1 Jn 3: 1-2
Jn 10: 11-18
lead us to a share in the joys of heaven,
so that the humble flock may reach
where the brave Shepherd has gone before.
Who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
One God, for ever and ever.
Posted on 04/28/2012 6:12:18 PM PDT by Salvation
Daily Marriage Tip for April 29, 2012:
A good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep. (Jn 10:11) In todays world time is often our most precious commodity. It reflects our priorities. When you give time and attention to your beloved, its like laying down your life for the other. Save time for each other today.
Fourth Sunday of Easter -- Cycle B Opening prayer Acts 4:8-12 (Psalm 118:1, 8-9, 21-23, 26, 28-29) 1 John 3:1-2 Overview of the Gospel:
This Sundays gospel reading is closely tied to the episode of the healing of a blind man in the preceding chapter (John 9ff). Jesus opponents steadfastly refuse to believe he has performed this miracle, probably because it would mean accepting his authority. As a result, they remain blind guides to the people (John 9: 39-41; Matthew 15:12-14).
In contrast to these leaders, Jesus presents himself as the Good Shepherd (this discourse actually starts at verse 10:1). The theme of God as a shepherd was very important in the Old Testament (Ezekiel 34; Genesis 48:15; 49:24; Micah 7:14; Psalm 23:1-4; 80:1, etc). King David, composer of Psalm 23, was the Old Testament proto-type of the shepherd (see 1 Sam 17:32-37), as was Moses and his successor, Joshua (Numbers 27:15-23).
As the Good Shepherd, Jesus will watch over his own, protecting them and keeping them united as one flock attentive to only his own voice (verse 16). Ironically, immediately following this discourse (verses 20-21), Jesus opponents show a marked lack of unity among themselves. Questions:
In the 1st Reading, how many times is the "name" of Jesus invoked? What power is there in his name?
In the 2nd Reading, what is the basis of our great dignity in being Christians? Where did this great dignity come from? How and why is this sometimes hard to see in our lives? What, ultimately, is our destiny in Christ?
Who is Jesus speaking to in todays Gospel Reading (John 9:40; 10:6-7)? How does the story in chapter 9 flow into Jesus discourse about the Good Shepherd in chapter 10?
What do the sheep, shepherd, sheepfold and stranger represent? Who are the "thieves and robbers" (Jeremiah 2:8; 10:21; 23:1-4; Ezekiel 34:2ff)? How is Jesus unlike them?
How do the sheep respond to the shepherd? How does this relate to the Pharisees difficulty in accepting Jesus (chapter 9; 10:19-39)?
Who are the other sheep Jesus must bring also (Ephesians 2:11-22)? What characterizes his flock?
What final claim does Jesus make (verses 17-18)? Why do his listeners respond as they do? How would you have responded?
What was the turning point for you in terms of hearing "Gods voice" and responding? How do you discern his voice from all the voices that vie for your attention?
How does it make you feel to think of God as caring for you as the Good Shepherd? Catechism of the Catholic Church: §§ 60, 609, 614, 649, 753-754 Closing prayer He did what he said he would do: He gave his life for his sheep, and he gave his body and blood in the Sacrament to nourish with his flesh the sheep he had redeemed (John 6:51). Remember to read and meditate on the daily Mass readings! © 2012 Vince Contreras Sunday Scripture Study for Catholic www.sundayscripturestudy.com "I am the Good Shepherd" Scripture: Meditation: Jesus made three promises to his followers. The words which Jesus spoke upset many of the Jewish leaders. How could he speak with the same authority which God spoke and claim to be equal with God? He must either be insane or divine. Unfortunately some thought he was mad even though he cured a man who was blind from birth. We are faced with the same choice. Either Jesus is who he claims to be the Son of God and Savior of the world or the world's greatest deluder! We cannot be indifferent to his claim. For those who accept him as Lord and Savior he offers the peace and security of unending life and joy with God. Cyril of Alexander, a 5th century church father comments on Jesus as our Good Shepherd: "He shows in what manner a shepherd may be proved good; and He teaches that he must be prepared to give up his life fighting in defense of his sheep, which was fulfilled in Christ. For man has departed from the love of God, and fallen into sin, and because of this was, I say, excluded from the divine abode of paradise, and when he was weakened by that disaster, he yielded to the devil tempting him to sin, and death following that sin he became the prey of fierce and ravenous wolves. But after Christ was announced as the True Shepherd of all men, Do you listen attentively to the voice of the Good Shepherd and obey his word? "Lord Jesus, you are the Good Shepherd who keeps watch over our lives. May I be ever attentive to your voice and submit fully to your wise rule for my life. Draw me near to you that I may always find peace and joy in your presence." Meditation: © 2012 Don Schwager Daily Scripture Readings and Meditations www.rc.net/wcc/readings/
A Scriptural Reflection on the Readings for Sunday, April 29, 2012, the Fourth Sunday of Easter | Carl E. Olson
Readings:
Acts 4:8-12
Ps 118:1, 8-9, 21-23, 26, 28, 29
1 Jn 3:1-2
Jn 10:11-18
During Holy Week we focused on the Passion, death, and Resurrection of the Son; when Pentecost arrives, we will focus on the transforming work of the Paraclete. It is sometimes said, very understandably, that the Holy Spirit is the most mysterious of the three Persons of the Trinity. But, while emphasizing the unity and equality of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, I often think the Father is, in his own way, just as mysterious.
Todays readings shed some light on the first Person of the Trinity, particularly on three qualities: his command, his power, and his love. All three help us to appreciate more deeply the Fathers plan, purpose, and person.
The Father is mentioned some 130 times in Johns Gospel, and one of the key themes of Johns writing is the intimate relationship between the Father and the Son. The Father, Jesus states, loves the Son, and has given all things into his hand (Jn 3:35). He who does not honor the Son, he preached, does not honor the Father who sent him (Jn 5:23). And Jesus says directly and simply: I and the Father are one (Jn 10:30). In todays Gospel, from the Good Shepherd discourse, Jesus makes clear he, of his own free will and volition, will lay down my life for the sheep. No one takes it from me, but I lay it down on my own. But he also adds that this command to lay down his life was received from my Father.
The Fathers command was for the Son to become man, suffer, and die. Yet this command was not accepted unwillingly or received as an order from a superiorafter all, the Father and the Son are both fully God. This might seem strange to us since we naturally tend to think of commands as directives from a superior to a subordinate. But this way of thinking is purified and transformed by the revelation of who God is as Trinityan eternal exchange of perfect and personal love.
This is why Jesus states later, If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my Father's commandments and abide in his love (Jn 15:10), and This I command you, to love one another (Jn 15:17). There is no conflict between the love of the Father and the Fathers commandments, for God is love and everything from him is love. To those who are sons of the Father, the commandments are gifts of love. But to those who reject the Father, the commandments are confining, annoying, even angering.
The Fathers power, Peter declared, is shown by raising the Son from the dead. The Father's power raised up Christ his Son, explains the Catechism, and by doing so perfectly introduced his Son's humanity, including his body, into the Trinity (par 648). The Father so loved the world he sent his Son, the Son became man, and the Incarnate Sonfully God, fully manwas taken into the Trinity.
That affirmation of the Crucified Lord and of his body brings us to Johns first epistle: See what love the Father has bestowed on us that we may be called the children of God. The Triune God created man out of love, his plan of salvation flows from his love, and he desires that all men freely choose to share in his gift of boundless love (cf., CCC, par 1). The Incarnation, the Crucifixion, and the Resurrection reveal and make present this perfect love.
Although the Son is always beloved by reason of his nature, wrote Cyril of Jerusalem in his commentary on the Gospel of John, it is evident that Christ is also beloved by God the Father because of his love toward us. The Father gives his Son, and the Son gives the Holy Spirit, and the Holy Spirit gives us the life of the Father so we might enter eternally into the beatific vision, the ever-flowing well-spring of happiness, peace, and mutual communion (CCC, 1045).
(This "Opening the Word" column originally appeared in the May 3, 2009, edition of Our Sunday Visitor newspaper.)
I Lay Down My Life | ||
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Fourth Sunday of Easter
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John 10:11-18 Introductory Prayer: Lord Jesus, thank you for this opportunity to be with you in prayer. My heart is ready to listen to your words of eternal life so that I may choose to follow you more closely on the path of true love. Petition: Lord, may I be faithful to your will in my life. 1. I Lay It Down: The Father entrusted Christ with a mission: Christ was to bring about our salvation through a life of unlimited self-giving, even to the point of giving his own life. Being God he could repay the Father for our sins; being man he could identify with our fallen humanity and raise its dignity so that we might become the Fathers children. Christ was the perfect bridge between fallen man and an infinitely holy God. His mission of bridging this chasm came about through freely accepting the will of the Father. Our Lord would receive nothing in return, and yet he was faithful even to the point of death. 2. On My Own: Jesus was not ordered to give himself for our sins. He offered himself. Freedom is best used when it willingly embraces Gods will, whatever the cost might be. We have to remember that Jesus knew what lay beyond his preaching and his miracles: the road to Calvary. He spent many nights in prayer on the Mount of Olives in preparation for his hour. He foretold his fate to his disciples and continued forward towards this end despite their misunderstanding. And in the end, when the hour came, he proved faithful. When the hour of darkness sought him, he stepped forward to say, I am he. Christ never flinched in front of Gods will. He felt its weight. Sorrow flooded his heart. An easier path tugged at his humanity. But he proved that love is stronger than death, that true freedom can defeat sin and master it. 3. A Life of Love: Perhaps offering ourselves to God frightens us. What will he ask? What will I have to leave behind? Will I be able to do it? However, fear vanishes when we live out of love, like Christ. We need to remember that the Father asked him to die for us, and look at the fruits this bore! Taking on our humanity, he left behind the splendor of his divinity and raised us to a new level. He did the impossible by bearing the weight of all our sins. He trusted in the Father to give him strength. Today we might be asked to die more to our self-love, to leave behind a vice we have been struggling with or to trust that with grace we can live a truly Christian life in a world hostile to Christianity. In the end, if we love Christ, we will not be frightened because he has already shown us the way and he has already conquered. Conversation with Christ: Lord, give me the courage to be a faithful Christian at all times and in all places, with whomever I meet and in whatever I say. Help me to give testimony to who you are. Resolution: I will offer one concrete act of self-mastery for love of Christ today. |
Do you know the peace and security of the Good Shepherd who watches over his own? The Old Testament often speaks of God as shepherd of his people, Israel. The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want (Psalm 23:1). Give ear, O Shepherd of Israel, you who lead Joseph like a flock! (Psalm 80:1) We are his people, and the sheep of his pasture (Psalm 100:3). The Messiah is also pictured as the shepherd of Gods people: He will feed his flock like a shepherd, he will gather the lambs in his arms (Isaiah 40:11). Jesus says he is the Good Shepherd who will risk his life to seek out and save the stray sheep (Matthew 18:12, Luke 15:4). He is the Shepherd and Guardian of our souls (1 Peter 2:25). Jesus made three promises to his followers. He promised them everlasting life. If they accept him and follow him, they will have the life of God in them. Jesus also promised them a life that would know no end. Death would not be the end but the beginning; they would know the glory of indestructible life. Jesus promised a life that was secure. Jesus said that nothing would snatch them out of his hand, not even sorrow and death, since he is everlasting life itself. Our lives are safe in his hands.
The words which Jesus spoke upset many of the Jewish leaders. How could he speak with the same authority which God spoke and claim to be equal with God? He must either be insane or divine. Unfortunately some thought he was mad even though he cured a man who was blind from birth. We are faced with the same choice. Either Jesus is who he claims to be the Son of God and Savior of the world or the worlds greatest deluder! We cannot be indifferent to his claim. For those who accept him as Lord and Savior he offers the peace and security of unending life and joy with God. Do you know the peace and security of a life fully submitted to Christ?
Cyril of Alexander, a 5th century church father comments on Jesus as our Good Shepherd: He shows in what manner a shepherd may be proved good; and He teaches that he must be prepared to give up his life fighting in defense of his sheep, which was fulfilled in Christ. For man has departed from the love of God, and fallen into sin, and because of this was, I say, excluded from the divine abode of paradise, and when he was weakened by that disaster, he yielded to the devil tempting him to sin, and death following that sin he became the prey of fierce and ravenous wolves. But after Christ was announced as the True Shepherd of all men, He laid down his life for us (1 John 3:16), fighting for us against that pack of inhuman beasts. He bore the Cross for us, that by His own death he might destroy death. He was condemned for us, that He might deliver all of us from the sentence of punishment: the tyranny of sin being overthrown by our faith: fastening to the Cross the decree that stood against us, as it is written (Col. 2:14). Therefore as the father of sin had as it were shut up the sheep in hell, giving them to death to feed on, as it is written in the psalms (Ps. Xlviii.16), He died for us as truly Good, and truly our Shepherd, so that the dark shadow of death driven away He might join us to the company of the blessed in heaven; and in exchange for abodes that lie far in the depths of the pit, and in the hidden places of the sea, grant us mansions in His Fathers House above. Because of this he says to us in another place: Fear not, little flock, for it has pleased your Father to give you a kingdom (Luke 12:32). Do you listen attentively to the voice of the Good Shepherd and obey his word?
The Holy Spirit confirms and strengthens us. He makes us confident, bold, and immune to manipulation by fears. Peter, for example, before receiving the Spirit, denied Christ three times when he was confronted with very minimal pressure from a servant girl (Lk 22:56ff). After receiving the Spirit, Peter fearlessly proclaimed Jesus as Lord and Savior without being intimidated by a formidable group of leaders, elders, scribes, and members of the high priest's family (Acts 4:5-6). How does the Spirit change the fearful into fearless warriors for God? The Spirit from our hearts cries out "Abba!" ("Father") (Gal 4:6; Rm 8:15) By the Spirit, we become convinced that God the Father loves us. We know that even if a mother would be without tenderness for the child of her womb, our heavenly Father will never stop loving us (see Is 49:15). The Spirit opens our eyes to realize that after the Father has sent the Son to die for love of us, we can be sure that our Father will never forsake us (Rm 8:32). "See what love the Father has bestowed on us in letting us be called children of God! Yet that is what we are" (1 Jn 3:1). We have no more reason to fear. If God the Father "is for us, who can be against us?" (Rm 8:31) When we receive the Spirit from the Father and the Son, we begin to know and trust the Father and the Son so deeply that we can fearlessly face death, endure sufferings, and live the risen life. Come, Holy Spirit!One Bread, One Body
<< Sunday, April 29, 2012 >>
Fourth Sunday of Easter
Saint of the Day
Acts 4:8-12
1 John 3:1-2
View ReadingsPsalm 118:1, 8-9, 21-23, 26, 28-29
John 10:11-18
THE SPIRIT OF OUR FATHER
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