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Holy Name Monastery
Founded 1889

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Thomas

Birds Sing After a Storm, Why Shouldn’t We?

May 8, 2023 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

This gospel reading is preparing us for what is coming:  celebrations of Ascension and Pentecost.   This is why we might call this “Goodbye Sunday.”  Jesus talks of leaving this world so that even greater works can be accomplished. But to the disciples this does not come across as a cheerful message.  Jesus will be leaving so how can things be better?! The answer Jesus gives is that he will send the Holy Spirit, and in the power of that Spirit his work will pervade the entire world.

Affection is evident in the exchange between Jesus with Thomas and Philip.  There is no rebuke or even disappointment in his tone as Jesus encourages Philip one more time to recognize him as the manifestation of the Father’s love.  He asks Philip, “Have I been with you all this time and you still do not know me?”  He is asking us the same question. If we really believe that Jesus is the way and the Truth and the Life, then we will find fresh and creative ways to keep alive his memory.  We will work to create safe, secure, happy, peaceful places for one another so we can undertake the really important work of keeping our priorities straight. Now it is our duty to lead the people whose lives we touch.  That’s what the sub-heading on our stationery promises: “Touching lives through prayer and service”.  This is the great challenge of transformation that enables us to respond to the needs of others with the compassion of Christ.  Note: we do not pledge with compassion like Jesus would show; but with the very compassion of Christ.

Jesus asks us the same question he posed to Philip: “You still do not know me?” Jesus continues by repeating what he has said before: “The Father and I are one.” Like Philip, we all tend to repeatedly ask the same similar question hoping for a clearer explanation.  The simple (and awesome) message we get in the Gospel exchange is that if we want to know what God is like, we must look at Jesus.  We must look at his life, ministry, words, death, resurrection and ascension.  If only we open our eyes, our spiritual eyes and heart, the Holy Spirit will enable us to have the kind of vision we need.

Nothing can take the sadness out of the encounter spoken of in the Gospel. Jesus is about to leave the company of friends with whom he has been through so much. But there is consolation even in the sadness. We all know the pain of departure from loved ones – family, community members, friends – through death or the separation by distance caused by job or living circumstances. Jesus’ consoling words support us in our pain, give us reason for hope and spur us forward with renewed faith.  We live assured that a time is coming when there will be no more pain of separation, only the joy of reunion in eternity.

By the time Rose Kennedy was age 93, she had been hit by tragedies again and again.  Four of her nine children had died violently and her husband’s rather unscrupulous life had been told and retold in the press. A reporter had asked her about all this.  Rose answered, slowly: “I have always believed that God never gives us a cross to bear larger than we can carry. And I have always believed that, no matter what, God wants us to be happy. He doesn’t want us to be sad.  Birds sing after a storm,” she said, “Why shouldn’t we?”

~Reflection by Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB

 

First Reading:  Acts 6:1-7        Second Reading:  1 Peter 2:4-9
Gospel:   John 14:1-12
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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: Birds sing, Christ, God, Jesus, Philip, quote, Rose Kennedy, Thomas

Second Sunday of Easter

April 4, 2016 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

christ is risen w tombWelcome to the Second Sunday of Easter.  Notice it’s “of”, not “after” .. because, you know this, Easter’s not a single day, or even an octave but a season of 50 days.

There’s no question that we know how to do Easter as an even: the question is … How are we at Easter as a way of life?

The great Easter truth we celebrate is not that we are going to live anew after death, but, by the power of Jesus’ resurrection we are new here and now!

“Here and now” – that’s easier said than done. If it’s any consolation, the first Christians: those who had the direct experience of our risen Lord don’t seem to have been much better at it than we are.  During the Easter season we’ll be reading a series of “post – resurrection” stories: the women at the tomb who seemed to have forgotten the “punchline”: that Jesus told them he would rise after three days. It took the angels to remind them of that rather important detail. And then they ran back to tell the disciples, but, the men didn’t believe them!  And, Mary in the garden?  She thought Jesus was the gardener

Imagine today’s Gospel scene.  It’s a week later.  Without warning, Jesus is in their midst – no time to run and hide under the table.  He’s THERE.  Someone’s first reaction was probably, who left that door open?  Immediately, Jesus “breathed on them”.

Some things we just can’t see. But we know they’re there anyway. Like the air when a gentle breeze caresses our cheek.  God’s love is sort of like the air, isn’t it? It fills us up –  even though we can’t see it – we can feel it in our hearts.  When Jesus breathed on them, Thomas who had missed Jesus’ first visit and wants to see Jesus with his very own eyes, expresses his belief. But Jesus reminds him of something very important.   Sometimes we just have to believe in things that we can’t see. We have a special name for that. We call it “faith.”

You may recall the words of several hymns that refer to the spirit breath of God: “Be our breath,” “fall afresh on me,” “whose breath is seed outpoured –  calling all things to birth,” “with your breath melt the frozen, warm the chill,”        One of my favorite Marian hymns often heard at Christmas, is sung by Amy Grant, entitled “Breath of Heaven.  It’s the story of Mary’s pondering the workings of the Incarnational Spirit within her.  Mary’s prayer becomes mine: “Breath of heaven, Hold me together, Be forever near me, Breath of heaven – Be with me now, lighten my darkness, Pour over me your holiness, for you are holy, breath of heaven.”

It has become for me a prayer: to be filled with the breath of God … And, that’s what Easter as a way of life is all about. And it’s a way of life we live one day at a time: one step at a time — trusting that even if we take a mis-step, we never journey so far from God that the life-giving breath of that Spirit is beyond our reach: even when that seems impossible to believe.

That’s the lesson we learn from Thomas who has gone down in history as “doubting Thomas” because he refused to accept the testimony of others, but demanded his own experience.  He has borne the brunt of almost two millennia of bad press because of His skepticism about the resurrection and Jesus’ appearance to the other disciples.  Yet, what did Thomas ask for that the others had not received?  They had seen Jesus. They had maybe had a chance to touch His wounds.  Why is Thomas ridiculed for his insistence that he see for himself?

I’m a little intrigued, actually, about how quick we are to make Thomas the poster child for faithless doubt. As a matter of fact, the rest of the bunch didn’t do any better.  Remember:  the women at the tomb, the men who didn’t believe the women’s story, Peter who runs back to see for himself …. and here are the “faithful” disciples, after the appearance of Jesus: still locked in the upper room.

Think about it:  why did Thomas come back at all. Whatever had taken him away from the community, he came back. And it was in the midst of the community that Jesus came to him, and without so much as a confession or absolution, offered him what he needed to believe: “Touch, me Thomas. Do not be faithless, but believing.”

One of Thomas’ great virtues was that he absolutely refused to say that he understood what he did not understand, or that he believed what he did not believe. There was an uncompromising honesty about him: he would never still his doubts by pretending they did not exist.

But, he refused to surrender to the fear, too, which kept the other disciples shut up in that locked room. He ventured out and then had the courage to come back – to face a community which had had an experience that he had not shared.  At first he insisted on his own experience of God.   Jesus knew what he needed – He extended his hand to him – not a hand out; but a hand up, the nudge Thomas’ needed to bolster his faith “my Lord and my God.”  This is our challenge, and our privilege, to figure out what people need –  to offer the comfort, security and peace that will bolster their faith in a loving God.  This, too, is the challenge the Good Shepherd extends to us on Divine Mercy Sunday: to lead people to green pastures, where, surely goodness and kindness and mercy may follow them all the days of their lives.”

With Thomas, and all whose faith wavers:  we pray, “Breathe on me breath of God, until my heart is pure. Until with you, my will and Yours are one – not my will but yours be done.”

~ Reflection by Prioress, S. Roberta Bailey, OSB

 

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Filed Under: Blog, Homily Tagged With: 50 days, Easter, God, Jesus, Lord, Mary, risen, Second Sunday, Thomas

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