are expected to do but what they are expected to be. Jesus wanted
their actions to stem from their being. Today’s verses begin after Judas has
gone out. He has decided not to be what Jesus expects him to be. He has decided
to opt out. It is in this context and even in the midst of impending betrayal
and deceitfulness that Jesus gives a new command. To be sure the command per se
is not new. It forms part of the Torah in the Old Testament. What is new about
it is that the commandment to love has its roots in the incarnation. God’s love
for the world was so great that God could only send the Son as a perfect
manifestation of that love. The second reading from the book of Revelation
confirms this when it affirms that because of the incarnation, the dwelling of
God is on earth and among mortals. God dwells with humans and manifests his
love to them in wiping away their tears, and taking away their crying, mourning
and pain. The disciples are asked to enter into that same love. They will show
that they have entered into this love by keeping this command of love. It is a
sure and tangible sign of the disciples abiding in Jesus. This love will also
be a sign to the world of who the disciples are and why they do what they do.
The first Christian community
continued to give this sign because of which many who experienced it were drawn
to their way of life. The first reading of today narrates how Paul and his
companions were able to transform the lives of many not merely because of their
preaching the Word, but because they lived out the Word they preached. They
were unafraid to continue to love even in the midst of persecution and
rejection. What mattered to them was that love be proclaimed. What mattered to
them was that the love that God had made incarnate in Christ be made known to
all. What mattered was that no matter how arduous the road ahead or how
terrifying the terrain, they would continue to persevere and love. They were
thus instrumental in giving a glimpse to those who encountered them of the new
heaven and new earth that the second reading of today speaks of. The first
heaven and earth which was a heaven and earth that had not had the privilege of
witnessing and experiencing the incarnation was no more. It had passed away
because of the coming of Christ and his gift on unconditional love. The new
heaven and new earth that the first Christian community experienced in Christ
and wanted to share with others. It was a situation in which there would be no
sea and therefore no negatives because all that was negative would fade with
the coming of the positive of unrestricted and unreserved love.
Today more than two thousand
years after the inauguration of that new heaven and new earth, the challenge
remains. The Christian community of today has to waken to this challenge and
call to give a glimpse of what was through the coming of Christ and so what can
be. It will do this when individual members of the new community take on the
responsibility of becoming Christ to those who do not know him or have not yet
encountered him. It will do this when the community as a whole is united in
that love which Christ brought with his coming. It will do this when those who
encounter Christians today ask, “Who are you that you do these things… and that
you do them in this way?”
Friday, 22 April 2016
Saturday, April 23, 2016 - Jesus revealed the Father as unconditional love. How will you reveal Jesus today?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts13:44-52; Jn 14:7-14
These verses continue the teachings begun in 14:1.
The one who knows Jesus also knows the Father for Jesus reveals the Father as
Father. In Jesus, one sees the Father as never before because no one has
revealed him like Jesus does. Like Thomas before him, now Philip does not
understand what Jesus is saying and in his ignorance, asks a question. He does
not realize that in seeing Jesus he has seen the Father because of the
revelation that Jesus makes of the Father. In offering himself, Jesus has
offered all the revelation that the disciples need to identify the Father.
Jesus can only do what the Father has told him and
so his works are those of the Father. Philip and the other disciples must be
able to see Jesus as the revelation of the Father, if not in his person, at
least through the works that Jesus does. The works flow from his person and are
not separate from him but an integral part of who Jesus is. The works, too, are
works of revelation. They show that the primary aim of God is not to condemn
but to save and so are works that enhance and build up.
Since it is Jesus who sends the disciples, the works
that anyone who believes in Jesus will do will be the same as those of Jesus.
In fact, these will be able to do even greater works than Jesus. These works
will make known the whole story of Jesus as Word made flesh and so, will be
greater than those which Jesus does. Since these will be done after the whole
Christ event – death, resurrection, and ascension to the Father – they will
continue the glorification of Jesus.
They will continue to reveal Jesus to the world, sitting at the right
hand of God. Jesus will answer every prayer of the disciples made in his name
and he will grant their petitions.
As Jesus made God known to the world through
unconditional, magnanimous love, so the disciples are called to do the same.
The works that Jesus did have to be continued today if Jesus is to be made
present and is to be revealed to a world that does not yet know him. It is the
present community of disciples that has the responsibility to continue the mission
that Jesus began. Whenever an enhancing word is spoken, whenever an action that
heals is done, whenever love is shown in a tangible manner, then the work of
Jesus continues and Jesus continues to be made present.
To be sure, the revelation of God that Jesus made
can also be recognized in the depths of one’s heart, but this is not the whole
story. It is a love that must be shared and revealed to the world if it is to
be complete and whole. The incarnation was not a private revelation given to a
select few, but an earth shattering event made visible to the whole world. So
the revelation of Jesus, today, has to be done visibly and tangibly.
Thursday, 21 April 2016
Friday, April 22,2016 - Have you, by your narrow mindedness, prevented others from encountering Jesus? Will you realize that he is bigger than anything that you can ever imagine?
To read the texts click on the texts:Acts13:26-33; Jn 14:1-6
Today’s Gospel reading contains the first of the
teachings of Jesus that speak about his departure and what it means for his
disciples. At the beginning of these
teachings, Jesus commands his disciples to stand firm. They are not to let the
event of his departure overwhelm them. They are not to give in to despair, give
up, or lose hope. They must continue to trust and believe. Even though it might
seem, on the surface level, that evil is winning, the disciples must realize
that God is always in charge and in control of all situations. They must place their trust in God and in
Jesus. Since Jesus shares an intimate relationship with the Father, and since
the disciples can do so too, there will be as many rooms as there are
believers. God and Jesus will exclude no one who wants to share this relationship
with them. Jesus goes, but only to return and so, his going is not permanent.
It is a temporary act that must be done and completed. This going and returning
will be evidence of his power over everything, including death. Nothing and no
one will ever be able to separate the disciples from the love that Jesus has
for them. The purpose of Jesus’ returning is to take the disciples to the place
where he is: the bosom of the Father. Even as Jesus points to himself as the
one who reveals the Father, Thomas misunderstands and asks a question. He
interprets the words “where I am going” only as a physical destination and so,
protests that, since he does not know the final destination of Jesus, it is not
possible to know how to get there. Jesus corrects this misunderstanding with an
“I am” saying. “The Way” is not a geographical term or physical road, it is
Jesus himself. Thus, to know Jesus is to know the way and, to know the way is
to know Jesus. In his being “the Way” Jesus is also “Truth” and “Life”. Jesus is
the “Truth’ because he has been sent by God to make God’s word known. He became
“flesh” and anyone who recognizes this and listens to his voice, is of the
truth. Recognition of the truth in Jesus leads to “life” in abundance. Since
the fullness of God’s life was revealed in Jesus, one can only partake of this
life through Jesus.
It is important not to be too fundamental in
interpreting the last verse of today’s reading. All too often, insistence on
the exclusiveness of the Christian way has been responsible for problems in
various parts of the world. The Gospels all agree that the approach of Jesus
was all inclusive and excluded no one who would want to come to the truth.
There is no doubt that Jesus revealed the Father in the most unique of ways, as
no one before had ever done. This is because, in the incarnation, God took on
“flesh” in all its weaknesses and limitations. Jesus did not simply put on
human nature but became like us in every single way and thus, can understand
every aspect of our lives. However, by the fact of the incarnation, Jesus also
gave us an insight into who God is and who we are called to be. He made us
aware of our own limitlessness. Though he limited himself, we must realize that
Jesus is much bigger than the narrow image of him we often have. This narrow
image is responsible for our restricting him and making him as small as we are.
John was writing about his community’s experience of
seeing God in Jesus incarnate and was not concerned with showing the
superiority of this revelation over any other or with the fate of believers of
other religions. We must keep this in mind when interpreting the last verse of
today’s text. We must, however, rejoice because we are privileged to receive
such a unique revelation of God in Jesus Christ.
When one brackets out the questions that
contemporary Christians falsely import into these verses, there is nothing
outrageous or offensive about the claims made here. Rather, at the heart of
Christianity is this affirmation of the decisive revelation of God in the
incarnation. John 14:6 can thus be read as the core claim of Christian
identity; what distinguishes Christians from peoples of other faiths is the
conviction given expression in John 14:6. It is, indeed, through Jesus that
Christians have access to their God.
Wednesday, 20 April 2016
Audio reflections of Thursday, April 21, 2016
To hear the Audio reflections of Thursday, April 21, 2016 click HERE
Thursday, April 21, 2016 - How do you as a Christian show that you are part of community?
To read the texts click on the texts:Acts13:13-25; Jn 13:16-20
These verses contain the second part of the
discourse spoken by Jesus after he washes the feet of his disciples. In the
first part (13:12 -15),
Jesus teaches his disciples about the meaning of his washing their feet, and
the implications that this action has for their lives as his disciples.
In the second part of this discourse (13:16 -20), Jesus teaches about
discipleship in general and the relationship that the disciples share with him.
The double Amen at 13:16 ,
and at 13:20 , forms an
inclusion and so brackets and highlights what Jesus says in between. The
disciples must remember that their role, in their relationship with Jesus, is
that of servants to their master. If they understand this and act on it, then
they will be blessed. They must, at every stage, know where their authority
ends. The sayings which are highlighted by the inclusion are in 13:18 -19 and contain a prediction of
betrayal. Jesus is aware of who the betrayer is and also knows that it is not
an outsider, but one who has eaten at table with him. Ps 41:9 is quoted here to
accentuate the intimacy of the betrayal. The betrayer is someone whose feet he
has washed, one with whom he has broken bread and one whom Jesus has loved to
the very end. This foreknowledge of the betrayer also means that Jesus is in
control of the events that lead to his death and is not taken by surprise. Another
reason for informing his disciples about his betrayal, in advance, is so that
they may realize who Jesus is: Son of God. Even as he is betrayed, he will
reveal himself as God for us.
Since Jesus has been sent by God, he has God’s stamp
and authority. The disciples, who are in turn sent by Jesus, have the authority
and stamp of Jesus. Thus, if anyone accepts the disciples, they are in effect
accepting Jesus. Just as Jesus shares fully in God’s work, so the disciples
share fully in Jesus’ work of giving life to all and giving it in abundance.
Jesus’ act toward us, in love, manifested
symbolically in the washing of the feet and sharing of bread, presents every
one who sits at his table with a choice: One can embrace Jesus’ gift to us and
embody one’s embrace of that gift through one’s own acts of love or, one can
turn one’s back on Jesus’ gift of love. This means that merely sitting at
Jesus’ table, and even eating the bread that he gives, is not the full story.
It has to be continued in the giving of self to others and is only completed
when this is done. We then enter into community with Jesus and with one
another.
Tuesday, 19 April 2016
Audio reflections of Wednesday, April 20, 2016
To hear the audio reflections of Wednesday, April 20, 2016 click HERE
Wednesday, April 20, 2016 - Have you decided “for” or “against” Jesus? How will you show the choice that you have made?
To read the texts click on the texts:Acts12:24-13:5; Jn 12:44-50
Today’s Gospel reading contains the last public
discourse of Jesus in the Gospel of John. It serves as the epilogue to, and
summarizes the main themes of Jesus’ public ministry. The words are a
proclamation, as indicated by the words “cried out” in 12:44 , which begin the discourse. Jesus has
been sent as the revelation of God and, though no one has ever seen God, the
one who sees Jesus, sees God. Jesus makes God known in a way never known
before. He is the unique revelation of the Father as Father since he is Son.
His reason for coming into the world was not to hide but to reveal and hence,
he came as light. All are invited to come to this light so as not to stay in
darkness any longer. Since the invitation that Jesus gives is free, one is not
compelled to accept it. Every individual is free to make his/her choice. There
is no coercion or force or any kind of pressure to accept. One will not be
judged, even if one rejects the invitation, since the prime purpose of Jesus’
coming into the world is not to judge, but to save. Though this is true, the ones who do not
accept the true word spoken in Jesus will have to accept responsibility for the
choice that he/she makes. Jesus keeps
revealing all that the Father has asked him to reveal.
These verses are a call to decision and commitment.
One has to decide for or against, one has to make a choice. If one does not
make a choice “for”, one is, in effect, making a choice “against” because with
Jesus, there is no middle way.
Monday, 18 April 2016
Audio Reflections of Tuesday, April 19, 2016
To listen to the Audio Reflections of Tuesday, April 19, 2016 click HERE
Tuesday, April 19,2016 - Do you believe that God always wants what is best for you? How will you respond if things do not go the way you wish them to go today?
To read the texts click on the texts:Acts11:19-26; Jn 10:22-30
The verses that begin today’s reading inform us that Jesus is in
The Jewish religious authorities begin the dialogue
by asking Jesus whether he is the Messiah. They are annoyed that Jesus is not
being explicit. This is the only place in the Gospel of John where Jesus is
asked explicitly whether he is the Messiah. Jesus responds that he has been
explicit and that he has told them, in no uncertain terms, the truth about
himself and yet, they do not believe. Jesus then points to his ‘works” as
indicators of this claim. “Works” here does not refer to miracles alone, but to
the broader scope of Jesus’ ministry and includes the revelation of himself as
having been sent by God.
Belief in Jesus determines whether one belongs to
the fold of Jesus. Since the Jewish leaders do not believe, they cannot and do
not belong to the fold. Those who belong to the fold hear the voice of the
Shepherd and follow trustingly. Following Jesus leads to eternal life which he
alone can give. The reason why Jesus can do this is because he has received
this gift directly from the Father. What is more is that Jesus and the Father
are one. This means that Jesus and God are united in their work of salvation
and Jesus shares completely in God’s work.
We are privileged, as Christians, to have as our God
one who is Good Shepherd, one whose primary interest and concern is to care for
the good of the sheep. Our God is a God who wants to lead us to safety and to
places where there is abundance. He wants what is best for us at all times and
will do anything to protect us from any kind of harm. Though this is the case,
we do not always listen to his voice and we prefer to go our own way. The only
result that we can expect, after such a choice, is destruction and death.
Sunday, 17 April 2016
Audio reflections of Monday, April 18, 2016
To hear the Audio reflections of Monday, April 18, 2016 click HERE
Monday, April 18, 2016 - What is the shepherd calling you to do today? Will you listen to his voice?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts11:1-18; Jn 10:1-10
These verses contain part of the Discourse on Jesus,
the Good Shepherd. This Discourse appears in the Gospel of John after Jesus has
healed a blind man on the Sabbath, because of which, the Jews are upset
(9:1-41). It is the last full discourse of the public ministry of Jesus. The
Farewell Discourse from 14:1-16:33 is exclusively given to the disciples and
not to the public.
The focus in the first part of the Discourse
(10:1-5) is on the shepherd and his relation to the flock. A contrast is made
between the authorized shepherd and the bandit. The authorized shepherd enters
by the gate, but the bandit climbs in another way. The reason for this is
because the gate keeper opens the gate for the authorized shepherd but not for
the bandit. Since he is the authorized shepherd, the sheep hear and recognize
his voice. When he calls, they answer. There is an intimate bond between the
shepherd and his sheep. They recognize and know each other. The shepherd walks
ahead of the sheep and leads them out. The sheep are confident in his
leadership and thus, follow him trustingly. They will not follow a stranger but
will rather run away from him. The comment of the evangelist serves two
purposes. The first is that the reader must understand that Jesus is using a
“figure of speech” and thus, not take the metaphor literally. The reader must
realize that many meanings are possible and therefore, must go below the
surface, to the deeper meaning. The second point is that the listeners did not
understand this figure of speech. If seen in the context of the miracle, and
the healing of the blind man on the Sabbath, and the Pharisees objection
because the healing took place on the Sabbath, then it seems clear that the
authorized shepherd is Jesus and the bandits are the objectors. Jesus has the good of the sheep at heart and
the bandits do not.
In the second part (10:7-16), while pastoral imagery
is still used, the Discourse moves in a new direction. Jesus is also the “Gate”
for the sheep. The gate has two functions: one is to give access to those who
are legitimate and have a right to enter, and the other is to prevent those
whose intention is to cause destruction. Rightful entry into the fold is only
through Jesus, who is the gate.
The text of today concludes with one of the most
beautiful and comprehensive statements of the mission of Jesus. Jesus is the
Good Shepherd and Gate. He has come to give life and give it to the full. All
who listen to his voice will receive this life in abundance.
As the gate, Jesus is the way to life, but he is not
merely that. He also leads the way and
so, is the Good Shepherd. Jesus is the way to life because he is himself life
and he leads the way to life because he lays down his own life. These are
non-transferable attributes; they derive from the heart of Jesus’ identity as
one sent by God.
Saturday, 16 April 2016
Sunday, April 17, 2016 - Fourth Sunday of Easter - Will you be an instrument of God’s unconditional love?
To read the texts click on the texts:Acts 13:14,43-52; Rev 7:9,14b-17; Jn 10:27-30
All three readings of today centre on what it means
to be a disciple of Jesus. If, in the first reading,
Paul includes Gentiles as those who are also called to be disciples, in the
Gospel text, Jesus speaks of disciples as those who listen to the voice of the
shepherd. The second reading speaks of showing in action rather than in words
that one is a disciple.
The final verse of the Gospel text of today, “The
Father and I are one,” summarizes beautifully what discipleship means. It
explicates and explains the relationship of Jesus and God as well as the
relationship of disciples with Jesus.
The oneness, which Jesus shares with God, is acted out in the whole
Gospel. He speaks God’s words, he does God’s deeds and he makes God known, as no other has ever done before. Jesus is thus the
manifestation of God’s unconditional love for the world. God sent Jesus and
gave him to the world to show, on the one hand, that God would hold nothing
back from the world and to show on the other that it was possible for every
human being who encountered Jesus in any way to share in such a relationship
with God because of Jesus. In Jesus, the world was able to witness who God is
and what God is like. Disciples of Jesus who walk the same path can also reveal
Jesus and so God.
This revelation of Jesus is what Paul invites the
people in the Synagogue to. However, here, like in the case of Jesus’ voice,
there is no coercion, pressure or force from without. The response has to be
free. Like the sheep of Jesus hear his voice and follow him the people in the
synagogue must decide if they are willing to follow. Since those to whom the
voice was first addressed reject the Shepherd, others are invited to follow.
Thus it is not primarily external identification marks that will determine a
disciple of Jesus, rather one who shows in action that he/she wants to follow.
This action is narrated in the second reading of
today, which speaks of those who dared to follow
unconditionally and had to pay the price of such following. These are people
from every nation, tribe and language, which is a clear indication that
discipleship is not exclusive nor determined by one’s background, but by having
the courage to follow even in the midst of all odds. These are the ones who
have undergone all kinds of persecution and maltreatment and have persevered.
They have shown not in words, but in action, what it means to follow and be a
disciple of Jesus. They have behaved as obedient sheep of the Good shepherd.
Thus, discipleship as brought out in the readings of
today is not merely a matter of saying, “Lord, Lord.” It concerns living out
such a confession. To live out such a confession means to live as Jesus did and
to manifest God as he did. The unique way in which Jesus revealed God is as
unconditional forgiveness and love. This is why God is not a God who needs
merely external worship and praise but a God who looks at the internal at the
heart. This is because it is God who loves first. God does not need one to do
anything to gain the love, because it is a love that is given gratis. One
cannot acquire such a love or ever be worthy of it. One cannot earn such a love
or merit it. However, one can show that this love given freely has been
received and accepted only if one shares that love with everyone.
The sharing of such love was what the incarnation,
mission, life, death and resurrection of Jesus was all about. God realised that
the best way to show this love was through becoming an integral part of
creation. In Jesus, this love reached the highest point and was manifested as
pure, unadulterated love. It was a love that was shown when things were going
well, but it was also a love that was revealed on and from the Cross. The
multitude from every nation, tribe and language that followed the lamb realised
this and that is why they, too, were able to go through the great ordeal and
withstand all kinds of persecution. Thus, like Jesus, they too revealed God and
thus, like Jesus, they too were able to see the face of God and stand before
God.
The world today is hungering for such a love. There
is too much hate, indifference, apathy and coldness. There is too much
selfishness and self-centredness. Those of us who profess to be disciples of
Jesus are challenged through the readings of today to bring about the change
that is needed. We have to dare like Jesus and the first Christian community to
first open our hearts to receive the unconditional forgiveness and love that
God keeps pouring and to share that love with all. In this we, too, make no
distinction between nation, race, tribe and language. In this we do not
discriminate between them and us, for all are invited to partake of this gracious
love of God made manifest and revealed in Jesus.
Friday, 15 April 2016
Audio Reflections of Saturday, April 16,2016
To hear the Audio Reflections of Saturday, April 16,2016 click HERE
Saturday, April 16,2016 - Will you opt for Jesus today? How will you show this in your actions?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts9:31-42; Jn 6:60-69
The text of today begins with the disciples
grumbling after hearing what Jesus has said. The sayings are too difficult for
them to accept. Jesus responds to their grumbling by issuing a challenge to
them. If this affects them, they will be even more affected when they
experience the death, resurrection, and ascension of the Son of Man. Jesus
takes the disciples beyond the specific event of becoming and giving
bread. He takes them to the whole of the
Christ event and its mystery. Jesus, as
Bread of Life, must be seen in the larger context of God’s plan of salvation
through his Son.
The flesh, as flesh, and without the Spirit, is
nothing. It cannot give live, nor does it have life. It is the Spirit that
gives life and makes the flesh what it is. This means that simply eating the
flesh of Jesus, without the right disposition, will not lead to life. Thus,
those who eat and drink are not merely eating Jesus’ flesh and blood but the
Spirit filled flesh and blood of Jesus. Even as Jesus offers the gift of life,
through becoming bread, the gift is rejected because most prefer death. There
are still those who will not believe. They have made their choice. God offers
the gift of his Son to all, but not all will accept him. This is why many
disciples drew back and no longer went with Jesus. This rejection leads Jesus
to turn to the Twelve and ask them about their stand. They must choose whether
they will accept or reject the offer of life that God makes in Jesus.
Simon Peter responds on behalf of the Twelve and at
least verbally accepts that offer of life. He acknowledges that Jesus has the
words of eternal life and that he is the Holy One of God, the one set aside by
God.
Life always offers us choices. The choices that we
are sometimes faced with might not always be what we desire, but the fact
remains that we are free to choose. We can choose to be miserable or to be
happy, we can choose to fear or to love, and we can choose to say No or to say
Yes. Every choice that we make has its own consequences and we must be prepared
to face them since it is we who have made the choice.
Thursday, 14 April 2016
Audio reflections of Friday, April 15, 2016
To hear the Audio reflections of Friday, April 15, 2016 click HERE.
Friday, April 15,2016 - When someone places a new idea in front of you, is your first reaction one of rejection?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts9:1-20; Jn 6:52-59
The first verse of today’s text, which contains the
question that the “Jews” ask, is occasioned by the statement that Jesus makes
in the previous verse. The agitation in their hearts is because Jesus has
identified himself with the bread of life. Jesus replaces the manna that their
ancestors ate.
Jesus addresses this protest in the verses that
follow. The bread that is to be eaten is the flesh and blood of the Son of Man.
Refusal to do this means death or non-life. Eating the flesh and drinking the
blood results in life and resurrection on the last day. By not mentioning bread
and wine and thus, not equating them with the flesh and blood of Jesus, John
focuses on the corporeal and not only on the sacramental representations. He
also wants to stress that Jesus gives his whole life to all who are willing to
receive him. The flesh that Jesus gives is life giving and so is his blood. It
is real food and drink that will end all hunger and thirst.
Eating of the flesh and blood of Jesus leads to a
mutual indwelling. The one who eats and drinks abides in Jesus and Jesus abides
in that person. This relationship is an extension of the relationship between
Jesus and the Father. Just as Jesus lives the Father’s life, so all who eat and
drink will live Jesus’ life. The penultimate verse concludes the Bread of Life
Discourse and repeats a theme that has been prevalent throughout. The bread
which Jesus gives has indeed come from heaven and will give life forever and
give it permanently, unlike the manna which could offer only temporary life.
The reference to the synagogue in Capernaum is to highlight the difference
between Jesus’ teaching and that of the Jewish teachers and the difference
between the manna eaten by their forefathers and the Bread of Life that Jesus
gives.
It is not always easy to accept ideas which
challenge our old way of thinking. Often our first reaction is rejection of
that idea. We refuse to think outside the box, and are content with stereotypes
with which we are comfortable. We are comfortable with them because they do not
threaten us or call on us to change. We prefer that our boats not be rocked.
However, Jesus continues to rock the boat and challenge our ways of thinking
and being. He continues to wake us from our stupor and keeps inviting us to see
more and be more.
Wednesday, 13 April 2016
Audio Reflections of Thursday, April 14, 2016
For the Audio Reflections of Thursday, April 14, 2016 click HERE
Audio Reflections of Wednesday, April 13, 2016
For the Audio Reflections of Wednesday, April 13, 2016 click HERE
Thursday, April 14,2016 - How will you show that you have accepted the gift that God gives in Jesus?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts8:26-40; Jn 6:41-51
The symbol of “bread” is misunderstood by the
people. They respond with unbelief. They grumble at Jesus’ claim that he is the
bread of life and has come down from heaven. They protest that they “know”
where Jesus comes from, they are aware of his antecedents. Even as they make
such a statement, they are unaware of its error. They “think” they know, but in
reality do not know.
Jesus addresses the crowd and asks them to stop
their grumbling and then repeats the promise made earlier of resurrection on
the last day for the ones who will believe. To reiterate the point that he
makes, Jesus appeals to scripture and specifically to the prophets. “And they
shall all be taught by God” refers to the initiative that God takes. The
emphasis is on God who does the teaching. This means that Jesus’ commission is
divinely ordained and not from humans. If the ones who hear realize this, then
they will come to Jesus and they will have learnt correctly. This means that,
while God does take the initiative, humans are responsible for responding
accurately.
Jesus shares a unique relationship with the Father
and is the only one who has seen Him. Those who learn have to learn to see the
Father in Jesus. They have to learn that it is in Jesus that they have eternal
life and that he is indeed the Bread of Life.
By using the distancing “your ancestors”, Jesus
makes a contrast between the manna that they ate and the bread of life that he
gives. The manna their ancestors consumed could not result in saving them from
death, but the bread that Jesus gives results in a person living forever. This
is because the bread that Jesus gives is living bread, a life giving bread. The
bread that he gives for the life of the world is his flesh. This can mean, on
one hand, the incarnation, where the Word became flesh, but on the other, can
refer to his death on the cross, when he will give his life for the life of the
world.
The purpose of Jesus’ coming into the world was to
reveal the Father as God who wanted to save all people. This results in God
taking the initiative in the tangible way of sending his son to become flesh
for all. Even as God takes the initiative, he leaves humans free to respond to
his act of love. Humans always have a choice when it comes to the gifts that
God gives. They can accept them or reject them. Acceptance means life,
rejection means death. There is no middle way.
Tuesday, 12 April 2016
Wednesday, April 13,2016 - What is preventing you from receiving the gifts that Jesus gives?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 8:1-8; Jn 6:35-40
Today’s text begins with the last verse that was
read yesterday in order to place what follows in context. Jesus has stated that
he is the Bread of Life and he invites all who are willing to come to him to be
fully satisfied. The words “seeing’ and “believing”, which appear at 6:36 and again at 6:40 form an inclusion. The crowd
has seen and yet has not perceived. They have not seen rightly and thus, cannot
come to faith. This lack of proper vision is surprising when one realizes that
Jesus’ primary purpose is not to hide but to reveal. He will welcome all who
come to him. They will not be driven away. The purpose of his coming down from
heaven is for the sake of revelation. This is the Father’s will and Jesus will
do only what the Father commissions him to do. The Father’s will is inclusive
and no one is to be excluded unless they want to exclude themselves. If one
sees rightly and thus believes, what is gained is eternal life and resurrection
on the last day. This promise combines both the present and the future.
These verses bring out powerfully the balance
between divine initiative and human response. God takes the first step and remains
open to anyone who is willing to come and receive the gifts that he wants to
pour out. However, there will not be any coercion or pressure on the part of
God. Those who come to receive from him must come freely and without
reservation. The gift is ever available and free. It is not for a select few but for all.
Monday, 11 April 2016
Tuesday, April 12, 2016 - Will you dare to become bread for at least one person today?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts7:51-8:1; Jn 6:30-35
The invitation that Jesus issues to the crowd, to
believe in him who was sent by God, results in the crowd asking for a sign.
This demand is a clear indication that they have not grasped the meaning of
Jesus’ words. They have been fed at the miraculous feeding but were not able to
see it for the sign that it was meant to be. The crowd goes further in this
demand by looking back at what happened in the desert during the Exodus and how
their ancestors were fed. This seems strange, and even absurd, because they
have been fed even more abundantly than their ancestors. This also points to
how ignorant and even closed the crowd is to the revelation that Jesus
continues to make.
Jesus does not remind them that he had already given
them bread, but first corrects their misunderstanding. It was not Moses who
gave their ancestors bread but his Father. This bread is not merely bread that
was given in the past but it continues to be given in the present. It, and not
the manna, is the true bread from heaven. It is true bread because it gives
life to all who eat it.
Like Nicodemus and the Samaritan woman before them,
the crowd does not fully understand what Jesus is really offering and so, make
a request for this bread. They are convinced that this bread is better than the
bread their ancestors ate, but do not understand how or why. Jesus is available
to them and yet, they cannot see. He gives the bread once for all and, in doing
so, gives the bread always. This is why Jesus can assert that He is the bread
of life. This is the first time in the Gospel of John that the “I am’ saying is
followed by a predicate nominative “the bread of life”. John’s Gospel often
uses this distinctive way of revealing who Jesus is. The symbols that are used
by Jesus in these sayings come from human and Near Eastern religious
experience. The use of these common, everyday symbols results in conveying to
all who will hear that Jesus can satisfy both the base and higher needs of
people everywhere. These symbols indicate that the mystery of Jesus cannot be
captured by any one symbol and that Jesus cannot be put into a well defined category.
The saying also contains an invitation to come to
him and be sated. Though, on the one hand, the invitation refers to a physical
eating and drinking and so satisfying human hunger and thirst, on a deeper
level, the invitation is to listen to Jesus’ teaching and see in him the
revelation of God and so, the fulfillment of all human needs.
Bread is the staple of many people all over the
world and is used to represent the basic needs of people. By use of this
symbol, Jesus reveals that his mission is to be available to all and for all.
He does not belong exclusively to any one group and no group can ever capture
him fully. He is available to all who are open to the revelation that he
continues to make. The primary form that this revelation will always take is
the form of love.
Sunday, 10 April 2016
Monday, April 11, 2016 - Will you express your faith in Jesus through one loving action today?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts6:8-15; Jn 6:22-29
The first three verses of today’s text, which appear
immediately after the miracle of walking on the water, serve as transition
verses for the dialogue with the people and the discourse on the bread of life
that follow. They also serve to bring the crowd, which had eaten at the
miraculous feeding of the five thousand, back into the story and so, link
Jesus’ words that follow with the feeding miracle and the miracle of walking on
the water.
Since the crowd has not been privy to the miracle of
Jesus walking on the water, they wonder how he got to the other side. Jesus
does not answer their question but draws attention to their reason for seeking
him. Though they have seen the sign that Jesus gave at the miraculous feeding,
they were not able to perceive it because their attention was directed to the
earthly and temporary, not to the heavenly and permanent. Even as they seek him
for temporary food, Jesus invites them to a higher seeking. He asks them to
seek for the food that only he can give, the food that endures forever. Jesus
is competent to give this food because the Father himself has approved and set
his seal on Jesus. In response to Jesus’ statement to not work for food that
perishes, the crowd interprets the word “work” to mean certain actions that
they must perform to acquire this food. Jesus corrects this misunderstanding by
explaining what is meant by “work”. They must believe in Jesus who has been
sent by God.
Believing in Jesus does not only mean a verbal
profession of faith. In the Gospel of John, the term believing is, most often,
used to describe faith that shows itself in action. This is why believing is
akin to work. Jesus does not provide merely physical nourishment, but also
nourishment of the mind, heart, and spirit. To know and believe in Jesus is to
be sated in every aspect of life. It is to never lack or want anything, because
all things are provided in him.
Saturday, 9 April 2016
Sunday, April 10, 2016 - Third Sunday of Easter - Let us strive for Unity even in Diversity - The Lord is the Lord of all
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 5:27b-32,40b-41; Rev5,11-14; Jn 21:1-19
The post resurrection appearance of Jesus on Lake
Tiberius is the Gospel text for today. The focus of these verses is on Jesus
and his “Church”. There are three parts to this story. The first deals with the
miraculous catch of fish, the second with the recognition of the risen Lord and
the third with the dialogue with Peter.
The text begins with Peter telling his companions
that he is going fishing. The response of the other six to Peter’s statement is
to affirm that they will go with him. This indicates a sense of community and
oneness. Though they may not be able to fully understand the significance of
going fishing at this crucial time, they will collaborate with Peter. They will
pull together. However, despite all their efforts, they are not able to achieve
anything. Jesus appears unobtrusively when it is light, and asks a question
about the catch. They respond that they have caught nothing. They obey Jesus’
command to cast the net on the right side and are successful. The quantity of
fish is so great that they struggle to haul in the net.
The second part of the story narrates the
recognition of the risen Lord. The enormity of the catch is detailed in the
number of fish caught, namely one hundred fifty three. A variety of
interpretations have been offered to explain this number. St. Augustine
proposed a mathematical way of reading this number which is regarded even today
as plausible. His explanation was that the number 153 is obtained when all of
the integers from 1 to 17 are added together; this mathematical fact thus
suggests the completeness of the number 153. Others regard the number as
clearly indicating that the narration of this event is an eyewitness account of
what actually happened. This is why the number is not a round number, but 153.
Still another interpretation is that 153 was the number of species of fish
known to Greek zoologists of that time and thus, it signifies that every kind
or species of fish was caught in the net. This symbolizes that no one is
excluded. That the net did not break, despite the fact that there were so many
fish, is an indication of unity not only in diversity but even in diversity.
That this seems to be the best explanation is confirmed by the fact that the
verb “to haul” used here of Peter’s hauling the net ashore is the same verb
used to describe those who come to Jesus from God (6:44). It is the same verb that is used to describe
the salvific effect of Jesus’ death when he will “draw’ (haul) all people to
himself (12:32). Thus, what seemed like aimlessness before the appearance of
Jesus becomes with his presence a focussed ministry. The disciples continue the
mission of Jesus even when they fish, by drawing all to him. Each one who is
drawn to Jesus and makes up a part of his community has his/her place. In this
community, diversity is not to be frowned upon but to be celebrated. It is good
to be different and yet united. It is good to be unique and special and yet
part of the whole. It is good to be an individual and yet part of one
community. Thus, exclusivity has no place in any mission that has its roots in
Jesus’ mission. All are included and all are welcome. Even more, each retains
his/her identity and is still very much a part of the whole. There is no need
for uniformity in the family of Jesus, but unity is very much a core value.
The third part of the text links this section with
the previous one (21:4-14) through the words, “When they had finished
breakfast”. It is a continuation of the appearance of Jesus to the disciples at
Lake Tiberius where, because they obey his instructions, they are able to haul
in 153 fish.
These verses narrate the conversation that Jesus has
with Simon Peter. One possible reason why Jesus asks Peter three questions is
because Peter denied him three times. However, it is also important to realize
that the three questions are all different. The first question which Jesus asks
is inclusive. It includes the other disciples, the boat, the nets, and the fish.
Jesus is asking Peter whether Peter loves him more than he loves the other
disciples and/or his livelihood. The second question is direct and involves
only Jesus and Peter. Everything else recedes into the background. The
spotlight shifts to the two. Does Peter love Jesus? Though the third question
seems similar to the second, it is really different because in it, Jesus asks
Peter about friendship. It reads: “Simon, son of John, are you my friend?” This
is a crucial change from the earlier question because, in 15:13, Jesus had
explained the true meaning of friendship when he said: “No one has greater love
than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.” By affirming that Peter
is, indeed, a friend of Jesus, he is affirming his willingness to die for
Jesus.
This interpretation is confirmed by the fact that as
soon as Peter affirms his friendship, Jesus invites him to lay down his life.
The text ends with Jesus inviting Peter to follow him. Though this command of
Jesus may be seen as a general invitation to discipleship, here it means a
specific command to martyrdom and even death. Peter knows, even as he answers,
that trials and difficulties are part and parcel of his commitment. He is aware
that following Jesus is not going to be easy and that he will be called to make
great sacrifices. He is ready, willing, and able. This willingness is evident
in the first reading of today when soon after this event as narrated by the
Acts of the Apostles; Peter was willing to suffer for his Lord. Not only was he
willing to suffer, he also learnt to rejoice in his suffering because as the
second reading states, he knew that in doing so he was being privileged to
imitate the lamb that was slain.
The call to follow Jesus today is a call that will
continue to be heard as long as there are people who dare to open their hearts
to this call. While it will not always be a call to martyrdom by death, like it
was in the case of Peter, it will always be a call to be a martyr or witness.
This is because the voice of Jesus can only be heard today in his disciples and
he can be seen and experienced only when those who profess to follow him reach
out in love.
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