Love
Gives Life
MONDAY, Easter week four: April 18, 2016
The Responsorial Psalm affirms the universal
hunger of the human heart for God: “Athirst
is my soul for the living God” (Psalm
42). And in the readings we see Jesus, the Good Shepherd, eager to satisfy that
hunger in every person on earth.
In Acts 11: 1-18 Peter is explaining to some of
the “circumcised believers” (the “judaizers”: Jewish Christians who clung to
the Jewish laws and customs they had grown up with and wanted to impose them on
everyone accepted into the community) why he broke the legal barrier between
Jews and Gentiles by entering the house of Gentiles and eating with them. He
explained it as an inspiration of the Holy Spirit — “The Spirit told me to
accompany them without discriminating” — and as a response to their evident
faith, confirmed by the outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon them: “If God gave
them the same gift he gave to us… who was I to be able to hinder God?”
Peter is
doing two things here: first, he is showing us that to be prophets we must respond to the living voice of God, even leading
us in unexpected directions, instead of remaining fixated in blind observance
of laws. Legalism cuts off communication between us and the Spirit.
Second,
Peter is modeling obedience to Jesus’ great command to him: “If you love me, feed my sheep” (John 21: 15-17). The first concern of every Church member and
minister should be to nourish people who are “athirst for the living God” and invite them to the table, not keep
them away by “one size fits all” rules that do not take into account the
concrete reality of individual persons and circumstances.
John 10: 11-18 teaches us the attitude of
Jesus, the Good Shepherd, toward those whom the “wolf” has “scattered” – and
toward everyone who does not gather with his sheep. He will seek them out,
welcome them, lead them: “And they will hear my voice.” When we encounter anyone
who is hearing the voice of Jesus, we need to say with Peter, “Who am I to be
able to hinder God?” If someone is “athirst
for the living God,” God must be calling. How can we ignore that?
The
Spirit of Jesus, Good Shepherd, is the Spirit of universal love; love that
reaches out, that removes barriers and smooths the way for those advancing
toward Jesus, whose “souls are athirst
for the living God.” The shepherds who do not do this are just working “for
pay, and they have no concern for the sheep.” In defending automatically the
letter of the law they are breaking the most fundamental law of pastoral
ministry: “If you love me, feed my sheep.”
Initiative: Be a prophet.
Recognize God’s voice in
others’ hearts and help them respond. Never turn them away.
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