Blog Post 4/16/2023 Cycle A - Offered at Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Bethlehem, Pa
Peter, John and the rest of the
apostles [except Thomas] were doing something very ordinary, they were praying. The simple, mundane tasks of being a parent,
of being a member of a family, of being a friend, of being a part of a parish,
is the very "work" of God …. The
"work" of God is not measured in effectiveness or efficiency; the
hallmark of God's work is the compassion and love,
the justice & healing that
inspire and compel that work.
The simplest act of kindness and
charity … is … the very work of Christ; the most hidden and unseen acts of
kindness will be exalted by Christ in the kingdom of his Father. The
hard work of being a Christian is filled with sadness and with joy!
The sadness we encounter points us to Christ’s wounds and
we know that [one day] they will be turned into joy.
Jesus greeted His disciples: “Peace
be with you.” And then, He
invited Thomas’ to touch and believe; Thomas response was a great act of faith,
of belief, “My Lord & my God!”
“The peace of Christ is realized in loving when it is
most difficult to love, in putting aside our own disappointments and doubts for
the sake of another, in forgiving when we are too angry or disappointed to
forgive, in reaching out when we expect to be rebuffed or rejected.” [Connections
April 10, 2010]
The Risen Christ gives us His PEACE to help us and to
help us help our world. At our Easter
Vigil Mass we sang “Create in Me a pure heart, O
God, a willing spirit.”
The “a willing spirit” struck
a deep chord in my heart and soul. That
seems to me to be the essential call each one of us must answer – “a willing
spirit”, to follow Jesus totally.
Thomas recognized Jesus’ divinity through His humanity. Thomas may have received one of the first, if
not the first sound bites when he was labeled “Doubting
Thomas.” Thomas represents each
of us. Our faith and our doubts in Jesus
Christ - true man and true God and our willingness to make a leap of faith in
Jesus Christ.
Sometimes we doubt when we [or a loved one] faces
sickness [my wife Joanne on Holy Thursday admitted to the hospital, she was
released yesterday] or death,
when we lose our job or experience economic hardship, when
we live with violence, war or terrorism.
Mother Theresa doubted sometimes; even the Popes
occasionally doubt. FAITH is leaping
with the doubts and through the doubts into the Lord!
Maybe this Story about a 5 year old boy whose house was on
fire can aid our understanding: smoke everywhere, he was on the 2nd
floor, blinded by the smoke, on the grass outside his window his father could
see him clearly and called to him to jump, the boy said he could not see, and his
father assured him that he would catch him.
“I CAN SEE YOU SON, JUMP & I AM HERE!”
Jesus waits for us when we doubt; He waits for us to jump
into His arms and into faith in Him. Unlike
Thomas we don’t have Jesus wounds to touch, but we have wounds: our own, and our
loved ones. When we touch those wounds with
our compassion and our empathy, we touch Christ!
We are profoundly blessed to receive the wounded and
resurrected Jesus in the Eucharist. Jesus
is the first and the last, the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end,
the Way to everlasting life.
“Create in me, create in me a
pure heart, O God, a willing spirit.”
Today join Thomas & me and declare Jesus, “My Lord and my God.”
Think about that on this Divine
Mercy Sunday, when celebrate God’s Mercy contained in unconditional
forgiveness and in unconditional love.
Pope Francis in his book, The
Name of God is Mercy, wrote, “Mercy
is the divine attitude which embraces, it is God’s giving himself to us,
accepting us, & bowing to forgive.” [pp. 7,8]
For a few minutes, in silence, accept God’s mercy and
give God your burdens!
May God Be Praised.