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Scripture Speaks:Sixth Sunday of Easter

Gayle Somers

by Gayle Somers on May 3, 2013 ·

During His conversation with the apostles on the night of His arrest, Jesus looks into the future.  What does He see?

Gospel (Read Jn 14:23-29)

In a long section of St. John’s Gospel that we call “the Last Supper Discourse” (see Jn 13-17), Jesus begins to anticipate His departure from this world and what that will mean for His friends, the apostles.  He emphasizes that to love Him means to live as He taught them.  Those who love Jesus in word and action will live in communion with the Trinity here on earth, even before they reach heaven.

Then, Jesus moves on to describe something that is yet to happen and is of vital importance as we seek to understand how His followers will know what they need to know about Him and His Word after His departure.  How will the Gospel move from this band of apostles and those who traveled with them into all the world?  Once Jesus leaves, how can we know we have the truth about Him and thus be able to live it?

Apostles 2

Jesus has a plan to make sure all those who wish to follow Him, in all the years that must pass before His return, will know what they need to know:  “The Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in My Name, will teach you everything and remind you of all that I told you.”  If we have read the Gospels carefully, this promise by Jesus has to bring some relief.  We have seen how little they actually understood of what Jesus said and did while He was still with them.  Notice that this promise is made uniquely to the apostles in this conversation.  Jesus switches from speaking about “whoever” (all believers) in vss 23-24 to “you” (the eleven who were with Him at the Last Supper) in vss 25-29.  We can understand by this that although the Holy Spirit will be sent to all believers, He will do a particular work of teaching and reminding the apostles.  Later in this same discourse, Jesus tells the apostles that the Holy Spirit will “guide you into all the truth” (Jn 16:13).  This is an even more expansive promise, because it anticipates that the apostles will, in the future, need to know more than they did on this night.  In all this, the work of the Holy Spirit is of supreme importance.  Jesus knew that He had chosen mere men upon whom to build His Church.  The worldwide proclamation of the Gospel, through all the ages of the Church’s history, would have to come through ordinary flesh and blood.  How could this be anything other than risky?  There is only one way:  a supernatural charism of the Holy Spirit, working in the apostles and their successors, would guarantee “all the truth.”

Because of this magnificent promise, Jesus can leave His apostles with “Peace.”  How is this peace different from what “the world gives”?  Peace in the world depends on circumstances.  The peace of Jesus goes much deeper than that!  His peace grounds us in the truth of God’s love and power, no matter what our circumstances might be.  How can we be sure of this truth?  We look to these promises right here.  The charism given first to the apostles and then passed on through the laying on of hands to their successors enables us to know “all the truth,” expressed now in both Sacred Scripture and Sacred Tradition.

What an incredible plan!  Did it work?  Our first reading gives us the evidence we need to answer this question.

Possible response:  Lord Jesus, please help me love You in ways that go beyond words and emotions.

First Reading (Read Acts 15:1-2, 22-29)

In Christendom, ever since the Reformation, there are Christians who interpret our Gospel reading differently from the Catholic Church.  They believe the Holy Spirit’s charism of teaching, reminding, and guiding into “all the truth” is given to every believer, not just those who are ordained successors to the apostles (the bishops).  Certainly Catholics recognize the way the Holy Spirit teaches and guides us in our individual lives with God.  However, the Church makes a distinction between that universal work of the Holy Spirit and this particular work of revealing “all the truth,” which we understand to be the dogma we must all believe and the way of life we must all live in order to have the fullness of what Jesus intended to give us.  The Church believes this teaching charism is a gift given exclusively to the apostles and those appointed to follow them.

Fortunately, we can look to the Book of Acts for evidence about which interpretation is the most biblical.  St. Luke tells us about the first episode of confusion over truth experienced by the New Testament Church.  In Antioch, where many Gentile pagans converted to Christianity, some Jewish Christians “who had come down from Judea” told the believers that they needed to be circumcised (always a sign of being in covenant with God) in order to be saved.  This caused quite a rift in the Church there, with Paul and Barnabas insisting that circumcision wasn’t necessary.  Which group had “all the truth”?  They were all believers; they all had the Holy Spirit.  The circumcision group had the Old Testament Scriptures on their side (the New Testament didn’t exist yet).  Jesus hadn’t said anything about a situation like this.  How would it be resolved?

“It was decided that Paul, Barnabas, and some of the others should go up to Jerusalem to the apostles and elders about this question” (emphasis added).  Here we see that the Christians in Antioch knew they couldn’t arrive at the truth about circumcision on their own.  They did not expect the Holy Spirit to lead them into “all the truth” on this question.  They did expect that the apostles in Jerusalem could settle it, because Jesus had promised that charism to them.  However, notice that it was not only the apostles but also “the elders” who were called upon to render a decision.  Who were they?  The “elders” (or “bishops”) were those appointed by the apostles to help lead the new Church (see Acts 14:23).  We can see that right away the apostles were passing along their special charism through the laying on of hands (the growing Church would need many more than twelve leaders).  Because the elders, by their ordination, received this gift of truth from the Holy Spirit, they were included in the decision about “all the truth” concering Gentile circumcision.

This meeting of apostles and elders (the Council of Jerusalem), led by Peter, declared that salvation is by grace (see Acts 15:6-11).  They also sent out a letter explaining how Jewish and Christian converts could peacefully coexist without undue provocation of Jewish sensibilities or undue emphasis on Jewish legal requirements.  These pronouncements were for all Christians.  The Council’s ruling prevented a split in the Church, which surely would have happened if individual Christians followed their individual convictions about circumcision of Gentiles.  Some of our non-Catholic brethren will suggest that this apostolic conciliar method of arriving at “all the truth” was only necessary until all the New Testament was written.   Once that was done, according to this way of thinking, the only teaching authority was the Bible itself.  History before the Reformation refutes this, however.  Even when the New Testament had been completed, the question of its interpretation needed to be addressed.  Major dogmas like the Trinity, the Incarnation, and even which books actually were Scripture were all resolved by apostolic conciliar declarations.  There were many good-hearted, devout, holy Christians who had many different ideas about what the words in Scripture actually meant.  It was, in all these dogmatic matters, ultimately up to the bishops of the Church, in union with the Pope, to make a final determination.  History makes this very clear.

So, we see that the New Testament Church understood apostolic authority in the way it has been preserved in the Catholic Church.  If we are looking for “all the truth” in the many dogmatic and moral questions that arise during the course of human history, we will need to look to those who can trace their ordinations back through a succession of hands to the apostles.   Jesus made His promise of the Holy Spirit’s charism of truth to them, and Scripture tells us they passed it on to others.  Today, by that gift, the Voice of Jesus continues to ring out through His Church to the whole world.  The plan worked!

Possible response:  Lord Jesus, thank You for building a Church that will always be able to teach us “all the truth” about life with You.

Psalm (Read Ps 67:2-3, 5-6, 8)

The psalm captures for us the joy that comes to “all nations” when God’s way may “be known upon earth.”  In the Gospel, when Jesus looked out to the future, He saw God’s plan for that to happen through His one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church.  Two thousand years later, we can see its fruit.  Therefore, we want to sing:  “O God, let all the nations praise You!”

Possible response:  The psalm is, itself, a response to our other readings.  Read it again prayerfully to make it your own.

Second Reading (Read Rev 21:10-14, 22-23)

Here we see a splendid vision of the Church at the end of time.  Notice how it is built on the foundation of the “twelve apostles of the Lamb.”  It is not built solely on the bible; it is built on twelve fallible human beings who were given the charism of infallible truth to build it.   All the teaching and preaching authority of the Catholic Church rests right there.  The beauty of this vision, written by an apostle to whom the charism of truth through the Holy Spirit had been given (see Rev 1:10), helps us understand why Jesus promised His peace in the Gospel.  The past, the present, and the future all belong to “the Lord God and the Lamb.”  Alleluia!

Possible response:  Heavenly Father, thank You for the splendor that lies ahead for Your people, the Church—You will dwell with us.  Thank You for its foretaste in the Eucharist at every Mass.


45 posted on 05/05/2013 6:12:33 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All

This Sunday’s Gospel :The Paraclete

Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D.

by Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D. on May 3, 2013 · 

He wore steel rimmed glasses and had hair to the middle of his back.  The fringe on his buck-skinned jacket bounced as he walked.

At least that was the way I was accustomed to seeing Mike as he bopped around town.  It was just a few years after Woodstock, and we were all taken with hippie culture.  It seemed so free, so new, so exciting.

But that day at the entrance of the mall, I scarcely recognized him.  His hair was cut and his clothing conventional.  He was passing out tracts and spoke to me of the Holy Spirit.  I scratched my head and vaguely remembered some talk about the Holy Spirit in confirmation class.   But I had to admit that I really did not know much about this third person of the Blessed Trinity.

This is quite common among Christians.  God the Father–we can get a glimpse of his tenderness and strength, thanks to Michelangelo’s magnificent Sistine ceiling.  And baby Jesus in the manger, the savior hanging on the Cross–these are images we can easily visualize.  But Holy Spirit, Holy Ghost?  Somehow, we can’t feel quite the same way about a dove as we do about a child on its mother’s lap.  And then what does this “Spirit” do?  The Father creates, the Son saves, but the Spirit?

Paraclete

Jesus calls him the “Paraclete” as he prepares the disciples for his departure (Jn 14:15-21).  Frankly, this does not help us much–unless, of course, we get a bit of explanation.  This word means “Advocate.”  It is the word for lawyer or attorney in Spanish and other languages.  There may be lots of jokes about lawyers, but when you are in trouble with the law, having a good lawyer is no laughing matter.  That’s the role of the Holy Spirit– He is our defense attorney.

Now part of the role of the defense attorney is to tell his client how to plead.  Sometimes, when the evidence against you is overwhelming, the sentence will be a whole lot lighter if you just plead guilty.  The Spirit counsels us to be honest, convicting us gently of sin–not to accuse us, not to condemn us, but to help us win our case.  He is the Spirit of Truth.  Blessed John Paul II’s theme was “Be not afraid.”   Be not afraid of the truth about your sin, your weakness, and your failings, says the Spirit.  For the judge happens to be the one who loves you so much that he died for you. Your judge is the same one who saved the woman caught in adultery from the rage of the hypocrites.

But he is also the one who told the adulteress to “go and sin no more.”  This is the real problem.  How is she to do that?  Sin was where she looked for life.  It drew her like a magnet.

Craving for drugs, booze and “free-sex” drew my hippie friends like a magnet in the 1970′s.  If we were acquitted by the Judge through the counsel of the Advocate, how were we to resist the allure of sin?

Archbishop Fulton Sheen once said that the only way to dislodge sin from one’s life is through the expulsive force of a new love.  This is the role of the Advocate.  He is the Love of God who is poured into our hearts (Ro 5:5) who drives out unlovely loves.  He is the Lord and Giver of true life who makes utterly clear that so many other things that we regarded as “life” are really death warmed-over.

Once you have a taste of the real thing, you are never again satisfied with imitations.  That’s why Mike abandoned the drug scene.  That’s why the Magdalene and the Samaritan woman abandoned all other lovers.  That’s why the rejoicing in Samaria rose to fever pitch (Acts 8:8).

The Holy Spirit is the real thing.  And he does not just come and go.  He is with us always.


46 posted on 05/05/2013 6:15:26 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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