(Homily for 7th Sunday of Easter Year B)
Upon
proper perusal and reflection on the readings of this Sunday, one discovers
that they help us to look back to what has happened before us: the event of
Christ, and as well, help us to look at and forward to what is and what is to
come: the on-going mission of the Church. A slight pause, therefore
reveals that the central pillar of this Sunday’s message is the call of the
disciples to be united in the Mission. Indeed, this Sunday
in-between Ascension and Pentecost is a special one, for it looks backward and
forward into the Event of Christ and its implication for the disciples (the
Church). Little wonder, the ascended Christ sends his apostles to go
and bear witness of his redemptive event to the world. It was for this purpose
that Mathias was chosen to complete the symbolic number 12 and to bear witness
to the Christ event (first reading). And the offshoot of this witnessing is the
confession of Jesus as the Son of God to the world and its implementation in
the life of the Church orchestrated by the phrase “love one another” (second
reading). And lastly, in the Gospel, Jesus offers his priestly prayer
to cement that love, to foster our unity, thus indicating an important factor: unity
in mission!
The
first reading (Acts 1: 15-17.20a.
20c-26) is basically the narrative of the election of Mathias, which
in the Acts of the Apostles occupied the twelve days interval between the
Ascension and the Pentecost day. It is therefore, well situated into the
context of this Sunday, in-between Ascension and the day of Pentecost. In the
narrative, the number of the Twelve has to be completed after the betrayal and
defection of Judas. And the prerequisite was the choice of someone who was
among those that received the resurrection appearances, possibly one of the
five hundred (cf. 1Cor. 15:6).
Be
that as it may, the number 12 is symbolic, for the earthly Jesus
appointed the Twelve as a sign of the eschatological community, a representation
of the new Israel. In that bid, the choice of the twelfth man was
geared towards the preservation of this eschatological significance. Not
only that, more importantly, in Luke’s parlance the Twelve serve as a bridge
between the earthly Jesus and the ongoing mission and life of the Church. The
basic requirement for the replacement, is that the person has to be a witness
to the manifestations of God’s love {witness to the earthly life of Jesus and
witness of his resurrection}. Matthias took the position and made up
the deficiency of a missing part. We can see that the position was
important but the person of Judas was not indispensable. This, reminds us
equally that none of us is indispensable.
Beloved
in Christ like Mattias we have called to be witnesses. The Lord has
called each of us in the world not as spectators in the scene of life,
rather he has called us majorly to be witnesses to the Resurrection. Thus, to
proclaim the reality of Jesus’ resurrection in our lives by the newness of our
lives. In a more active way, we witness to that event by sharing the Good news
with others and by making the presence of God visible in the world.
The
second reading (1John 4:11-16) is the continuation of the second reading of the previous
week, and as it is typical of John, it repeated practically the themes of the
preceding passage with slight difference. As such, the themes of God’s
love, the reciprocity of love among the faithful and the mutual indwelling of
God in the faithful and the faithful in God resurfaced. God loves us so
that we should love one another. Upon proper voyage into the Johannine corpus,
one notices that when John makes his repetitions, usually he accompanies it
with a new point, and in the context of our reading today, the new
point revolves around the fact that this mutual indwelling is manifested
glaringly in the confession of Jesus as the Son of God.
St. John therefore, exemplifies the element that gives
life to unity and that enlivens it. The element in question is love. The
apostle John advised that as God so loved us we should love one another. Here, Christ becomes the Reason and Model of
our love. Our love should be an offshoot from God’s love. Love is
like the cement that binds the people of God together, and as such, unity
cannot be achieved without love. The unity that Christ asked for in His
Sacerdotal prayer (Jn. 17) is a unity wrought out of love. We
may therefore categorically say: “no love, no unity”. Above all else, however, love is a sign of divine
presence, because according to St. John “by this we know that we abide
in him and him in us” (v.13). By what? By Love! (cf. vv.11-12). “This is a proof
that we remain in him and he in us, that he has given us a share in his
Spirit” (v. 13), our sharing and participation in the Spirit of God
is indeed proof of our abidance in his love. Once again, we meet this wonderful
definition of love. Love in Jesus’ parlance is an action word.
The
Gospel periscope of St. John (Jn. 17:11b-19) presents
the High Priestly Prayer of Jesus, or as some exegetes have termed
it: “the Prayer of Consecration”. In this passage, Jesus consecrated
himself in that the disciples may equally be consecrated for their mission, in
order to be preserved in unity and truth even in the midst of persecutions.
Once again, this passage is situated well into the context of our liturgical
season, for the departure (Ascension) of Jesus paved way for the
inauguration of the mission of the Apostles. In the same vein
therefore, the prayer looks forward to the event of the Pentecost, but
also beyond it, to the mission of the Church. Jesus tells us in the
Gospel what it means to be grounded in Him. Jesus presents God as a great
Unifier, unlike the Devil who is a divider.
Jesus
considered his earthly mission to have been concluded, and he already situates
himself outside the world, that he was about to leave. Conscious of his
would-be absence he prayed for the disciples that are going to be left alone in
an adverse and hostile world, in the midst of persecution and hatred. The
term world in the fourth gospel has a negative connotation, it symbolizes the
world of sin and evil dominance, with ideas and mentalities
contrary to the values of the Gospel and the Kingdom. For this Jesus says that
his followers are not of the world. That is why the world hated them., indeed
“friendship with the world is enmity with God” (Jm. 4:4). Jesus
does not ask the Father to take them away from the world, rather to keep them
from the evil one. Who is the evil one? The “dia-bállo”: the accuser of
the brethren (cf. Rev. 12:10), the one who divides, the
slanderer. The belonging of the disciples to Jesus by adhesion to
his Word separates them from the world, as such, attracts hatred
and persecution for them (v.14).
Jesus
addresses his prayer to the Father “Holy Father, keep those you have given me
true to your name, so that they may be one like us” (Jn. 17:11b). His
invocation was addressed to the Father. He addressed the Father with the
appellatives “Holy”, the transcendent God, and also “Father” as such not a
distant God, He is in an intimate union with the Son. Jesus invokes the
Father in a tender manner, in order to keep the disciples in their struggle
against evil. He asked the Father to keep or to guard them in his name,
with the power that springs from his omnipotence. He
prays the Father to preserve the disciples in fidelity to his revelation. By
the effects of the Father’s guardiance, the
disciples can experience that same profound union that united the Father and
the Son. He says he kept all, except the Son of perdition, that is
Judas (who lost his place among the twelve, and was replaced with Mathias).
Jesus says “so that they will have fullness of joy” (13-16). Jesus
invokes the assistance of the Father so that their joy will be full. This joy
indeed is an eschatological gift (cf. 15:11; 16:24), a total joy
that is identified with the communion with the Father and the Son in a
reciprocal indwelling. How have you been an instrument of unification in the
society or in your family? Jesus prays for our joy to be full, does your life
as a Christian radiate joy to those around you?
In the 17th chapter of the gospel of John,
Jesus is seen praying for different purposes, at the
first part of the chapter Jesus prays for Himself (17:1-5), and
in the second part he prays for his disciples (17:6-26). In
the passage of today’s gospel, our Lord Jesus Christ was seen praying to God
the Father in a very exceptional way. This is traditionally known as the
priestly prayer of our Lord Jesus Christ. The highlight of his prayer
was the need for his disciples (which includes all of us) to be one as he is
one with the Father. “Why was that supplication very important to our Lord
Jesus Christ? Why was he wishing that they all be one?” Our Lord Jesus Christ thus prayed for Oneness so that his
disciples can share in the unity existent between Him and the Father. For
any apparent unity and oneness that are not founded on God, sooner or
later collapses (cf.
Gen. 11:1-7). No doubt, one of the easiest ways towards
destruction and failure in life is through disunity. This can be seen in families, communities and nations. It is
often said: “together we stand but divided we fall.” Jesus prayed for oneness in the “Name” of the Father, because
in the Old Testament the name of God indicates his being, supremacy and
manifestation, and this manifestation is that of love. The name
of God is Love. Little wonder, Jesus
asks the protection of the Father so that they will remain united in his name
(in his love), in a reciprocal love. Jesus further prayed for their
consecration in the Truth, and the sanctification of Jesus for his people culminates
in his death, a death that is beaming with love. That is the truth they are to be consecrated in, which has to
become the lung of their Mission.
Jesus
in his sacerdotal prayer intercedes for his disciples. He prays
that his work may continue through the disciples, in a unity of charity, a
participation in the unity of the Father and the Son (vv.20-23). It is a
holy, apostolic and universal unity,
which is to be consumed in
eternal love. The spirit of this longest prayer of Jesus, resembles
the one in his short prayer found in (cf. Jn. 11:41; 12:27; Mt.11:25;
Lk. 22:42).
In all, this Sunday is the last before the Pentecost, little
wonder, the messages emanating from the readings are preparatory. Evidently,
our Lord Jesus Christ prepares the ground for his disciples before the coming
of the Holy Spirit. Extrapolating from this passage, he was actually
communicating to them and to us, that before the Holy Spirit comes we should be
united as one. We should be bound together in love. If we peep into the upper room before the coming of the Holy
Spirit we could see that all the believers were together in ONE place and in
ONE accord (Act 2:1). Similarly, as Jesus offered his prayer
to the Father for love and unity among his disciples and among us today, we
pray that the efficacy of His Priestly prayer may be felt the more in our
world, in our nation and in our families torn apart by the presages of war,
division, dissension and hatred. May the power of His Priestly prayer dissipate
the darkness that discord and disunity have implanted in our hearts. May we all
be united in His love! Amen!!!
(Fr.
Vitus Chigozie, SC)
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