April 26, 2024

Fifth Sunday of Easter / Msgr. Owen F. Campion

The Sunday Readings

Msgr. Owen CampionThe Acts of the Apostles is the source of the first reading of Mass this weekend during the Easter season.

It highlights St. Paul. In an earlier passage—not proclaimed in this liturgy—Paul, an intensely devoted Jew, after having persecuted Christians, miraculously experiences an encounter with the Lord on the way to Damascus.

Paul instantly converts to Christianity. Eventually, the Christian community accepts him, although understandably with some trepidation, considering Paul’s record of persecuting them. He had been quite hostile to followers of Jesus.

At last accepted, in this weekend’s reading he returns to Jerusalem. With his choleric personality and religious fervor, now bursting with belief in Christ, Paul openly debated with Greek-speaking Jews.

Paul himself was well-educated. From Tarsus in Asia Minor, he was not a product of the Holy Land, although he was an ethnic and religiously observant Jew. He spoke Greek, the language of the empire and of scholarship at that time.

Paul’s intensity made enemies for him. The Christians took him for his own safety to Caesarea, the Roman capital of Palestine, a place now in ruins on the outskirts of modern Tel Aviv.

From Caesarea, a seaport, the Christians sent him home to Tarsus for his personal security.

An important statement in this reading is in its final verse. It says that throughout the entire area, the Church was at peace and making progress. Notice that the term “Church” is used.

For the second reading this Easter weekend, the Church offers a selection from the First Epistle of St. John. It refers to its readers as “children” (1 Jn 3:18). Obviously, adults composed the epistle’s audience—or most of the audience. Still, John employs this term of endearment. Those who follow Jesus indeed are God’s “children” in their vulnerability and need for him.

St. John’s Gospel supplies the last reading, part of the long discourse by Jesus given to the Apostles at the Last Supper.

This reading has a deeply eucharistic undertone. At the Last Supper, Jesus gave the Twelve the wine that became his blood through his power.

Wine, of course, is the product of grapes that grow on vines. In this reading, Jesus says, “I am the true vine” (Jn 15:1). All who love the Lord are the branches. God protects the vine, even by cutting away branches because of sin.

Thus, Jesus warns that no branch can bear fruit if it separates itself from the true vine of God.

Receiving and remaining in the blood of Christ completes and strengthens this bond between vine and branches.

Reflection

In Acts, the First Epistle of John and the Gospel of John, the Church calls us to absolute faith in and deep love for God in Jesus, risen to life after dying on the cross. He is the cornerstone of our faith and of our lives.

Part of the Lord’s legacy is the Church. The Church does not (or should not) merely mean an earthly, visible and coincidental entity that we can take or leave. If we truly are with Christ, then we are part of the Church, and vice versa.

The Church is the mystical body of Christ, a phrase rich in its references to St. Paul’s writings. It then also is the vine. Members of the Church are its branches.

Vines and branches involve a living relationship. The vine nourishes and holds the branches. Cut away from the vine, the branches die. This Church offers us divine nourishment—the eucharistic blood of Christ—and it unites us to the Lord.

On this weekend, the Church again invites us to celebrate the victory of Jesus over death. If faithful, if in the Church, Christ’s mystical body, we are with Jesus. He is the vine. We are the branches. We live and are strong in Christ, nourished by the Eucharist. †

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