NB. from 2011. . .
3rd Sunday of Easter
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Joseph's, Ponchatula, LA
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3rd Sunday of Easter
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Joseph's, Ponchatula, LA
“Lord, you will show me the path
of life!” A declaration, not a request; not a demand, but an outcry of
hope. “[Y]ou will not abandon my soul to the netherworld, nor will you
suffer your faithful one to undergo corruption. . .You will show me the
path to life, abounding joy in your presence. . .” Who might be
consoled by this psalm? Someone who hears temptation whispering.
Someone abandoned by family and friends. Someone barely hanging on to
their faith. No, that's not right. That someone would be asking for
refuge, begging for mercy. “Lord, please, show me the path of life!”
Someone who declares faith in God with such vehemence, cries out in hope
with such assurance is strong in their faith, confident that God will
never forsake His loved ones. Someone who declares, “Lord, you will not
abandon my soul. . .” is convicted by truth, and at the same time,
sorely tested by the enemies of truth. That someone is Peter preaching
to the Sanhedrin. All of the Eleven remaining apostles standing before
the lawless men who crucified the Lord. Who gives them such confidence,
such zeal? The Risen Lord, the one God raised up, “releasing him from
the throes of death, because it was impossible for him to be held by
it.” Eleven of Christ's ambassadors to a fallen world are brought to
man's justice before the Sanhedrin. There they lay claim to the legacy
of the resurrection. Sure of their inheritance, Peter quotes David's
declaration, “Lord, you will show us the path of life!” This is our
claim, our inheritance as well.
Around the year 100 A.D. an anonymous author writes out a booklet and titles it, The Lord's Teaching Through the Twelve Apostles to the Nations. We refer to it as The Didache.
Besides the gospels themselves, this booklet is probably the first
written witness we have to the teachings of Christ and the early life of
the Church. The guiding principle of the text is found in the opening
paragraph: “There are two paths, one of life and one of death; but
there is a great difference between the two paths.” The rest of the
work is a map for the path of life, a map any 21st century Catholic
would immediately recognize: “The path of life, then, is this: First,
you shall love God who made you; second, your neighbor as yourself; and
all things whatsoever you would not have done to you, do not do to
another.” There is a summary of the Beatitudes and instructions on how
to give alms. The book's description of the path of death is also
easily recognizable. “And the path of death is this: First of all it
is evil and full of curse. . .” Then follows a long list of sins, in
which we find: “. . .murders, adulteries, . . .fornications, thefts,
idolatries, magic arts,. . .false witnessings, hypocrisies,
double-heartedness, deceit, haughtiness, depravity, self-will, . . .not
knowing Him that made them, murderers of children, destroyers of the
handiwork of God. . .” The path of life is taken by those willing to
sacrifice themselves for the benefit of others. The path of death is
taken by those determined to sacrifice others for their own benefit.
Lord, you will show us the path of life!
For a couple of the disciples,
after the Lord's resurrection, the path of life begins on the road to
Emmaus. While walking along the road, the Lord joins his students and
reminds them of all he had taught them. He begins with Moses and the
prophets and reveals to them his constant presence in scripture. He
reminds them that the prophets foretold his suffering and death and his
entrance into glory. Once they arrive home, the Lord sits at table with
them, blesses the food, breaks open the bread, gives it to them. “With
that their eyes were opened and they recognized him. . .” The Lord
vanishes the moment their eyes are opened, but they remember his
presence, “Were not our hearts burning within us while he spoke to us on
the way and opened the Scriptures to us?” Their hearts were burning!
In the company of Christ, listening to his words and breaking bread at
the table, the disciples were set on fire with the truth that only he
can reveal. That truth, the truth that burns but is never consumed, is
that the Lord is indeed risen and because he is risen, we too will rise
and join him. We will, that is, if we choose the path of life he has
blazed for us, mapped out for us. Christ suffered death—he allowed
death, “a death he freely accepted”—in order to reveal to us the beauty
and goodness of sacrificing self for the benefit of others, the path of
life. Knowing this truth, Peter and the other ten apostles stand before
the Sanhedrin and the “lawless men” and proclaim a message once sung by
King David: “Lord, you will not abandon my soul to the netherworld,
nor will you suffer your holy one to see corruption. You have made known
to me the paths of life; you will fill me with joy in your presence.”
Living as we do in a cynical and
skeptical age, we are constantly tempted to complicate the simple
truths of the faith. Some of us are likely tempted to dismiss
historical texts like The Didache as examples of naïve, peasant piety;
unsophisticated manuals for those who cannot handle nuanced thinking.
Life isn't black and white; it's gray, mostly gray and the circumstances
we find ourselves in determine truth, goodness, and beauty. The whole
idea that the faith can be reduced to two, mutually exclusive paths is
dangerously childish and possibly irrational. But if our choices aren't
Life or Death, then what are they? What lies between? A living death?
Breathing, eating, working, and all the while being dead inside,
living for nothing more than serving self? If Peter and the other
apostles are able to confront and defeat their enemies while praising
God for showing them the path of life, why can't we? Why can't we
choose this path, praise God for showing us the path, and then stand
firm, resolute on the truth of the faith and bound eternally to the
resurrection we are promised? We can. And we do. Each time we love
the unloveable, forgive the unforgiveable, show mercy to the unworthy,
and give God thanks for doing the same for us, we choose the path of
life. And by choosing life, we see more clearly, hear more sharply, and
love more abundantly. If you can leave here this morning and say to a
spouse or friend, “Were not our hearts burning within us while [Christ]
spoke to us on the way and opened the Scriptures to us?”, if you can say
that and mean it, then know that God's truth burns within you and then
do what the disciples did: make known to others, to everyone what
Christ did for you. . .on the cross, out of the tomb, in the breaking of
the bread. Tell them, all of them: the Lord showed me the path to
life!
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