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To: All
The Word Among Us

Meditation: Revelation 7:9, 14-17

4th Sunday of Easter

They were … wearing white robes. (Revelation 7:9)

Jesus, I can’t wait to get to heaven and put on my white robe. It’s going to be so exciting, experiencing the greatest victory of my life—and I didn’t even do the hard part. You took care of that for me when you died on the cross!

Lord, I can’t wait to be with all of my family, my friends, and even all of my ancestors from generations past. It’s going to be so fascinating to learn about where I came from and to hear the stories of all those who have gone before me. I can’t wait to meet all the saints as well and to finally discover their ways of holiness. From the Virgin Mary all the way down to Mother Teresa and John Paul II, I want to see through their eyes what it is like to have lived in such a deep union with you, Jesus.

I can’t wait to join in the heavenly worship that is constantly going on before your throne, Lord. I wonder how similar it will be to our Sunday Mass? I wonder if the sense of joy and peace I get when my pastor lifts up the Host at Mass is anything like the joy I will experience see when I put on my white robe and stand before you, singing your praises and rejoicing in your love and glory. Lord, I can’t wait to experience this!

Most of all, Lord, I can’t wait to finally see you face-to-face. I can’t wait to thank you for coming in the flesh. I can’t wait for the day when I can throw my arms around you and thank you for dying for my sins on the cross!

Lord, I really don’t know what heaven will be like. But I do know that when we proclaim the mystery of faith at Mass today, I will say it just a bit more loudly than usual. I long for the day when I can put on my white robe and be with you forever!

“Save us, Savior of the world!”

Acts 13:14, 43-52; Psalm 100:1-3, 5; John 10:27-30

 

Questions for Reflection or Group Discussion

1. In the first reading, Luke describes the moment when St. Paul obeys God’s command and begins giving the Good News of Christ to the Gentiles. We too have been called to share the Gospel with others. With whom do you think God may be asking you to share the news of Christ? What keeps you from doing it? The reading ends with: “The disciples were filled with joy and the Holy Spirit” (Acts 13:52). Why do you think this was so?

2. In the Responsorial Psalm, we hear these words: “Sing joyfully to the Lord, all you lands: serve the Lord with gladness; come before him with joyful song” (Psalm 100:1-2). What are some of the reasons listed for this joy and gladness? Our own joy and gladness is not a shallow giddiness. Because of Christ, death’s “victory” over us has been destroyed. We will live forever in an eternal experience of the love of God our Father! What can you do to make your life a greater reflection of this expectation?

3. In John’s vision of Heaven in the Second Reading, we are told of the vast number gathered around the throne of God, “from every nation, race, people, and tongue.” God’s mercy and love is for everyone. Are there people from nations, races, or tongues you exclude from your love? What about the person who cut you off in traffic? What about a boss or co-worker or a family member? What steps can you take to reflect God’s love to these persons?

4. In the Gospel, Jesus says “my sheep hear my voice”. How good are you at hearing the voice of Jesus, our Shepherd? What practical steps can you take this week to make yourself more available to “hear” his voice?

5. Also in the Gospel, are there any more comforting and reassuring thoughts than the knowledge that we are held in the Father’s and Jesus’ hands and that no one can change that? In what way, does your daily life reflect that reality? What can you do to increase your confidence in this reality for your life?

6. The meditation opens with these words: “Jesus, I can’t wait to get to heaven and put on my white robe. It’s going to be so exciting, experiencing the greatest victory of my life—and I didn’t even do the hard part. You took care of that for me when you died on the cross!” Thanks to the redemption Jesus won for us, heaven is our inheritance, and every day brings us one step closer to our true home. How often do you think about your heavenly inheritance? In what ways does pondering this heavenly reality impact the way you live out your life on earth?

7. Take some time now to pray and ask the Lord to give you a greater faith and hope, and a greater expectancy, for the heavenly inheritance that awaits you. Use the prayer at the end of the meditation as a starting point.


33 posted on 04/21/2013 1:39:21 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All
A Christian Pilgrim

I GIVE THEM ETERNAL LIFE

(A biblical refection on THE FOURTH SUNDAY OF EASTER – April 21, 2013) 

Gospel Reading: John 10:27-30 

First Reading: Acts 13:14,43-52; Psalms: Ps 100:2,3,5; Second Reading: Rev 7:9,14-17 

The Scripture Text

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Jesus said to the Jews gathered round Him, My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me; and I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish, and no one shall snatch them out of the Father’s hand. I and the Father are one.” (Jn 10:27-30 RSV) 

What comfort we can have in recognizing who we are as Christians! Jesus said that He gives us “eternal life”, that will “never perish”, and that “no one can snatch” us from His hand (Jn 10:28). How secure, confident, and even humble this statement should make us! Far from rendering us complacent – thinking we have nothing to worry about – knowing Jesus’ love should compel us to love Him back and give ourselves to Him as His grateful servants.

Imagine two teenagers in school today: one from a warm, nurturing home built on the foundation of love and faith in Christ, the other from an environment of sadness and disunity. Which of the two teenagers do you think would be more trusting of his parents and more willing to give of himself? The outside world might be chaos, but, all the same, a secure child knows he is loved. How much more, then, can we rejoice upon hearing Jesus’ promises? We can trust our God at all times, for He is always near to us, even at times when we feel distant from Him.

Saint Maximilian Kolbe – a Conventual Franciscan priest from Poland who lived in the middle of the twentieth century – surely felt the security that comes from trusting our loving God. His love for Christ and devotion to spreading the Gospel eventually led to arrest by the Nazis and imprisonment in Auschwitz. While there, he not only endured the sufferings of life in a concentration camp, but he also traded his very life so that another’s life would be spared. This is true confidence in God!

Do you know your place with Jesus? Have you heard Him tell you that He has you in the palm of His hand and that He will never let you go? This is the life that is available to us as we allow the Holy Spirit to stamp the personal, passionate love of Jesus on our hearts. Let us have the same certainty of faith that Saint Maximilian Kolbe had. He deeply understood the Father’s love for him, and even the honors of a death camp could not snuff out the fire of God in him. 

Short Prayer: Heavenly Father, thank You for calling me by name. I am weak and I rest my life in Your hands. Help me to trust You as You lead me in Your will. Amen. 


34 posted on 04/21/2013 3:39:25 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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