My friends, each year the readings for the Easter Season present a somewhat idyllic time that I think gives many of us hope that life on earth, coupled with faith, can be good – sharing all in common, as we are told that they did. We know that Luke, the evangelist, not one of the original apostles, wrote for the Gentiles, or non-Jewish people, like us, and that he also penned the Acts of the Apostles, of which today’s first reading is taken.
Luke shows us a group of people who lived with, “a reverent fear,” over the “wonders and signs” that the apostles were doing in the name of their brother and rabbi, Jesus, now become the Christ.
A word on the meaning of “Christ” here is appropriate. Many times, we hear, “Jesus” and “Christ” put together, almost as if “Christ” were Jesus’ last name, which it is not. For the Jewish people, “Christ” meant the “Messiah” and comes from the Greek word, “Christos.” When all is said and done, both groups would have seen and realized that Jesus, as the Christ, was someone, for all!
Luke goes on to say that these “first Christians,” or followers of Jesus, often called people of The Way, “shared all things in common” because “they believed” in the words of Jesus, and additionally, as we just heard, were “faithful to the breaking of the bread.” And this first reading also lets us know that “God added to their numbers,” [because they praised God with] “sincere hearts.”
So, my friends, what are we to make of these first followers? I think there is a place in most of our hearts that longs for such an existence – living in harmony with others, and in peace, and this is so much the case not only for us, but for people around the world. Unfortunately, if we continue on reading from the Acts of the Apostles, we find that this idyllic beginning doesn’t last. Humanity comes into play after a while, and they find that living so closely with others has its downside too.
But once again, we find that as we read Scripture, what we hear in these first, seemingly wonderful days, is only the surface message – Jesus, God, always intends that we, go deeper.
Peter, in today’s second reading, shows us what this looks like. He compares our faith in, and love for Jesus, to, “fire-tried gold,” – simply put, something that must be worked on. The people that he was preaching to, we must remember, had never seen Jesus – which, by the way, is our case as well. We know that our faith comes to us through our baptisms, and through Jesus’ Spirit, given to all who would believe, through God’s mercy, before Jesus physically left us.
Today’s Gospel from John is all about giving Jesus’ 1st followers the strength to carry on the “Good News” first given them. We can only imagine what this experience of physically and personally knowing Jesus was like for them…and it is, I believe, a good thing for us to sit with, and indeed imagine.
Earlier, I spoke of our faith being compared to “fire-tried gold” – this term, we are told, “represents purified faith, and a spirituality that has been tested by adversity” – something that Jesus’ apostles would discover, as we in our lives do too.
Additionally, in today’s Gospel from John, we hear Jesus three times saying the words, “Peace be with you.” Later in the Scripture story, we will hear Jesus telling the apostles that “he will be with them always!” and we might add, that is why we should have “peace.”
Us too, my friends, should know, believe and have faith in the fact that all that we do, or attempt to do in our one, wonderful life, we will have our brother Jesus with us – to give us strength, support us, and at times even, carry us.
In my ministry to the wider community, I have, over the years, given pastoral care to those in need who find me through many different sources. One such woman I have visited now for several years on a regular basis. This individual will, from time to time, speak to me about “someone who harasses her,” following her from place to place where she has lived over the years. I know from several reliable people that there are protections in place that would make these occurrences next to impossible in a physical way. Yet, I know she truly believes that what she tells me is the truth for her. Because she has a deep faith, I call her attention to the fact that Jesus is always with her and that she should ask him to help her. I additionally ask her to keep her mind and heart on all that is positive and good in her life and this gives her hope. This past week, after I said this, she looked at me, cracked a grin and said, “I won at bingo three times yesterday!”
Life isn’t always easy, and for some, we might say, seldom is. I believe that each of us, as we try in our world, to make a difference for the good for so many who suffer from ignorance, greed for power and control, must remember too that Jesus is “sending us” as he did the apostles before us, with the strength of the Spirit, to speak truth to power when needed, to be faithful to the one we say we follow,
and to always believe, and never forget, that we do not walk alone! — we can’t wait for bishops to show us the way…Amen? —Amen! —Alleluia!