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Monday, 8 April 2024

2nd Sunday of Easter Year B, 2024

 

(Acts of the Apostles 4:32-35; 1st. Letter of John 5:1-6; John 20:19-31)

Jesus said to Thomas, "Have you believed because you have seen Me?  Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed."

Now Jesus did many other signs in the presence of the disciples which are not written in this book.

What precisely was John’s thinking in that passage from today’s Gospel reading?

Having just reported Jesus as saying: ‘Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed;’ he then himself added: ‘Now Jesus did many other signs in the presence of His disciples that are not written in this book’.

It would seem that John is saying that he didn’t think it necessary to tell us ‘many other signs’  accomplished by Jesus in the presence His disciples because of Jesus’ words of solemn admonition to Thomas:

            Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed,

But, if that is the case, why then, did Jesus perform so many signs?

John appears to be confessing that he, Thomas, and the other original disciples of Jesus, had been too weak in faith during Our Lord’s public ministry, and especially at His apprehension and crucifixion by the religious authorities, because they did not then have that key to a right understanding of the fulness of God’s revelation – Our Blessed Lord’s Resurrection and Ascension -- which is now ours through faith in Mother Church’s proclamation of Jesus.

In his first letter John again emphasizes  the supreme importance of resurrection-faith :

Everyone who has been born of God overcomes the world. And this is the victory that has overcome the world … our faith. (1 John 5:4)

There he re-iterates his Gospel teaching, by saying that whoever is one of those praised by Jesus for believing without ‘seeing’, such a one has overcome the world; and his victory over the world is proved by the fact that he is spiritually alive and strong-in-Jesus without any requirement of worldly evidence.   Indeed, need for worldly corroboration could only signal a weakness in the spiritual life of a true Christian.

Now, why does John so emphatically praise such a faithful response to Jesus’ gospel?  In order to teach all of us just how sublime  is  our Catholic faith!  Because, ultimately, it is God -- the Father Himself -- Who introduces us to such faith, as John alone tells us in his Gospel (6:43-45):

Jesus answered the Jews, "Do not grumble among yourselves.  No one can come to Me unless the Father who sent Me draws him.  And I will raise him up on the last day.  It is written in the prophets, 'And they will all be taught by God.' Everyone who has heard and learned from the Father comes to Me.

Worldly evidence cannot establish the spiritual realities of our Christian faith, it can only confirm faith’s basic rationality -- for example, we have greater historical testimony for Jesus than for Julius Caesar -- but the faithful, loving, embrace of Jesus’ Gospel can only come as a response to God’s inspiring grace enlightening our mind, moving our heart, guiding and confirming our will.

John is not against us using our natural intelligence to  grow in understanding of the Gospel of Jesus; on the contrary, he expressly tells us that is why he wrote his Gospel:

These (signs) are written that you may believe (that they may help you believe) that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing you may have life in His name.

For St. John, the supreme function of the Gospel message is to provoke, awaken and promote our awareness of, our contact with and our response to, God Himself; and that contact, that response, though based essentially on the Gospel message, is not to be limited to or constrained by the written words of the Gospel.   The truth about Jesus, and indeed about God, is broader, wider, goes deeper and higher, is more intimately personal than the inspired but human words of the Gospels; that is why we Catholics accept the Tradition of the Church and acknowledge development in the doctrine of Faith; all, however, on the basis of, and never in contradiction to, the original, Apostolic Gospel proclamation.  And that is also why the Catholic Church has always recognized, revered and delighted in, her authentic saints as shining beacons and inspiring examples of that possibility, open to all her faithful children, of wondrous personal communion with God,  beginning here on earth and leading to its fulfilment through vision, as children of God in Jesus, in our heavenly home.

And so. dear  People of God, we have come to the essential characteristic of our Christian Faith.  It is not simply a faith to be learned, it is not a faith just to be obeyed; it is a faith to be learned, experienced, loved, and lived: not only in the sense of obeying its commands and fighting for its rights, but, above all, as a communion with the Father, in His Incarnate  Son our Lord and Saviour, by God’s great Gift, His most Holy Spirit.   Mother Church today is still called to prepare herself to be inspired by God, not indeed to write or proclaim a new revelation, but to understand yet more fully and appreciate still more deeply the revelation originally and finally given to her by God.

Mother Church is a mystical Church, where truth, rationally elucidated, and emotional awareness born of God’s beauty-perceived, though most gratefully appreciated are also necessarily subjected to the supreme authority of the Apostolic Proclamation, especially the transcendent words of Our Lord Jesus Christ.

All this is contained in those words of our Creed which say: ‘we believe in one, holy, CATHOLIC AND APOSTOLIC Church’.   Those words do not simply state that we believe the Catholic Church to have been founded by Jesus Christ, established on His Apostles, to be guided and preserved by His Spirit; they also mean that it is only in the Catholic Church -- only in her atmosphere, so to speak -- that we are able to breath fully as Christians, fully endowed and empowered to believe aright the fullness of truth  about God and His will for the salvation of mankind.

Whoever is begotten by God conquers the world.   And the victory that conquers the world is our faith.

            The Spirit is the one that testifies, and the Spirit is truth.

Oh, you believing Catholics, rejoice in, and be grateful for, the treasure you have been given!  John, the Apostle whom Jesus loved particularly, regards us today, as -- in some measure -- better placed in relation to Jesus than he, John, was in the days of the Lord’s public ministry!!   Because your faith has been given to you at the instigation of the heavenly Father Himself Who has P/personally called you and introduced you to Jesus.  And that faith is being continually nourished and purified -- even to this very day, at this very hour – by the Holy Spirit of Truth and Love, in the womb of Mother Church.

Dear friends in Christ, you who are remnants -- faithful remnants -- of what was Western Christianity, you who are possibly being persecuted and killed, mocked and defamed, in the midst of a society become pagan; you who today are hearing strange things even in Mother Church herself, words and teachings that would try to conform her to modern society, you who remember those words of the Lord  (Matthew. 10:28):  

Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul; rather, be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body in Gehenna;

To all of you I say, let us all rejoice wholeheartedly in the Lord, for He is risen today, One of us, risen for the glory of the Father and for the salvation of all believers.

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