April 16, 2015
THURSDAY, Easter
week two
“The Lord hears the cry of the poor”
The Responsorial
Psalm tells us: “The Lord hears the
cry of the poor” (Psalm 34). He
pours out on them his Spirit and bears witness through them.
Acts 5: 27-33 shows us the Apostles, ordinary, weak men without any
human power or resources, standing up to the highest authority in Israel, the
Sanhedrin (council of seventy-one elders, chief priests and scribes, presided
over by the high priest). Their strength came from the certitude of their faith
about two things: 1. God had raised Jesus from the dead and “exalted him… as
leader and Savior.” 2. They were doing God’s will: “We must obey God rather
than any human authority.” Ultimately, this is where our own strength comes
from as we try to live the Christian life. Other things may motivate us more
consciously or immediately. But this is the rock-bottom foundation of our
courage, and we need to be aware of it.
What was God’s will for the Apostles that they were so sure
about? It was to bear witness: “We
are witnesses of these things.” They had to bear witness because they were witnesses. Even in civil law,
people who know something about a case being tried are obliged to testify; it
is their duty. Does that oblige us to testify to Christ? Are we witnesses? We
did not see Jesus rise. What
makes us able to testify to him?
The Apostles said that they were bearing witness along with
“the Holy Spirit, whom God has given
to those who obey him.” What we are witnesses to is the certitude the Holy
Spirit has given us: the certitude of faith: the greatest certitude there is.
Faith is vision. St. Paul said, “At present we see
indistinctly [or “darkly”], as in a mirror” (1 Corinthians 13:12), but we see. We don’t imagine, guess, speculate,
simply accept what others have told us or just draw conclusions from rational
arguments. We see. Faith is an act of sharing
in God’s own act of knowing. It is the gift of knowing with the certitude
of vision without the experience of seeing in a human way.
We see in a divine way. John 3: 31-36 insists on the contrast between “the one who comes
from above” and “the one who is of earth.” The one from above, Jesus,
“testifies to what he has seen and heard.” And those who accept his testimony
“see” the truth with him and in him, as members of his body, through the gift of
the Spirit. The experience of grace is the source and foundation of all
Christian witness. We need to get in touch with our experience of the Spirit by
living according to his inspirations. Begin by taking God’s words seriously. The rest will follow. “The Lord hears the cry of the poor.”
Initiative: Be a
prophet. Live divinely. Act on what you
see by the light of faith.
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