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"It is true there is an ebb and flow, but the sea remains the sea.’ You are the sea. Although I experience many ups and downs in my emotions and often feel great shifts and changes in my inner life, you remain the same." Vincent Van Gogh
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Sixth Week of Easter |
| John 16:12–15 |
Friends, in today’s Gospel, Jesus promises to send the Holy Spirit to guide the Church through time. “I have much more to tell you, but you cannot bear it now. But when he comes, the Spirit of truth, he will guide you to all truth.” Since Jesus is the Son of God, it is impossible for us adequately to interpret him through our own powers of perception. We require a divine pedagogue through which the speech of the Father is to be understood. This is the advocate we call the Holy Spirit. The words of today’s Gospel are almost unbearably profound, for they speak not only of the inner life of God but of the central dynamic of the Church’s life. The Father indeed spoke the fullness of his life, being, and truth in the Son, but the Church, in its earliest days, was incapable of taking that fullness in. What was (and still is) required is the ongoing influence of the Spirit, the divine interpreter of the Word, who does his work gradually and powerfully as the Church journeys across space and time. Bishop Robert Barron |
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Happy Mother’s Day to all mothers, grandmothers, and godmothers!
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The Apostle Paul’s message in First Corinthians 11 is surprisingly direct.
The greatest danger facing the church was not persecution from outside. It was selfishness growing inside. It’s amazing how all the issues that trip Christians up all these years later are the same basic issues that showed up immediately in the early church.
By the time Paul wrote to the believers in Corinth, their gatherings had become divided and unhealthy. Wealthier members gathered in exclusive groups with plenty of food, while poorer believers were left hungry and embarrassed. Instead of reflecting unity, the church reflected the same selfishness and status-seeking found in the world around them.
Paul’s response cuts to the heart of the issue.
The problem was not simply bad behavior.
The church had lost sight of the main thing.
And the main thing, Paul says, is what Jesus Christ truly means in everybody’s everyday life.
Not what people say publicly.
Not what they sing during worship.
But what Christ means when pride, anger, lust, selfishness, or division show up in your life.
To correct them, Paul brings the people back to the table and the Lord’s Supper.
On the night before His crucifixion, Jesus took bread and told His disciples, “This is my body, which is for you.” The bread symbolized that Christ Himself becomes the source of life for His people. Christians are not meant to live by self-effort, but through dependence on Him.
Then Jesus lifted the cup, representing His blood and the new covenant. The cup symbolized the death of the old self-centered life so that a new life could emerge.
That is the heart of the Christian faith:
The old life dies.
The new life begins.
He tells believers not to approach the Lord’s Table without counting on this.
Some in Corinth were treating it like an empty ritual while continuing to live selfishly and dishonestly. Paul says that attitude makes people “guilty of profaning the body and blood of the Lord.”
Paul warns that participating in communion carelessly turns it into an empty ritual. The issue was not become perfect first. No believer lives flawlessly. The issue was honesty.
People were expected to examine themselves truthfully, admit sin openly, repent sincerely, and receive God’s grace.
Paul even says some believers had become weak or sick because they ignored God’s warnings. His point was not that every hardship is punishment, but that God sometimes uses difficulty to slow people down and call them back to Him.
Pain often forces people to ask questions; success rarely does.
Am I drifting?
Am I becoming selfish?
Have I ignored what matters most?
Paul closes with a simple instruction: “Wait for one another.” In other words, pay attention to people. Care for each other. Let everybody catch up, at least in honesty. We all are together in God’s grace. There is no spiritual hierarchy. Act in all cases with love and humility. Wait for each other.
That was the missing ingredient in Corinth.
And it may still be the missing ingredient today.
We Christians can still become distracted by personalities, status, rituals, politics, divisions, preferences, and endless arguments.
But Paul keeps bringing believers back to the same foundation.
The bread.
The cup.
The death of the old life.
The birth of the new.
That is the main thing.
And if the main thing is lost, everything else eventually falls apart.
John Fischer
The month of May allows the Church to honor Mary as the one in whom God’s plan of salvation is perfectly fulfilled through Christ’s transforming work. Her holiness is a cause for hope: what God promises in Christ is not only awaited but already accomplished in her.
In this Sunday’s Gospel, Jesus makes three promises to his disciples: that love for him will be expressed in obedience to his commandments, that the Father will give the Spirit of truth, and that he will not leave us orphans. These promises are already realized in Mary in a unique and exemplary way.
Mary shows that love is not primarily emotion or sentiment, but obedience. Her decisive “yes” at the Annunciation—her fiat, “Let it be done to me according to your word”—is the purest expression of Christ’s teaching: “If you love me, you will keep my commandments.” Her obedience is concrete and total, the offering of herself without reservation to God’s will.
Christ’s promise not to leave us orphans is fulfilled both in the gift of the Holy Spirit and in the gift of Mary as our Mother. From the Cross, Jesus says to the beloved disciple, “Behold, your mother,” entrusting Mary to all who belong to him. In moments of loneliness or abandonment, we can turn to her with confidence, knowing her maternal intercession and care. Marian devotion thus anchors us in the communion of saints, where we are never alone.
The promise of the Spirit of truth is likewise manifested in Mary’s “fullness of grace.” She is the Spirit-filled disciple par excellence, the one who hears the word of God and keeps it. Her life reveals what it means to receive the Spirit fully and remain faithful to the end.
To honor Mary is therefore to honor God’s redemptive work in Christ. To turn to her, Queen of heaven and earth, is to be led more surely to her Son. And in uniting our hearts to her Immaculate Heart, we come to know more deeply the heart of Christ himself—the human heart of God who loved us to the end.
-Fr. Richard Hermes, S.J.