(Homily for the 6th Sunday of Easter Year A)
From this Sunday, attention
moves from the risen Christ to the Holy Spirit, from the Risen Lord to His Gift.
In fact, we can call it a brief advent in preparation for Pentecost. The departure of Jesus does not mean
that he is now absent; rather it entails his ever renewed presence through the
coming of the Spirit. Be that as it may, at the verge of
the closing of the Easter season we move from the contemplation of the
resurrection appearances to the meditation on the continued presence of the
exalted Christ in and with his Church through the Spirit. The coming of Christ was prepared for ages, from the
proclamation of the prophets and the voice of John the Baptist, the precursor of
the Messiah. But for the advent of the Holy Spirit, Jesus himself announces it:
“I shall ask the Father, and he will give you another Paraclete to be with you
for ever” (v. 16), He is the ‘Precursor of the Paraclete’.
Indeed, the first promise that Jesus made to his disciples was the gift of the
Spirit, who comes as the Paraclete, the Advocate. As Jesus prepares to leave
the scene, He prepares the minds of his disciples for the advent of the
Paraclete. This indeed, is one of the greatest promises in the New Testament.
As a matter of fact, the
three readings of today are to prepare us to wait and to desire the coming of
the Holy Spirit on Pentecost. The readings serve as an anticipation of the
Pentecost. The liturgy presents Jesus who promises the Holy Spirit to his
disciples (Gospel). St. Luke presents Peter and John “praying for the newly
baptized Christians of Samaria, so that they can receive the Holy Spirit”
(First reading). And St. Peter in his first letter says “Christ as man suffered
death, but was restored to life by the Holy Spirit” (Second reading). The readings help us to understand better
the One whom we are expecting. And we may ask: who is the Holy Spirit? We usually say that He is the third Person
of the Holy Trinity, and with that it does appear we have said all about Him.
He is truly a Person, not simply the creating breath of God as presented in the
Old Testament. He is not the breath of man, the divine principle in him.
Christ says of Him: ‘whom the Father will send in my name’ (Jn.14:26) and ‘He dwells’ (v.17);
and St. Paul pointed out that He prays in us with sighs too deep for words (cf. Rm. 8:26). The theologians
identify Him as the love of the Father and the Son. The Spirit conveys the presence of the Son, who reveals the Father. However, it is
obvious that we cannot know fully who the Spirit is in se, but we can know who He is for us. As evident in today’s readings He is the Paraclete, He dwells in the
life of the baptized and He is the Giver of life.
In the Gospel of last Sunday
the Lord Jesus promises that He was going to leave us, but it was not all about distancing himself from us, rather he precedes
us: I am going to prepare a place for you, so that where I am you also will
be (cf. Jn. 14:2-3). Therefore, the
separation were to be a temporary one. But interestingly, today in the Gospel (Jn. 14:15-21) Jesus promises his disciples something more, not about the future, but
about the present time characterized with trials. He promises the Holy
Spirit and he presents Him as the “Paraclete” and the “Spirit of Truth”. He is
the Paraclete, the Advocate, the Counsellor, the third Person of the Holy
Trinity. ●Spirit Paraclete, because
he has the mandate of sustaining the apostles and disciples in the difficulties
they were to confront and comforts us in every tribulation. ●Spirit of Truth because he has the
duty to illumine and enwisdomize the apostles and disciples so that they will
understand better the Truth announced by Christ.
In the history of salvation there is a harmonious succession in the
manifestation of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, always for the
benefit of man’s salvation. The Father is the origin and fount of every
salvific initiative. In his love for man, he sent his Son to redeem and restore
man to his filial condition, (as sons and daughters). As soon as the Son
realized his mission, He sent the Holy Spirit, so that he accompanies man in his
pilgrimage on earth towards the Father. Indeed, the liturgy of today presents
the promise made by Jesus to his disciples, to send the Holy Spirit, so that he
will remain always with them. Why did Jesus make this promise to them? So that
the disciples will not feel abandoned like orphans, because Jesus was about
to return to the Father; and he says to
them and to us: “I will not leave you orphans, I will return to be with you” (Jn. 14:18), but not personally, rather
through the Holy Spirit. The Spirit as
he promised is not going to be a momentary Gift, but a stable and permanent one:
“I will pray to the Father and he will
give you another Paraclete, to be with you forever” (Jn.14:16). The presence of
the Paraclete is a real and continuous presence, even though invisible. From
the Christological standpoint, we may say that this is a realization of Jesus’
promises not to leave us orphans, not to abandon us, else where He tells us:
“I am with you, until the end of time” (Mt.
28:20).
The promise of Jesus in the
Last Supper is for the Church and for every single Christian, as such today’s
gospel is also comforting for us. The Spirit that Jesus promises us is a Spirit
of Truth (who will guide us to the comprehension of the entire Truth
revealed by Jesus himself), Spirit of
divine power (who renders us capable of witnessing to the Gospel), Spirit of consolation (who comforts us
in all our tribulations). Our God is a God of consolation, He spoke through the
prophets inviting them to console His people, “Console, console my people” (Is. 40:1). St. Paul captured well this
image of God when he invoked God thus: “the Father of mercy and the God of all
consolation” (2 Cor. 1:3). This
consolation of God was incarnated in Jesus Christ, for He went around consoling
every form of suffering and preaching consolation: “Blessed are those who
mourn, for they shall be consoled” (Mt.5:5).
“Come to me, all you who labour and are overburdened, and i will give you rest”
(Mt.11:28). And before leaving this
world, Jesus prayed to the Father so that he will send the Holy Spirit, who
will remain with us for ever. He is not
going to be with or to console us from a distance or momentarily, Jesus
says: “he is with you, he is in you” (Jn.
14:17). The Eucharist is the
sacrament that renews this presence of the Holy Spirit in us, as the Spirit of
the risen Christ. In the canon of the Mass, we pray: “to us who are
nourished by the Body and Blood of Christ give the fullness of the Holy
Spirit”, knowing that with the fullness of the Holy Spirit, he will give us
also the fullness of his consolation. He equally wants us to become comforters
to those who are in tribulation. The
Father through his Son and the Holy Spirt comforts and consoles us; however, we
are also called to console others in return: “God consoles us in all our
tribulation, we are also to console others with the same consolation we have
received from God” (2Cor. 1:4). But today we need to ask ourselves, what are we to do, to have this
consolation of the Spirit? We need to stop going to other sources for
consolation, in the words of Jeremiah, many a times we abandon the source of
living water and go to “cracked water-tanks that hold no water” (Jer. 2:13), those sources maybe
riches, pleasure, desires of the flesh and false spirits etc.
Before this promise, Jesus
called his apostles to a more serious commitment: “If you love me you would
keep my commandment” (Jn. 14:15). As
such, we may well affirm that loving Him and keeping his commandments are the
criteria for receiving the Holy Spirit. He further expressed that in the last
verse of our passage: “whoever holds to my commandment and keeps them, is the
one who loves me; and whoever loves me will be loved by my Father and I shall
love him and reveal myself to him” (Jn.
14:21). As we can see, Jesus started his speech to his apostles with the
word “if” and ends with “whoever”, He says if you love me, whoever that loves
me, He did not say you must love me, for
God’s love is a humble, suggestive and a prepositive love, never by coercion or
imposition, it is love in freedom. However, to love him is not easy, for
you cannot love Him without paying the price, and the price is keeping his
commandment. Thus, in the parlance of
Jesus a Christian is a beloved, who becomes a lover. In this passage, we
see for the first time Jesus asks to be loved, prior to this he says that the
greatest commandment is: “You will love the Lord your God…, and your neighbour as
yourself” (Mt. 22:37; Mk. 12:30-31; Lk.
10:27), in the previous chapter of this Gospel, Jesus gave his disciples a
new commandment saying: “love one another as I have loved you” (Jn. 13:34). And today he adds himself
in the objective of the Christian love. Jesus calls the attention of his
apostles to proof that they love him by keeping the commandments. The proof of loving him, is keeping his
commandments (“probatio amoris, exhibitio est operis”). The vital question we
have to ask ourselves today is this: what does Jesus want from us? He wants us
to love him not with words but with facts. That we love each other as he loved
us (model and reason), He should be the
reason and the model of our love.
In the first reading (Acts 8:5-8.14-17) we listened to the
narrative of the coming of the Holy Spirit on one of the first Christian communities,
the one formed in Samaria through the preaching of the apostle Philip. The
message therein points to the fact that in order to be the Church of Christ, we
have to be in communion with the apostles, because they serve as guarantors of
the authenticity of our faith. This is exemplified in this passage, when the
apostles in Jerusalem learnt that those in Samaria have accepted the Word of
God they sent Peter and John, this was
to ascertain the authenticity of their faith and to confer on them the Holy Spirit. More than that, the Acts of the Apostles is organized in such a way
that it traces the expansion of the mission of the Church from Jerusalem, Judea
and Samaria to the ends of the earth (cf. Acts 1:8). As such, one of
the theological concerns of the Acts, as reflected in this passage, is to
maintain the ties between the expanding mission of the Church and the mother
Church at Jerusalem. However, in this passage we see something unfamiliar
in the Acts of the Apostles, that is the fact that Baptism does not convey the
gifts of the Spirit, as it has been the case in the Acts (cf. Acts 1:4-5;
11:15-16), but in this episode it has to wait for the arrival of Peter and
John in order to lay hands on the converts. Peter and John prayed for the Christians of Samaria so that they will
receive the Holy Spirit, they laid their hands on them and they received the
Holy Spirit. And we may ask: where does the Spirit come? The first reading
tells us that He comes where the Word of God has already been accepted (with a
visible sign of conversion).
In the second reading (1Pt. 3:15-18) instead, this presence
of the Holy Spirit in the Church nourishes our Christian and spiritual life
with serenity, trust and hope. And this Hope in us, we have to know how to
defend it, how to give the reason behind it. St. Peter tells us to do this
through a courageous witness to the Word of God, especially through honest
life, learning to suffer like Christ, with unconditional love and with works
that conform to the will of God. Therefore we have to be ready always to give
reason of the hope in us (v.15). We
have to do this with sweetness and
respect, with right conscience and good conduct. Behold, we have to
understand that the hope we are talking about here, is not just ordinary hope,
but hope personified in Jesus and in God. As such, giving reason for the hope in us is paramount to giving reason for the
presence of God in us. St. Paul makes this clearer to us in his letter to
the Romans where he called God: “God of Hope” (15:13), and in his first letter to Timothy where he proclaimed “Christ
Jesus our hope” (1Tm. 1:1). On the
other hand, our hope does not make us fold our arms to wait for when manner
will fall from heaven, rather it is a hope that propels us to be active and
operative, little wonder St. Paul sustained that “we toil and battle because we
have put our hope in the living God” (1Tm.
4:10). But the hit track of this
epistle reading is found in the last sentence of this passage: “In the body
he was put to death, in the Spirit he was raised to life” (v.18). The Spirit, the Paraclete is the Giver of life, the
restorer to life.
Behold, in today’s readings
especially in the Gospel passage we see the three divine Persons in action for
our love, sanctification and restoration. It is not only that Jesus promises
the Holy Spirit to those who love Him and keep his commandment, “whom the world
cannot receive, because it neither sees him nor knows him” (v.17), but equally promises
to make us partakers in the trinitarian union, “you will know that I am in
the Father and you are in me and I in you” (v.20).
Moreover, the promised Paraclete gives life, it is the Spirit that restored
Jesus to life (second reading), and vivifies the Christians like the inhabitants
of Samaria (first reading). Above all, while the Gospel and the second reading
give us indications on what we can do to in order to welcome the Holy Spirit,
the first reading presents a practical example of His decent through imposition
of hands. May we therefore, implore the Spirit, who gives life to continually restore
us to life, to life in abundance (cf.
Jn. 10:10). Let us not be overtaken by panic for Jesus assures us that we
shall live because he lives, He is the living God, “you will see that I live
and you also will live” (Jn.14:19).
May the healing, sanctifying and restoring presence and power of the Holy
Spirit renew the face of the earth, renew us as well, and console the
sorrowful, the abandoned and the sick. May the Paraclete find a fitting abode
in our hearts for His indwelling! Amen!!!
(Fr. Vitus Chigozie, SC)