April 14 2015
TUESDAY, Easter
week two
“The Lord is king; He is robed in majesty”
The Responsorial
Psalm is a proclamation of victory: “The
Lord is king; he is robed in majesty” (Psalm
93). And this is what Christianity is: a proclamation that Jesus Christ has
risen from the dead and won the gift of divine life for all who believe in him.
The prophets make this proclamation
credible by visibly embodying the teachings of Jesus in their lifestyle. They
make the living Jesus visible in their bodies.
Acts 4: 32-37 shows us the first Christians as a community making the
divine life of Jesus visible in their lifestyle: “The community of believers
was of one heart and mind, and no one claimed anything as a personal
possession, but they had everything in common…. There was no needy person among
them, for all who owned property or houses would sell them… and the proceeds
were distributed to each according to need.”
Suppose all Christians had continued to live like this for
the past two thousand years — not literally, but according to the spirit
described here: all providing for others’ needs as much as for their own —
would there still be poverty on earth? How many wars would never have happened?
How many people would be turning to drugs and alcoholism to escape a society
they can’t stand?
How many changes will come about if just the prophets begin to live in this spirit?
(All the baptized are consecrated, commissioned and committed to be prophets, but not all are aware of what
that means). When all of us accept personally this element of our baptismal
consecration, we will renew the face of
the earth.
Is that possible? “The
Lord is king; he is robed in majesty.” Jesus has triumphed over sin and
death. His reign is assured. It is just a question of how long it takes for us
to establish it on earth.
John 3: 7-15 tells us that to do this we must be “born from above.” What
is humanly impossible is not impossible to Jesus working in and through the
members of his body who have united themselves to him and to each other in mind
and will and heart by “devoting
themselves to the teaching of the
Apostles, and to the communal life,
to the breaking of the bread and to the prayers.“ They are “born of the Spirit”
and ready to follow his voice. No matter “where it comes from or where it
goes,” they will follow the Spirit’s inspirations. Through them it will become
evident that Jesus is risen as Lord and king, robed in majesty.”
Initiative: Be a
prophet. Live the Gospel with “radical” love: love that reaches to the roots
of your life-goals and choices.
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