Sunday, April 15, 2018

Opening





When we gather at Mass, our Eucharistic Feast,
Our Thanksgiving celebration,
We express our gratitude for all that God has given us.
One of those gifts is the recording and the preservation
And the interpretation
Of the history of His relationship with His people.
The Scriptures—and in particular the Gospels.

We’re now in the midst of the Easter Season.
So, as we may well expect, the Gospel passages selected for these weeks
Have been saying a lot about the Resurrection.
And Jesus’ actions and words during those final days on earth.
The days between the Resurrection and the Ascension. 
Those topics will continue through the remaining weeks of Easter.
Along with some flashbacks to things Jesus said earlier, 
About who he was.
About his relationship to the Father.
And his relationship to us.

The Church has selected and organized these Gospel passages,
As well as other Scripture readings, for each Mass throughout the year.
They’re compiled in the Lectionary that we read from at Mass.
The Gospels are also broken down and ordered in an additional book,
The Book of the Gospels.

In today’s Gospel we hear that Jesus opened the minds of his disciples
So that they might understand the Scriptures.
The Church tries to open our minds to understanding the Scriptures.
It offers us those installments, those episodes, each day.

(Of course, we’re always free to read an entire Gospel from start to end.
And that’s something we should do from time to time.
They’re not terribly long.)

A few years ago, I was surprised to learn from some Protestant pastors
That they all follow a Lectionary that’s based upon ours.
Even though they were Methodist and Presbyterian and Episcopalian,
They could meet for coffee every week and share ideas about their plans
For preaching the next Sunday.
So, the same Scripture we hear at Mass is also being heard and discussed
At all Masses around the world.
And at many other Christian services around the world.

Following our Lectionary, 
We hear mostly from John during Easter Season.
But today we hear from Luke.
The Scripture readings sound very familiar.
Not only because we hear them every Easter Season,
But also, because they address the most central elements of our faith.
Truths we hear repeated or supported in other parts of the Gospel.
And in our Creed and in other prayers at Mass.
Affirmations that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God—God Himself.
And that he died for our salvation and rose again from the dead.

Another reason today’s Gospel passage might seem particularly familiar
Is because we heard a very similar passage from John just last Sunday.
Both Gospels give their account of Jesus appearing to his disciples.
Suddenly standing among them in their locked room.
In his glorified human body.
Greeting them with, Peace be with you.
Speaking of the forgiveness of sins.
Showing them the remnants of his crucifixion wounds.
Telling them to go out and spread the Good News.

Last week John added a few other details,
About Jesus breathing the Holy Spirit upon them.
And about doubting Thomas.
This week Luke adds some detail about
The disciples who had met Jesus on the road to Emmaus.
And about Jesus eating a piece of fish to prove he wasn’t a ghost.

Depending on which Mass we went to on Easter Sunday,
We heard from Luke or Mark.
Those of us who are able to go to daily Mass heard from
Matthew and Mark during Easter Week.
We’ll hear from Mark again on the Feast of the Ascension.
But this is primarily the season of John.

As we see with John’s and Luke’s accounts of the locked room,
The four Evangelists don’t report exactly the same details
Throughout their Gospels.

Matthew, Mark and Luke are quite similar in their accounts.
They report many of the same stories and statements,
In roughly the same sequence.
John is less similar to the other three.

But all four give their account of the key truths of Jesus’ mission.
And the key truths of the Easter Season.
They all tell of the empty tomb;
The encounters with the risen Jesus;
The disciples’ initial fear and disbelief,
And their eventual, confident belief.
They tell of our salvation;
Of the institution of the Church;
Of God’s continued presence with us through the Holy Spirit;
And of our commission and call to go out and spread the Good News.

The Evangelists wrote not just for their contemporaries,
But for future generations—for us.
And sometimes they’re surprisingly direct in addressing us.
They step out of their narrator role
And deliver a direct, personal message for us.

Of the Evangelists’ motivation and purpose.
Addressing us directly by the title Theophilus
Which means: Friend of God, or Lover of God, or Loved by God.

Luke tells us:
Since many have undertaken to compile a narrative
Of the events that have been fulfilled among us,
Just as those who were eyewitnesses from the beginning
And ministers of the word have handed them down to us,
I too have decided, after investigating everything accurately anew,
To write it down in an orderly sequence for you, most excellent Theophilus, So that you may realize the certainty of the teachings you have received.

He adds a note on the Evangelists’ purpose.
He tells us:
Now Jesus did many other signs in the presence of [his] disciples
That are not written in this book.  
But these are written that you may [come to] believe
That Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God,
And that through this belief you may have life in his name.

Matthew also, closes his account of the Gospel with a personal message.
A directive and an assurance addressed directly to us.
A message found in all the Gospel accounts, but perhaps best presented
Here by Matthew.
A call to action.
A call to respond to the Good News we’ve received.

Matthew doesn’t step out of his narrator voice like Luke and John did.
He instead presents Jesus’ own final words at the Ascension.
Parting words directed to each of us:

Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the holy Spirit,
Teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you.  

And behold, I am with you always, until the end of the age.

Third Sunday of Easter

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