Sixth Sunday of Easter

 

Happy Mother’s Day!

Though Jesus taught His followers many things throughout His public ministry, they were unable to understand much of what He said because the heart of His truth was revealed in His death and resurrection.  Jesus told His disciples that the role of the Holy Spirit is to “teach you everything and remind you of all that I have said to you”.  The Spirit of truth will continue the teachings of Jesus in light of the transforming reality of Jesus dying and rising.  The Spirit will enable believers to experience Jesus days, years or centuries after His earthly life.  The effect of the Spirit’s work within the believer is a profound sense of peace, well-being, and confidence, the kind of peace that the world cannot give and that does not go away in the midst of life’s most difficult struggles.  It is the greatest gift imaginable.

Just as Jesus promises to send His Holy Spirit, so He promises to send us His peace.  These two gifts are really one.  The Hebrew idea of peace was not merely lack of strife but completeness, wholeness.  Through the Holy Spirit, we are being make whole in the image of Christ.

God Bless!

-Msgr. Powell

 

 

Fifth Sunday of Easter

Jesus’ full command is, “do not let your hearts be troubled. You have faith in God; have faith also in me.”  It is only through faith that we can continue as disciples of Christ, following Him even though we do not see Him with bodily eyes, striving to love as he loved, even though we know that we, like His first disciples, fall woefully short.  It is only through faith that we can be peaceful instead of troubled and anxious.

Our faith is this: Jesus of Nazareth is the word—made—flesh, the one who came into the world in order to give us everlasting life.  Our faith is that Jesus is God’s revelation of  Himself to us, so that whoever sees Jesus sees the Father.  Our faith is that  Jesus has  blazed a path through death for us.  He has  gone  ahead of us to prepare our eternal reward so that where Jesus now is, we also may eternally be.  Our faith tells us that Jesus is drawing us, despite our frailties and failures, to Himself and His Father.

God Bless.

Msgr. Powell

 

Fourth Sunday of Easter

A sheepgate allowed a shepherd to lead his flock into a sheepfold or corral, where it would be safe and secure. By identifying Himself as a sheepgate, Jesus claims that anyone who comes through Him will be safe.

They would be safe from harm. This could mean protection from harm in our outer world (from accidents, injury or sickness). It could also mean safety from harm in our inner world (from discouragement, depression or despair).

A second kind of safety would be from negative influences. There are all kinds of sinister influences in the world trying to rob us of our faith and ideals. For example, corrupt government officials threaten our quest for justice and freedom; greedy investors undermine our desire to share with and help the poor; misguided entertainers distort our sense of decency. It is not easy to follow Christ faithfully in a world hostile to gospel values. We need Christ’s reassurance that our faith and ideals will ultimately prevail.

A third kind of safety we need is safety from worry, anxiety and self-pity. Excessive concern can drain our energy and immobilize us. If we get to worried about our health, finances or relationships, we can’t function productively, advance in personal growth, or deepen our life in the Spirit. Only Jesus can make us safe from being dominated by worry, overwhelmed by anxiety, or paralyzed by self-pity. Only Christ can help us to live fully with joy and enthusiasm.

Jesus is not just like a sheepgate. He is the sheepgate. He is our safety in any trouble. He is our fullness of life.

God Bless

Msgr. Powell