Banners of Templars procession - St. Andrew, Cistercian |
6th
Sunday of Easter (A)
Mass Homily, – Fr. Aelred
In the latter part of
Easter Season we move from the accounts of the resurrection appearances to
meditation upon the continued presence of the exalted Christ with his Church
through the Spirit. In the 1st reading from the Acts of the Apostles
we see that the Church is a community in which the Spirit is given and shared!
When the Gospel is preached in Samaria it is important that the Samaritans remain
in union with the mother Church in Jerusalem where Christ’s Passover was
accomplished. And in the Gospel we see that the communion with the risen Christ,
and through Him with the Father, is in fact a Trinitarian experience. Sometimes
this is an ecstatic experience, though not always; but keeping the commandments
is the touchstone of the love of Christ and the indwelling of the Spirit.
The Church makes frequent
use of St. John’s Gospel during Eastertide. Nor is this accidental. St. John
has been described as ‘he who knows the secrets’. St John seems to penetrate
more deeply into the mystery of Jesus than do other parts of Scripture. He
tells us that the man Jesus, whom we have seen in the first three Gospels
performing miracles and speaking in parables, thereby causing controversy, is
at the same tome the very Word of God. Jesus’ divinity is shown more clearly in
St. John than elsewhere. Armed with this deeper insight into who Jesus really
is we can re-read the other Gospels and indeed the whole of the NT with greater
profit and penetration.
St. John tells us that his
purpose in writing his Gospel was that his readers might ‘believe that Jesus is
the Christ, the, the Son of God, and believing have life in his name’. This
purpose is not fundamentally different from that of the other Gospel writers,
but many people through the centuries have found in John’s Gospel a favoured
means of perceiving the Spirit’s active presence.
In today’s Reading from
St. John, Jesus tells us he will not leave us orphans. He has asked the Father
to give us ‘another Advocate to be with us always, the Spirit of truth’.
Invisible to human eyes, but perceptive with the eyes of faith, the Advocate
allows the disciples to believe without having seen. And to recognize that the
Lord is in his Father, that we are in him, and he in us.
It is through our life in the
same Spirit that we can enter more deeply into the secrets of the Fourth
Gospel and live by it’s faith.
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