6th Sunday of
Easter
Fr. Philip Neri Powell OP
St.
Albert the Great, Irving
This
Ole English Professor would like to note that there are a whole lotta
verbs working in the readings this morning. Proclaiming, hearing,
crying out, curing, rejoicing, receiving, praising, giving,
suffering, loving, keeping, remaining, asking, seeing, loving,
revealing. And my favorite verb of them all: being. It warms
my Grammatical Heart to hear so many nouns verbing and so many direct
objects receiving the action! Yes, there's a lot going on. As it
should be. Jesus is leaving the disciples. He's not abandoning them.
He makes that clear. But he is leaving. You can almost feel the
anxiety vibrating off the disciples at this news. The near panic at
being left to fend for themselves – w/o a teacher, w/o a shepherd,
w/o direction. It must've been brutal for them. And, no doubt, Jesus
feels their terror. So, he promises, “I
will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate to be with
you always, the Spirit of truth...I
will not leave you orphans; I will come to you.”
That Spirit comes to us at Pentecost. And remains with us still –
proclaiming, loving, revealing, fortifying, and just being.
One of the first lessons I teach seminarians in my preaching classes
is to always present the Gospel using present-tense, active verbs.
This is harder than you might think. We're reading about events that
happened centuries ago. Jesus healed
the sick. He died
and rose
again. Jesus sent
the Holy Spirit. Historically accurate, yes. But not exactly
thrilling. Using past-tense verbs leaves us the distinct impression
that these events are one and done. Over. And in some sense that's
true. Jesus doesn't die more than once. Nor does he resend the Spirit
when necessary. But thinking about our life in Christ as an
historical account, something that happened long ago and far away,
can lead us to believe that we are merely Readers About the Faith,
latecomers to the glories of the Gospel who are charged with
occasionally dusting off the text and wondering what it was like
“back then.” Philip urges us: “Always
be ready to give an explanation...for your hope.” Does our
explanation go something like this: “Well, you see, there's this
story where this guy Jesus teaches about love and then dies on a
cross and now we get together once a week to read about his life.”
Is that our hope? A story? A weekly get-together to catch up on life?
'Cause if it is, we're the biggest dupes to draw breath since Adam
and Eve trusted a talking snake!
Fortunately,
we're not dupes. We're not dupes b/c we do not believe that our faith
is based on a book, a story. We have a book – lots of books – and
we have a story, a powerful, life-giving story. But books and stories
don't create great saints, faithful-to-the-end martyrs, or
hope-filled witnesses to the truth. Jesus promises his disciples that
they will not be left orphaned. He promises to send them the Spirit
of Truth. Not a trendy ghost who will show them how to negotiate with
the powers of the world for approval. Not a spirit of individual
empowerment or a spirit of collectivist subservience. Not a spirit of
cowardice, compromise, or corruption. But a Spirit of Truth. An
abiding, enduring, on-going Spirit of Love who clarifies, sharpens,
and focuses our witness in and to a world determined to commit
suicide just for the fun of it...and take us with it. Jesus tells his
disciples that the world cannot and will not accept this Spirit. Why?
Because the world “neither sees nor knows him.” The world neither
sees nor knows this Spirit b/c it does not know the Father. In fact,
the world has rejected the Father. It has rejected His fatherhood,
His guidance, His discipline, His creation, and so, it must also
reject His children. The Spirit of Truth teaches us even now: do
not receive the world's rejection!
That's
right. Do not receive the world's rejection. Don't worry about
opposition. Don't worry about embarrassment or ridicule or
persecution. What's the saying? You know you're over the target when
you start getting flak. Amen. Bring to bear the faith's most
devastating weapon against the Spirit of the Age: veritas
in caritate.
Truth in love. A 500 gigaton bomb, 500 billion tons of truth dropped
in love. Not a “once upon a time” fairy-tale told in the
past-tense. Not a philosophical system or theological method. Not a
bureaucratic institution with policies and procedures. And certainly
not a global process-meeting with predetermined outcomes. Truth in
love. The universal solvent for all the world's illusions, lies, and
death-dealing vices. Do not receive the world's rejection. It's what
the world wants. It needs you and me to abandon it to its
suicidal/homicidal tendencies. That's not what the Spirit of Truth
demands of us. Whoever observes my commandments loves me. [So] I give
you a new commandment:
love
one another. Present-tense, imperative, active voice. Love one
another.
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