Monday, April 17, 2017

Cycle A - Year 1:  

23 April 2017: Second Sunday of Easter (Divine Mercy Sunday)
(Liturgical Color: White)

Gospel:Please Read John 20:19-31

Believe in your heart!

Do you believe that "the best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched. They must be felt by the heart."? This famous quote is from the well-known American author, Helen Keller, who was blind.

Going back to the opening question, perhaps the answer is maybe sometimes. Because others also say that "to see is to believe".

Let us reflect on these interesting quotes to connect us to the Gospel message for the second Sunday of Easter.

We recall that on Easter Sunday the universal Church proclaimed the Lord is risen! But in those time, He has yet to appear to the disciples who kept themselves locked up in a room after Jesus' death for fear of the Jews.

As the story goes, Simon Peter, John and Mary of Magdala, who were the first to witness the empty tomb, told the rest of the disciples that there was no dead body of Jesus in the tomb where they laid Him, but the burial cloths were there. Perhaps, the disciples were thinking that if indeed Jesus is risen, all the more the disciples were afraid because they realized that they were cowardly during the passion and death of their Master.

And so, "when the doors were locked, where the disciples were", the risen Lord appears for the first time to the disciples and greets them, "Peace be with you." Now take note that the Lord's first words to the disciples are a declaration of forgiveness, peace and mercy, even before the disciples could even ask for forgiveness for their unfaithfulness and cowardice.

One of the original twelve disciples, Thomas was his name, was not with them when the
risen Lord first appeared to the group. So the next time Thomas was with the group, the rest of the disciples shared their experience with the risen Christ, but Thomas refused to believe and said, "Unless I see the mark of the nails in His hands and put my finger into the nail marks and put my hand into His side, I will not believe." (Jn 20:25)

A week passed, and the risen Lord appeared again, and Thomas was with the disciples this time.  Then Jesus allowed him to put his finger in Jesus' wounds, and Thomas saw and believed. Jesus said to Thomas, "Have you come to believe because you have seen me? Blessed are those who have not seen and have believed." (Jn 20:29)

What then is the message of the Gospel narratives for us today?

Well, we too are often fearful to face the risen Lord in our lives. Because we feel like the doubting Thomas in the Gospel -- our faith is not strong enough to withstand suffering, trials and evils in our world. That is why, like Thomas, we demand clear signs of Jesus' victory over death and sin. Or perhaps, we spend so much time focusing on our sins and failures, and not enough on God's mercy and compassion.

This Sunday's liturgy assures us that God's mercy precedes our sins, precisely because of the saving work of our Lord Jesus Christ. This means that we are forgiven long before we even think of committing sins. But we must repent and ask for forgiveness. God only waits for us to claim the mercy already prepared for us through the saving work of Jesus Christ.

Let us then pray in the Holy Eucharist at Mass that like Thomas may the risen Christ open our eyes to the power of the Resurrection, and transform our doubts  and fear into confident faith and boundless joy.

But do you ever wonder why the Lord Jesus Christ keep His wounds in His glorified body?

Some great theologians have the following answers:

- The wounds are there because they proclaim the glory and victory of Christ.

- The wounds of our Lord also serve to confirm the disciples in their faith and hope in the resurrection, and so give them the courage to suffer for our Lord, as they did.

- And the five wounds of Jesus are there so that He may constantly present them to the Father in heaven in supplication in our behalf, when we fall back to sin.  

Finally, the second Sunday of Easter is also Divine Mercy Sunday, promoted by Sister Faustina Kowalska. Let us, therefore, claim our own share of God's divine mercy as we face, with confidence in divine goodness, whatever difficulties we encounter in our worldly journey to the Father's house..

A blessed Sunday to us all. And thank you for a moment with God.

Ad Jesum per Mariam!

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