First
Reading - Acts 9:26-31 ©
Responsorial Psalm - Psalm
21(22):26-28,30-32
Second Reading - 1 John 3:18-24 ©
Gospel Acclamation – John 15: 4, 5
The Gospel According to John – 15:1 –
8 ©
(NAB)
Listen!
These stories from The Book of Acts are the
stories of the first Christians. They are illuminating, if not exactly true,
nevertheless they tell us something of what Christians wanted other people to
believe about them, to control the narrative…so to speak, concerning what was
being said about them.
These readings are like records that reveal the work
of the early church and its progress in the world, as well as the matters that divided
them from one another.
Be mindful.
God hears you; the creator of the universe knows
your innermost thoughts. God knows you as you know yourself, God understands
all that you are and all that you struggle with. God feels your experience in
the world as you feel it. God is with you; your struggles are God’s own.
Know this.
God has given you the power to save yourself, the
power to surrender, to agonize or be at peace, but God will not rescue you from
your dilemma; God will never intervene on your behalf.
Remember.
God’s love
reaches everyone, even the wealthy and the greedy, as much as to the poor and
the needy. When the wealthy refuse to give to those in need, it is not because
God ‘s love is not alive in them, but because they are dead to God’s love.
Be assured,
God’s love is present and trying to break through. Do not abandon them, just as
we would wish that they not abandon those in need, stay with them and
remembrance of Jesus who showed us the way, who taught us to “love our enemy,” and “pray for those who
persecute us.”
Love is its
own reward, do not seek anything else in return for love, save love itself.
Understand
this.
Nothing
good or useful comes from believing in a name, whatever that means; it is only
in loving, in the act of caring that good things come through us and to us.
God is
alive in all people, no one is excluded from the love of God. If you are a
servant of God, you will honor this. You will honor it, not because it has been
proven to you and the way is now beyond doubt, you will honor it because
you trust God, and your faith informs you
Be on the
lookout for false prophets, look to everyone around you, especially those who
claim to be “true believers.”
Look to
yourself.
We are imperfect,
all of us. We have false understandings of who God is, each of us. We have all
sinned and fallen short of the glory of God, this is the human condition. No
matter how quickly we may apprehend the truth, or how swiftly comprehension
comes to us, we all confound our understanding of it by the admixture of our
fears, hopes and desires for ourselves, our friends and families…it cant be helped.
Therefor we
are called on to trust God, to trust the image of God that was present in Jesus,
not the God of categorical propositions, idioms and dogma. The teaching of the
church is meant to foster belief in God, to nurture faith, trust and
understanding.
We are
called on to trust God, to forgive and to accept forgiveness, to love and be
loved.
Be mindful.
God dwells
within the obedient and the disobedient, the faithful and the unfaithful, God
does not hold back the divine love from anyone.
God lives
in all people, God knows you, and God knows them, God knows us, even as we know ourselves.
Consider
the Gospel reading for today, it comes from a place of division and fear, a
theme that is often repeated in the early church facing persecutions from
without, and divisions from within.
It
is right and good to say that Jesus is the vine, and God the vine dresser, understanding
that the vinedresser takes care of the whole plant; from root to branch, pruning,
binding and bringing to flower all the fruit that is productive of the good
wine. The vine dresser cares for the vine and all its shoots, the vine dresser
does not seek to kill it.
Know
this.
God
is the creator of all that is; everything that is comes to be through the vine,
as the introduction to John’s Gospel attests:
In the beginning was the word and all
things came to be through him, all things are in him, and not one thing exists
without him.
The
vine weaves through all creation, it touches every person, it sustains every
living thing and undergirds the created order.
Everyone
is within the vine, Christian and non-Christian alike…the good, the bad and the
ugly.
Be
mindful.
When
the writers of John’s Gospel were writing today’s verse, they were concerned
with the faithfulness of their members. They drafted warning for those they
thought would betray them, and provided a rationale for excluding those whom
they thought had done so.
This
is not the way.
Remember
Jesus, who forgave the men who murdered him, even while he was dying on the
cross. Remember Peter, who denied him, and Paul who persecuted Christians. They
were all in the vine, before they ever knew the name of Jesus they were there, each
and every one of them; they were in the vine with Judas Iscariot and Pontius
Pilate, and all those members of the Sanhedrin, the Herodians and other run of
the mill villains. They were all there in the vine, both in their faithfulness
and in their most faithful moments.
First Reading - Acts 9:26-31 ©
Barnabas
Explained How the Lord Had Appeared to Saul on His Journey
When
Saul got to Jerusalem he tried to join the disciples, but they were all afraid
of him: they could not believe he was really a disciple. Barnabas, however,
took charge of him, introduced him to the apostles, and explained how the Lord
had appeared to Saul and spoken to him on his journey, and how he had preached
boldly at Damascus in the name of Jesus. Saul now started to go round with them
in Jerusalem, preaching fearlessly in the name of the Lord. But after he had
spoken to the Hellenists, and argued with them, they became determined to kill
him. When the brothers knew, they took him to Caesarea, and sent him off from
there to Tarsus.
The churches throughout Judaea, Galilee and
Samaria were now left in peace, building themselves up, living in the fear of
the Lord, and filled with the consolation of the Holy Spirit.
Responsorial
Psalm - Psalm 21(22):26-28,30-32
The Just Man Suffers; the Lord Hears Him
This is the time of repentance for us to atone for
our sins and seek salvation.
God, my God, why have you abandoned me?
The words
that I groan do not reach my saviour.
My God, I call by day and you do not listen.
I call to
you by night, but no rest comes.
But still you are holy,
the one whom
Israel praises.
Our fathers put their hope in you;
they gave
you their trust and you freed them.
They called on you and they were saved,
they trusted
and were not disappointed.
But I am a worm and no man,
despised by
mankind and rejected by the people.
All who see me deride me,
they make
faces and toss their heads:
“He trusted in the Lord, so let the Lord rescue him:
let him save
him, if he truly delights in him!”
Indeed, you drew me from my mother’s womb,
you set me
to suck at her breasts.
I have depended on you since before I was born,
from my
mother’s womb you have been my God.
Do not be far from me now,
for my
tribulation is close at hand,
for there is
no-one who will help.
I am surrounded by many cattle,
the bulls of
Bashan hem me in.
Their mouths open wide before me,
like a
fierce and roaring lion.
I have flowed away like water,
and all my
bones come apart.
My heart has turned to wax,
it melts
away within me.
My mouth is dry as burnt clay,
my tongue
sticks in my throat:
you have
laid me in the dust of death.
I am surrounded by many dogs,
my enemies
unite and hem me in.
They have pierced my hands and my feet:
I can count
all my bones.
They gaze on me, they inspect me.
They have divided my clothing between them,
they have
cast lots for my garment.
So you, Lord, do not stay away:
Lord, my
strength, hurry to my help.
Rescue my soul from the sword,
my only
child from the teeth of the dogs.
Save me from the lion’s mouth,
from the
wild oxen’s horns that brought me low.
I will tell of your glory to my brethren;
I will
praise you in the midst of the assembly.
Praise the Lord, you who fear him!
Give him
glory, all the seed of Jacob.
Let Israel tremble before him,
for he does
not spurn the poor or ignore their plight.
He does not turn his face away –
whoever
calls on him, he listens.
I shall cry out your praise in the great assembly,
I shall
fulfil my vows before all those who fear you.
The poor will eat and be filled,
those who
seek the Lord will praise him.
“Let their
hearts live for ever!”
All the ends of the earth will remember the Lord:
they will
turn to him.
All the families of nations will worship before him.
For the Lord’s is the kingdom,
it is he who
will rule all the nations.
Him alone will they praise, those who sleep in the
earth;
they will
worship before him, who go down into the dust.
But my soul will be alive to him,
and my seed
shall serve him.
They shall tell of the Lord to the next generation,
they shall
proclaim his righteousness to a people yet to be born.
“Hear what
the Lord has done!”
Second Reading - 1 John 3:18-24 ©
The Commandment of Faith and Love
My children, our love is not to be just words or
mere talk, but something real and active; only by this can we be certain that
we are children of the truth and be able to quieten our conscience in his
presence, whatever accusations it may raise against us, because God is greater
than our conscience and he knows everything.
My dear people, if we cannot be condemned by our own
conscience, we need not be afraid in God’s presence, and whatever we ask him, we
shall receive, because we keep his ommandments and live the kind of life that he wants.
His commandments are these:
That we believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ and
that we love one another as he told us to.
Whoever keeps his commandments lives in God and God
lives in him.
We know that he lives in us by the Spirit that he
has given us.
Gospel
Acclamation – John 15: 4, 5
Alleluia, alleluia!
Make your home in me, as I make mine in you.
Whoever remains in me bears fruit in plenty.
Alleluia!
The Gospel According to John – 15:1 –
8 ©
I
Am the Vine, You Are the Branches
Jesus
said to his disciples:
‘I
am the true vine, and my Father is the vinedresser.
Every
branch in me that bears no fruit he cuts away, and every branch that does bear
fruit he prunes to make it bear even more.
You
are pruned already, by means of the word that I have spoken to you.
Make
your home in me, as I make mine in you.
As
a branch cannot bear fruit all by itself, but must remain part of the vine, neither
can you unless you remain in me.
I
am the vine, you are the branches.
Whoever
remains in me, with me in him, bears fruit in plenty; for cut off from me you
can do nothing.
Anyone
who does not remain in me is like a branch that has been thrown away – he
withers; these branches are collected and thrown on the fire, and they are
burnt.
If
you remain in me and my words remain in you, you may ask what you will and you
shall get it.
It
is to the glory of my Father that you should bear much fruit, and then you will
be my disciples.’
The Fifth Sunday of Easter (Year B)