Throughout the Easter season, we embark on a journey that culminates in an expansive exploration of love.
First Reading: Acts 1:15-17, 20-26
Psalm: Psalm 102(103):1-2, 11-12, 19-20
Second Reading: 1 John 4:11-16
Gospel: John 17:11-19
Last week, we considered the kind of love that Jesus exemplified and called us to participate in. This week, our readings from John flesh that theme out even more.
I’d encourage you to read through the whole of 1 John today to recap where we’ve been. John’s letter is multi-layered, each phrase building on another and circling back to reinforce earlier points. Reading it as a whole today won’t take very long but will hopefully enrich the journey that John’s taken us on throughout the Easter season, a journey that has culminated in an expansive exploration of love.
Our passage from 1 John begins with another little word: “since.” In other words, John wants us to remember what came before in his letter.
He wants us to remember these points:
God is love
Everyone who loves is begotten by God and knows God
God’s love is revealed in Jesus
With those truths fixed firmly in our minds, John reinforces the call for us to love one another, echoing Jesus’ words from last week’s gospel.
At the end of last week’s reflection, we cast a glance in the direction of the Holy Spirit, who begins to move into view today and takes centre stage next week.
We said that Jesus’ command to love one another is a tall order. Or, to be blunt, it’s just not feasible for us simple, flawed human beings with busy lives. The only way we could have a chance of modelling that kind of life would be with the help of the Holy Spirit.
Today, John gives just that reassurance. Read these words again:
“We can know that we are living in him, and he is living in us because he lets us share in his Spirit.”
There’s a conviction in John, which can be a little bit hard for us to swallow. How can I know I’m sharing in the Spirit? I can hope that I am! But can I know? For sure?
It’s almost as if John can see our hesitation because he immediately jumps in: I can witness to it! He says:
“We testify that the Father sent his Son as saviour of the world.”
He puts himself up as living proof of what he’s saying. Which is all well and good, but we’re nearly two millennia removed from John! We, though, have the saints. Look at the lives of people who testify to this reality: that the Father sent the Son to save the world and has given us a share in his Spirit.
Look to Padre Pio: look at the stigmata on his hands, his way of speaking to people so directly in confession.
Look to Mother Teresa: see how she poured herself out in compassionate service to the poorest people, even as she grappled with darkness herself.
Look to Pope John Paul II, who took on the Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe, survived an assassination attempt, and led the Church through his increasingly debilitating Parkinson’s.
Each of these saints, and so many more, were motivated in their lives of heroism by the conviction and experience of the truth of God’s promises in Jesus Christ. In the words of Jesus from the gospel today, they were consecrated in the truth: set apart for it and sent into the world to proclaim it.
The Church is a living body stretching back thousands of years, and God has always raised up men and women as beacons to remind us that we can trust his promises. A John, a Padre Pio, Mother Teresa, or John Paul II are not given the title “Saint” to make themselves look good; they don’t need it, and they’re happier than we can possibly imagine in the presence of the Lord! They’re called “Saint” to encourage and motivate us who are called to follow in their footsteps.
The lot has fallen to you and me. With the Spirit living within us, let’s go out into the world to love extravagantly.
Fruit: