First reading: Acts 4:32-35
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm
117(118):2-4,15-18,22-24
Second reading: 1 John 5:1-6
Sequence
– Victimae Paschali Laudes
Gospel Acclamation: John 20:29
The Gospel According to John: 20:19-31
(NJB)
Listen!
The
readings for today move us away from the ministry of Jesus, into the life of
the early church.
John’s
Gospel was written roughly one hundred-twenty years after Jesus died, it
contains some fascinating glimpses into the life of John’s community, but it is
far removed from the way Jesus instructed us to follow.
John’s
Gospel makes enemies of the Jewish people, it tells his audience that in the
week after Jesus’ crucifixion the apostles hid for “fear of the Jews,” indicating
deep division in the nascent church between the Pharisaic Jews who founded it,
and the far greater number of gentiles in Palestine and the broader
Mediterranean world who quickly became the majority of its members.
Remember!
Jesus
and the apostles were Jewish, they were Jews of the diaspora; Jesus taught in
synagogues, the people called him Rabbi.
Ninety
years before John’s gospel was written, Paul was active with his “ministry to
the gentiles,” arguing with Peter over the question of whether gentiles must
first convert and become observant Jews before they could join the church. In
this period the Jesus movement was a Jewish movement.
Paul
argued against the notion that gentiles should first covert to Judaism before
becoming Christians, Paul’s point of view ultimately prevailed. The Church, still
in its infancy, opened itself to the world and over the ninety intervening years
between the ministry of Peter and Paul and the writing of John’s Gospel a profound
transformation took place, coming to see the Jewish tradition and its people, the
tradition and people from which it was born, as anathema to itself.
During
the period that John’s Gospel was written, the Church had great concern for its
authority, this time was marked by persecutions from without and division from
within. In this time the image of Jesus is changes from prophet to priest; he
is less and less the voice of one crying out in the wilderness, and more the
administrator of priestly functions. When he commissions the disciples he
instantiates their office as a priestly office, empowering them to pass
judgement on the people, to forgive or not forgive sins as they and the heirs
to their authority saw fit, etc…so they told us.
This
portrayal of Jesus as the Christ is a betrayal of the actual ministry of Jesus and
his teaching on the way, it flies in the face of the historical account
that lingers in the synoptic gospels (Mark, Luke and Matthew), a history almost
wholly absent in John.
The
historical record tells us that Jesus was not a priest; he was a prophet. Jesus
forgave sin and encouraged the disciples to forgive sins, not because they had
the sacred power to do so, but because God, the creator of the universe had
already done so, and their role was merely to proclaim it, to teach this truth
and help people to understand what that means: which is that sin is forgiven by
the divine, and we are meant to honor God by accepting this forgiveness, and to
emulate God by forgiving those who have done us harm…real or imagined.
When
Jesus and the disciples forgave sins, they were not so much performing an act as
they were proclaiming God’s intention for the whole of creation, teaching God’s
abiding love for the creature, no matter how far they might have strayed.
When
a prophet proclaims absolution, they are not exercising a priestly power, they
are articulating the will of God.
John’s
Gospel did a disservice to the early Church by encouraging the faithful to become
believers, to respond to reports mystical deeds and magical happenings, to ghostly
apparitions and visions as if they were true, in the hope that these
supernatural events, if accepted would lend a greater authority to their position
in the Church, and their own ministry within it.
Many
people are taken in by this sort of thing.
Every
appeal the Church makes on the conscience of the believer that relies on the super-fantastic
for its authority, must always be understood as a fabrication and a failure of the
Church’s ability to reason.
It
is our duty to uphold the notion that when Jesus called us he called us to
serve in the Church, he called us to abide by the Spirit of Truth in that service,
and that when we lie, we undermine its foundation, which is destructive of the
faith.
In
the final passage of the Gospel for today, the writer puts forth the notion
that the miracles were real: he insists on it, he says that they were performed
so that people would believe that Jesus was (in a special way) the son of God,
and that through this belief (as if their belief-itself were the key to a
secret door) they would enter the Church, becoming candidates for admission
into eternal life…this is a false representation of the way.
The
construction of the ideology is:
Come
to the church where the Gospel is given, learn the name of Jesus Christ and
believe in it; believe that Jesus is the Son of God. If you believe this, you
will be rewarded with eternal life.
The
scheme of this idiom is essentially Gnostic, it represents a system of belief
that the Church attempted to reject in the same era that John’s Gospel was
written. However, the Gnostic strain of thought had significant appeal among early
Christians, and the teaching of the Church, even the liturgy and especially
John’s Gospel, reflect the compromises that the Church made with those Gnostic movements
in order to allow their adherents to join the mainstream.
It
is my position that we should continue to reject those Gnostic strains of
thought, the reliance on magic, the super-natural and the fantastic. More
importantly, we should reject the notion that there is some kind of exchange
that must take place before any one of God’s children can become the
beneficiary of God’s saving will.
Understand
this!
Grace
is free and salvation is not transactional; what brings us to salvation is the
natural movement of God’s will, flowing from the Divine out toward the creature,
infusing each and every being from the moment of their generation with a divine
force that culminates in the return of the creature to God.
Know
this.
The
meaning of faith is trust, and the faithful trust God. The meaning of faith is
not belief, belief is an ideation that we hold in our minds, like a proposition
or an article of dogma. A person may have faith in a belief, they may also
believe in the things they have faith in. But faith and belief are not the same
thing, and the distinction between them is important.
The
proper content of Christian faith is not: believe in Christ so that you can be
saved.
Christian
faith is this: trust God, you are saved already.
Be
mindful.
Everyone
who is, or was begotten by God, is loved by God; we are called upon to love God
in return, to love the ineffable, the transcendent and the infinite, to do so
to the best that we are able.
The
ministry of Jesus, the ministry that we are meant to follow as Christians, this
ministry calls on us to act from our love for God, by loving all of God’s
children, by loving them equally and without preference, whether or not they
believe what we believe or have faith in the same things we trust in.
Note
well: the profession of an ideology or the articulation of belief in a
particular doctrine is not in itself an act of love.
Keep
God’s commandment, as Jesus said: love your neighbor as you love yourself, care
for them as you care for your own, do not equivocate.
Do
not assume that just because a person professes to love God that this person
actually has love in their heart. Such a profession is a good first step, but
it is not proof of anything. The profession of love is not the act of loving…its
proof is in the doing.
Know
this.
Being
a follower of Jesus does not confer any special benefit on a person, neither in
this life, nor in the next.
Rather,
being a Christian, having accepted the responsibilities of following Jesus, confers
a special responsibility on the follower, the responsibility to treat all
people as God would, as beloved members of the divine family.
Remember,
God
is kind, God is loving and God is merciful.
Wherever
God is present (and God is not, not present in any place), God’s kindness,
God’s love and God’s mercy are also present. As Christians we are called to
trust in this, to demonstrate that trust through our actions, and to encourage
that trust in others.
Know
this.
The
Church, like God, has no enemies.
Know
that God does not dwell behind the wall of a city, or within the precinct of a
temple, neither in a cathedral, nor a basilica. There are no gates barring
access to God, priestly intermediaries are wholly unnecessary, God is in all
places, at all times and in the hearts of all people.
God
is with us!
God
does not favor one child over another. God is a bringer of life, not death. God
loves peace, not war.
God
is the parent of everyone, the creator of the universe and everything in it,
and the resurrection of Jesus (if you believe in it) is a gift of hope for you.
It is a reason to trust in what had theretofore been unseen, and encouragement
to believe that you are included in what God has promised to do for everyone.
Whether
we believe in the resurrection or not, does not matter, the return to God is
the destiny set in place for you and everyone, not one of us will be left in
the dark.
All
will be saved, all will be well. God will be all in all…this is the hope of the
church, and the true content of our faith.
Faith
makes it easier to live the good life. When your belief in God’s love for you
is firm, it is easier to pray for those who persecute you, to love your enemy,
to orient your life toward justice, to fill it with mercy and express it with
humility.
Faith
is not an article of belief that we are meant to cling to, it is not the golden
ticket that will grant a person access to paradise.
Faith
will not protect you from evil, either from within or from without, but faith
will empower you to persevere in the face of it, to endure it and remain whole.
Consider
this.
The
myths we tell about Cain and Able, Ishmael and Isaac, Essau and Jacob, Saul and
David, these stories reflect the tribal and dynastic machinations of small
minded and sinful creatures. They are not a reflection of the divine will.
Do
not confuse victory in battle with God’s will, do not confuse human suffering
with God’s will; God does not desire anyone to suffer.
Now
consider the reading from the Book of Acts. The author of Acts is informing us
of the way things ought to have been, rather than speaking of the way things actually
were.
We
know that the Church did not conduct its daily business according to its most
lofty ideals. The letters of Paul confirm it. More importantly, we have the
judgement of common sense and our own experience to tell us that this is always
how things go. This reading from Acts informs us of what our aspirations for
our communities should be, and it is good that the author directs people toward
a unity of heart and soul. However, it is a disservice to hold these aspirations
over the people of the Church today, as a factual representation of a
“golden-age” that has been lost to sin.
Be
mindful!
The
apostolic era was a period in the Church that was rife with conflict,
oftentimes bloody, and it was not always the party in the right that emerged
from those internal conflicts victorious.
There
was conflict and misunderstanding among the disciples, even those closest to
Jesus, even while he lived with them and taught them; Jesus’ own disciples betrayed
and denied him.
The
conflicts of the apostolic era ended with the age of heresies, the age of
heresies ended with advent of the Imperial church, after which, new heresies
were persecuted through the power of the state, leading to centuries of war and
bloody conflict, all the way to the inquisition and the protestant reformation,
which has never ended.
The
last two hundred years have brought us an ebb in the tide of those conflicts,
but the structure of those conflicts remain…the unscrupulous could reignite
them at any moment, and with the rise of Christian nationalism in America, we
could easily experience those conflicts again.
Know
this.
There
is not a single teaching of the Church whose meaning has been agreed upon by all
Christians, not a single teaching that has been held by all people, in all
times and all places; even the teaching on the resurrection has been a point of
division among Christians, going all the way back to the discovery of the empty
tomb.
It
is not the teaching we believe, it is not doctrine nor dogma that lifts us up
and saves us. It is only the ever-present love of God that returns us to
ourselves and to the divine. Our salvation is to trust in that…not that we will
be saved one day, but that we are saved already
First reading: Acts 4:32-35
The
whole group of believers was united, heart and soul
The
whole group of believers was united, heart and soul; no one claimed for his own
use anything that he had, as everything they owned was held in common.
The apostles continued to testify to the
resurrection of the Lord Jesus with great power, and they were all given great
respect.
None of their members was ever in want, as
all those who owned land or houses would sell them, and bring the money from
them, to present it to the apostles; it was then distributed to any members who
might be in need.
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm
117(118):2-4,15-18,22-24
Give thanks to the Lord for he is
good, for his love has no end.
Let
the sons of Israel say:
‘His love has no end.’
Let
the sons of Aaron say:
‘His love has no end.’
Let
those who fear the Lord say:
‘His love has no end.’
Give thanks to the Lord for he is
good, for his love has no end.
The
Lord’s right hand has triumphed;
his right hand raised me up.
I
shall not die, I shall live
and recount his deeds.
I
was punished, I was punished by the Lord,
but not doomed to die.
Give thanks to the Lord for he is
good, for his love has no end.
The
stone which the builders rejected
has become the corner stone.
This
is the work of the Lord,
a marvel in our eyes.
This
day was made by the Lord;
we rejoice and are glad.
Give thanks to the Lord for he is
good, for his love has no end.
Second reading: 1 John 5:1-6
Whoever believes that Jesus is the
Christ has already overcome the world
Whoever
believes that Jesus is the Christ has been begotten by God; and whoever loves
the Father that begot him loves the child whom he begets.
We
can be sure that we love God’s children if we love God himself and do what he
has commanded us; this is what loving God is – keeping his commandments; and
his commandments are not difficult, because anyone who has been begotten by God
has already overcome the world; this is the victory over the world – our faith.
Who
can overcome the world?
Only
the man who believes that Jesus is the Son of God:
Jesus
Christ who came by water and blood, not with water only, but with water and
blood; with the Spirit as another witness – since the Spirit is the truth.
Sequence
- Victimae Paschali Laudes
Christians,
to the Paschal Victim
offer sacrifice and praise.
The
sheep are ransomed by the Lamb;
and
Christ, the undefiled,
hath
sinners to his Father reconciled.
Death
with life contended:
combat strangely ended!
Life’s
own Champion, slain,
yet lives to reign.
Tell
us, Mary:
say what thou didst see
upon the way.
The
tomb the Living did enclose;
I
saw Christ’s glory as he rose!
The
angels there attesting;
shroud
with grave-clothes resting.
Christ,
my hope, has risen:
he
goes before you into Galilee.
That
Christ is truly risen
from the dead we know.
Victorious
king, thy mercy show!
Gospel Acclamation: John 20:29
Alleluia,
alleluia!
Jesus
said: ‘You believe because you can see me.
Happy
are those who have not seen and yet believe.’
Alleluia!
The Gospel According to John 20:19-31
Eight
days later, Jesus came again and stood among them
In
the evening of that same day, the first day of the week, the doors were closed
in the room where the disciples were, for fear of the Jews. Jesus came and
stood among them. He said to them, ‘Peace be with you’, and showed them his
hands and his side. The disciples were filled with joy when they saw the Lord,
and he said to them again, ‘Peace be with you.
‘As
the Father sent me, so am I sending you.’
After
saying this he breathed on them and said:
‘Receive
the Holy Spirit. For those whose sins you forgive, they are forgiven; for those
whose sins you retain, they are retained.’
Thomas,
called the Twin, who was one of the Twelve, was not with them when Jesus came.
When the disciples said, ‘We have seen the Lord’, he answered, ‘Unless I see
the holes that the nails made in his hands and can put my finger into the holes
they made, and unless I can put my hand into his side, I refuse to believe.’
Eight days later the disciples were in the house again and Thomas was with
them. The doors were closed, but Jesus came in and stood among them. ‘Peace be
with you’ he said. Then he spoke to Thomas, ‘Put your finger here; look, here
are my hands. Give me your hand; put it into my side. Doubt no longer but
believe.’ Thomas replied, ‘My Lord and my God!’ Jesus said to him:
‘You
believe because you can see me.
Happy
are those who have not seen and yet believe.’
There
were many other signs that Jesus worked and the disciples saw, but they are not
recorded in this book. These are recorded so that you may believe that Jesus is
the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing this you may have life through
his name.
The Second Sunday of Easter (Year B)
Divine Mercy Sunday, A Holy Day of Obligation