We pray through the graces of this holy Mass, that we understand what the resurrection of Christ has done for us; making us living stones of a spiritual edifice, a holy people whom God has acquired to proclaim his wonderful deeds, and so help us to pass from darkness to his marvelous light. Happy Sunday!
DOCTRINE AND FAITH
Acts 6,1-7; Psalm 32 (33); 1 Peter 2,4-9; John 14,1-12; Year A, 5th Sunday of Easter, May 7, 2023)
We have been called by God to pass from darkness to his marvelous light. Peter reminds us of this in his First Letter, stating also that this call makes us living stones of a spiritual edifice, a holy people whom God has acquired to proclaim his wonderful deeds (1 Peter 2,9). The faith that Jesus asks us to have, to overcome every disturbance and fear, has this quality, and it does not concern only him, his identity, and the Father who reveals himself in him but also tells us whom we must become, in obedience to his word and docility to the Spirit.
The liturgy today makes us listen to the first part of chapter 14 of John. It is worth recalling some verses. Jesus' words open with a great promise: When I have gone and have prepared a place for you, I will come again and take you with me, so that where I am, you also may be (John 14,3). Towards the end of the chapter the perspective is reversed: Whoever loves me will keep my word, and my Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him (John 14,23). The abode that he prepares with his Passover, is within us. And we truly become God's temple and his spiritual building, as Peter affirms. Jesus is the way also in this sense: for through him we go to the Father, but always through him the Father himself comes to make his abode in us. We discover then that the truth is no longer an idea to grasp, some knowledge to possess: it becomes rather an open space in which to live, a vital environment in which to build one's home to dwell, a road on which to walk. Pope Francis often recalls this: rather than preserving doctrines, it is necessary to start
processes of maturation in the truth. For John, the truth is a person: it is Jesus, as the full revelation of the mystery of God and unveiling, equally full, of our human face. Truth is that communion of love that exists between the Father and the Son, into which the Spirit introduces us: When he comes, the Spirit of truth, he will guide you into all the truth (John 16, 13). It is as if Jesus said: the Spirit will lead you into the truth that I am, into that truth which is my communion of love with the Father: in that space, you too can live and thus find life. Paul understands well that this is the quality of authentic faith. How many times does the expression of Christ resound in his letters? Yes, because with his Easter, in the mystery of his resurrection, Jesus has become a space in which to stay, breathe, and mature to bear the fruit of life. It is the body of which we are members, the vine in which to remain grafted, the dress in which to let ourselves be covered. How can we fail to remember the cry that echoes at the heart of the Letter to the Philippians, which reveals the profound desire of his life: to be given a place in him (Jesus Christ) with the righteousness that is not derived from Law, but that which comes from faith in Christ, the righteousness that comes from God, based on faith (Phil 3,9). Here the ancient question that starts from Genesis and runs through all the Scriptures is answered: Adam, where are you? Man, where are you? (cf. Gen 3,9). Now, we can answer, without shame, even in the nakedness of our sin: I am in Christ! This is our place, to which he, as a way, leads us, because here we find not only God's truth, but our truth, and we can truly live by it. Christ is the space of life, and Paul recalls it: dwelling in him we know the power of his resurrection (cf. Phil 3,10). Being in him, the Apostle always teaches us, sharing what he feels about him (cf. Phil 2,5). By saying to Philip “Whoever has seen me has seen the Father” (John 14,9), Jesus reminds his disciple, and all of us, that seeing him means knowing the Son, and therefore discovering a filial way of relating to the Father. Only by sharing his filial feeling can we encounter not a generic God, but the face of the Father. To know the Father it is necessary that he reveals himself in the Son (who is one with him), but it is equally necessary that we too assume an authentic filial attitude. If we remain servants we will know God as a master, certainly not as the Father. No one knows the Father except the Son and anyone to whom the Son chooses to reveal him (Matt 11,27). And the Son reveals it to us by inviting us to learn from him, to assume his yoke, no longer that of the Law, but that of the filial condition. By sharing his feelings, we can get to know the Father and become a temple of the Spirit, so that, filled with his wisdom, we can also face new situations, such as the one created in the community of Jerusalem, according to the account in the Acts. The Apostles cannot remember a clear word of Jesus that helps them to face the problem, there isn't one: they are full of his Spirit who guides them to make the right decisions. Then the difficulty or obstacle turns into a propitious occasion for the growth of the community.
May the Lord give us the same attitudes, to transform even today's problems into opportunities in which the Spirit can once again speak his words of wisdom. If we abide in him and he in us it will be possible. + John I. Okoye.
(graphics by Chukwubike)
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