Wednesday, June 4, 2025

 

Wednesday of the Seventh Week of Easter

(Acts 20:28-38; John 17:11b-19)

In today’s first reading St. Paul expresses concern over the truth of Christ.  He tells Church leaders that he taught the whole truth of Jesus Christ.  Now he is worried that false evangelists will come along distorting it. 

Paul taught that God created the world good and gave it to humans to care for.  He said that God made only one demand – that humans not eat of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. (Perhaps to avoid misunderstanding, God reserved to Himself the determination of right and wrong.)  Paul further taught that humans, deceived by the Father of lies, wanted to claim equality with their benefactor.  So they ate from the tree of knowledge, and alienated themselves from God.  Their situation was hopeless because they could never cease trying to compete with God.   God Himself had to come to their rescue.  The Father sent His Son as a human, whom we know as Jesus Christ.  The Son submitted himself completely to the Father’s will.  As Paul says, Christ gave his blood which won for him, the God-man, eternal life.  Now those who partake of that blood offered in the Church, his Body, may acquire not only forgiveness but also eternal life.

False evangelists are still among us.  They may not be bad-intentioned, but nevertheless they get the story of salvation wrong.  They may claim that they have a better idea of good and bad than Jesus taught.  They may say that God loves everybody so that a person need not join himself or herself to Christ’s body to reach salvation.  Whatever their mistakes, we do well to avoid false teachers by adhering to St. Paul’s teaching.

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

 Memorial of Charles Lwanga and Companions

 (Acts 20:17-27; John 17:1-11a)

The old priest was found dead on the floor without life signs.  Some would say that he had the best death possible – without suffering or invasive hospital procedures.  But this point is debatable. Today's readings show other ways to die.

 Paul feels his end is near as he travels to Jerusalem.  On the journey he stops at the port of Miletus and sends for the church workers in Ephesus to meet him.  With old friends around him he shares his affection and concerns.  In the gospel Jesus has been instructing his disciples throughout the long final discourse.  In today’s passage he prays to his Father for them.

No one can enjoy suffering.  But we should not always run from it.  Through suffering we can draw closer to Jesus on the cross.  It even allows us to share in his work of redemption.  Suffering in the dying process may also afford us opportunity to confirm our love for those who mean the most to us.  Like both Paul and Jesus, we may want to embrace it for the sake of others.

Monday, June 2, 2025

 

Monday of the Seventh Week of Easter

(Acts 19:1-8; John 16:19-23)

With Pentecost less than a week away, the Church supplies Mass readings that focus on the Holy Spirit.  In today’s reading from Acts, the Spirit’s effect on believers is visually described.

The disciples of John the Baptist heard of the coming Messiah but were baptized according to John’s rite of repentance.  Only being able to recognize their sins, they experienced difficulty reforming their lives.  Paul arrives to help them.  He likely gives them instructions regarding the Spirit before he baptizes in the name of Jesus.  Immediately they show the Spirit’s effects by living in a new way.  They speak in tongues, praise the Lord, and hold forth prophetically about the good they must do.

The Holy Spirit is inviting us to pray these days that we may more energetically live what we believe.  He will come to show us how to bring about peace through selfless love.

Sunday, June 1, 2025

ASCENSION OF THE LORD

(Acts 1:1-11; Hebrews 9:24-28, 10:19-23 (Ephesians 1:17-23); Luke 24:46-53)

In 1961, Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin returned from the first human voyage into outer space. In an interview afterward, he said, “I looked and looked, but I did not see God.” His statement was likely just mockery of believers by an atheist. But it raises a question worth exploring on this Solemnity of the Ascension. Should we expect to find heaven in the heavens? In other words, is heaven a physical place? Because Jesus has a resurrection body, it seems He needs a physical place to contain Him.

We begin by examining the first reading and the Gospel for today’s Mass. Both were written by the evangelist we know as Luke. Both also report Jesus ascending into heaven. But the accounts are not entirely the same. We will discuss the Gospel first, since it was written earlier and is simpler. Then we will look at the longer reading from the Acts of the Apostles.

The Gospel text portrays Jesus appearing to his apostles on the night of his resurrection. He explains what happened to him in terms of Scripture. At the end, he commands them to preach his resurrection to all nations and how it led to the forgiveness of sins. However, before beginning the mission, he tells them to await the coming of the Holy Spirit. Then Jesus leaves the house to ascend into heaven, evidently on the same night.

The reading from Acts says that Jesus appeared several times to his apostles during forty days after his resurrection. For the most part, he spoke of the Kingdom of God in these appearances. On the fortieth day, the apostles expressed the same concern for the Kingdom that we have. They asked Jesus when he would return to demonstrate his dominion over the world. Jesus responds that it is not for them to know the exact time. However, he says that they will receive the Holy Spirit so that they may bear witness to him throughout the world. Then he rises from their sight until he vanishes into a cloud. The reading ends with two angels (the "men in white") telling them that Jesus will return as they have seen him depart.

The two readings point to several conclusions about the Ascension. First, it teaches that Jesus has a firm idea of ​​how his mission will continue. He will not be limited by being with his disciples in the flesh. Rather, he will remain with them through his Holy Spirit as they preach forgiveness throughout the world. Second, the forty days are not an exact time but rather a way for Luke to create order in his story. At the beginning of the Gospel, Luke promised the reader just this order. Third, the day of Jesus' return is unknown, although it is certain that he will return. The motive of his return is to fulfill God's promise to restore his Kingdom on earth (see Is 32:1-11). Fourth, the Ascension anticipates the coming of the Holy Spirit upon the disciples at Pentecost and upon us at Baptism. The Spirit will help us carry out the mission of proclaiming Jesus' resurrection from the dead and the forgiveness of sin in his name. Fifth, the cloud acts as a chariot carrying Jesus to the glory of heaven where he will reside forever. From there he sends forth his Spirit. Finally, the residence of Christ with the Father is a spiritual place, not a material one. In the First Letter to the Corinthians, Saint Paul writes that Jesus' body has been changed from corruptibility to incorruptibility, from weakness to power, and from material reality to spiritual reality. Therefore, when the Scriptures speak of heaven as above, they mean freedom from material things, like a bird in flight.

For us today, the Ascension allows us to live as free men and women. It presents us as victorious over sin through the Lord's death and destined for glory with bodies transformed like that of the resurrected Jesus. This is because we have the Holy Spirit, who empowers us to proclaim Christ to everyone we meet.

Friday, May 30, 2025

 

Friday of the Sixth Week of Easter

(Acts 18:9-18; John 16:20-23)

As if global warming were not enough concern for the future, another catastrophe looms on the horizon.  Western cultures will wane if not disappear because women in many nations do not want to bear children.  The joy of which Jesus speaks in today’s gospel is being lost.

Jesus speaks of childbearing as a metaphor to describe his imminent death and resurrection.  He tells his disciples that their anguish will be great like a woman in labor as they watch him suffer and die.  But like a child being born, he will rise to a new life giving them great joy.

Jesus shares his new life with us in Baptism.  Properly nourished with the Eucharist, the new life will recognize the need to procreate for the common good.  It will also acknowledge that few things are more satisfying than guiding one’s progeny to become loving, faithful people of God.