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Thursday 15 April 2021

3rd Sunday of Eastertide 2021

 

 3rd. Sunday of Eastertide                             

(Acts of the Apostles 3:13-15, 17-19; 1st. John 2:1-5; Luke 24:35-48)

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My dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, once again we have a beautiful Eastertide apparition of the Risen Lord Jesus to His disciples which we are privileged to share with them in Mother Church thanks to her holy Scriptures.

Jesus appeared to the Eleven in Jerusalem as they were gathered together discussing the report of two disciples who claimed to have met the Lord Jesus -- risen from the dead -- as they had been on their way to Emmaus.  To prove that they were not mistaken they had told the Apostles about the meal they had shared with Jesus, just like the meal they had all shared together at the Last Supper.   The Apostles gathered there in secret in Jerusalem were amazed to hear what had transpired on the way to Emmaus, and, as they were considering together what it all might mean, suddenly Jesus Himself was standing there in the room with them.  Despite His greeting:

          Peace be with you,

they – thinking they were seeing a ghost -- were terrified and frightened to such an extent that Jesus went straight on to say to them:

“Why are you troubled? And why do questions arise in your hearts?  Behold My hands and My feet, that it is I Myself. Touch Me and see, for a spirit does not have flesh and bones as you see I have."    And as He said this, He showed them His hands and His feet.  

Jesus had no recriminations for His Apostles, just an assurance about the reality and truth of what they were actually seeing and experiencing.

Thereupon, He opened their understanding that they might comprehend the Scriptures, just as they had heard He had done for those two disciples on the way to Emmaus.

Now let us turn our attention to the Apostle Peter in our first reading today, addressing the devout Jews gathered in the portico of the Temple in Jerusalem immediately after he, Peter, together with John, had made a man, lame from birth, walk upright for the first time:

The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the God of our fathers, glorified His Servant Jesus, Whom you delivered up and denied in the presence of Pilate, when he was determined to let Him go.  But you denied the Holy and Righteous One and asked for a murderer to be granted to you.  The author of life you put to death but God raised Him from the dead; of this we are witnesses.

Peter was taking great care to do precisely what the Risen Jesus had commanded His Apostles when He said that:

Repentance and remission of sins should be preached in (Jesus’) name to all nations, beginning at Jerusalem.

Peter, who had wept so profusely over his own denials of the Lord, was immensely grateful that Jesus, appearing so unexpectedly in that upper room had no words of recrimination but only a peaceful greeting and comforting exhortations to confidence; and he, Peter, was now trying to follow his Master’s example:

          Now I know, brothers that you acted out of ignorance.

Peter was, indeed, following the example of his Master so closely that not only did he not condemn those who had been led into sin, but he even refrained from condemning those who had been responsible for thus leading them astray:

Now I know, brothers that you acted out of ignorance just as your leaders did.

However, since for disciples of Jesus there can be no repentance without sin being acknowledged, therefore he, Peter, was trying first of all to lead his fellow Jews to recognize and acknowledge their sins as he himself had so broken-heartedly acknowledged his own public betrayal of his Lord and Master.  That done, no recriminations, no accusations, just what the Apostles themselves, above all, what Peter himself, had received from Jesus, understanding and forgiveness:

Brethren, those things which God foretold by the mouths of all His prophets, that the Christ would suffer, He has thus fulfilled.  Repent therefore and be converted, that your sins may be wiped away.

Indeed, Peter then went on to add some further encouragement, saying:

Repent therefore and be converted, that your sins may be wiped away, that the Lord may grant you times of refreshment.

There we see something of the beauty of the Church and there we realise why we call her Mother Church: because she uses the Scriptures, given into her care by her Lord, for our refreshing, that is, for our comfort and strengthening, for our consolation, and enlightenment.

People of God, the Church has too often been accused of preaching hatred of the Jews, and we should notice that there was no hatred in Mother Church’s earliest response to the Jews through her supreme leader on earth, Peter the Rock who, having openly declared the guilt of both People of Israel and their leaders, also went on the say:

Brethren, I know that you acted in ignorance, as did also your rulers;

and was able to look forward to times of refreshing coming from the presence of the Lord.  Notice what is happening in our days, however.

Our Blessed Lord’s whole life and dreadful death was for one purpose only, God’s supreme glorification through mankind’s repentance for sin committed and grateful acceptance of forgiveness given, in Jesus by the Spirit.

Moreover, the very first thing our Risen Lord did on appearing to His Apostles hiding for fear of the Jews in the upper room, was to open their minds to understand the Scriptures and say:

Thus it is written that the Christ would suffer and rise again from the dead on the third day, and THAT REPENTANCE FOR THE FORGIVENESS OF SINS WOULD BE PROCLAIMED in His name to all the nations.  You are witnesses of these things and I am sending forth the promise of My Father (the Holy Spirit) upon you (to cloth you with power from on high).  (Luke 24:46-49)

And again, in St. John’s Gospel this time, the Risen Jesus immediately equips His Church to take up her supreme task:

Jesus breathed on them and said to them, Receive the Holy Spirit.   Whose sins you forgive are forgiven them; and whose sins you retain are retained.  (John 20: 22-23)

But we, today, we hear so little of forgiveness of sins being officially proclaimed as necessary in our modern context of a supremely sinful and proudly sinful world society.   We hear of brotherly love, a better and fairer world for all, and much other such pious moralism, but so very, very, little that is immediately pertinent and necessary to protect Christians and Catholics in a world blatantly ‘pushing’ sins of choice as popular standard bearers in a cohesive rebellion again previous Christian values and standards, now abandoned or totally rejected.  The whole ‘modern’ world is proclaiming sin as natural and therefore morally acceptable, while we Catholics and Christians hear merely ‘official’ platitudes which are ‘right’, we know, but which are not the Christian message necessary for our times, especially with regard to believers who have not yet experienced years of witness to and public practice of, the faith of our fathers and the background of our culture.

Now, our great hope, as Christians, is for the return in glory of the Lord when He will establish God’s Kingdom here on earth and finalise God’s triumph over all evil.  That will indeed be -- as Peter said -- a time of refreshing.  However, even now, we can already enjoy a time of refreshing from the presence of the Lord: for all devout Christians recognize and revere the presence of the Lord in the Scriptures, particularly in the New Testament Scriptures; while, perhaps even greater refreshing is offered to us Catholics who can participate in the Eucharistic sacrifice and feast by receiving the very Body and Blood of Christ in Holy Communion.

So, from the readings set before us today by Mother Church, we have learnt something about ourselves as Catholics: we should be here in Church, not simply out of duty, not simply out of obligation, but for our refreshing as disciples of Jesus!

We heard St. John, also speaking to us for our refreshment today in the second reading:

(Jesus) Himself is the propitiation for our sins, and not for ours only but also for the whole world.    Now by this we know that we know Him, if we keep His commandments.

Now, anyone who is sincere in his or her desire to serve the Lord will, inevitably, be only too well aware of their own failings, or their own inclination to sin at times.  It is therefore comforting to hear John explain what makes a true disciple of the Lord, for he tells us that, although there are people who think themselves - and are often thought by others - to be true disciples of Jesus because they have warm feelings for Him and can speak effusive and/or enthusiastic words about Him, nevertheless, in so far as they pay no close attention to His commandments,  they are mistaken about themselves, and no sure guides for others. 

We may be sure that we know Him if we keep His commandments.

And, today, dear People of God, a unique aspect of Christianity is largely overlooked, if not deliberately ignored:

Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.

That is the only conditional part of the prayer taught us by our Blessed Lord but it is of momentous importance, because too many Christians today allow themselves to be influenced by – and even at times profess admiration for – those who ‘get their revenge’, or to make it seem a little better, ‘get even’.  Dear people, there can be no point of honour for a Christian to go so deliberately against Our Lord’s teaching; and any attempt to justify such retaliatory behaviour can only ruin one’s own chances of forgiveness by God.

God’s commandments are the very core and centre of Jesus’ own relationship with His Father, and of His Father’s love for mankind:

I do not speak on My own, but the Father Who sent Me commanded Me what to say and speak.  And I know that His commandment is eternal life.   (John 12:49-50)

God’s commandments are eternal life and express divine love; and because Jesus understood, appreciated, and appropriately accepted them as such He was able to redeem all mankind.  Consequently, such commandments must not be manipulated and adulterated – by pseudo disciples of the Lord -- for the human expression of pretentious, and ultimately false, love and deadly pride.

Whoever loves Me will be loved by My Father, and I will love him and reveal Myself to him.  Whoever loves Me will keep My word, and My Father will love him, and We will come to him and make Our dwelling with him.

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, may we leave Church today gratefully strengthened and bountifully refreshed for the service of, and witness to, Mother Church who is so divinely wise as to cling resolutely to her Scriptures and to her earliest and most firmly established traditions and teachings in the face of all modern flights of intellectual froth and proud fancy (not true scholarship) or tides of popular, emotional feeling (not true devotion).  And being thus herself obedient to her Lord and His foundation truths, she has not failed us; indeed, she has called us, in His Name, to come here obediently today and rewarded us with the most sublime nourishment and comfort for our souls.