Texts of the Readings
May 17, 2009
Sixth
Sunday of Easter (B)
by Terrance Callan
Acts 10:25-26, 34-35, 44-48
1 John 4:7-10
John 15:9-17
It is natural for us to care most about the people close to us and those who
are most like us. And we easily assume that God cares more about us than
about those who differ from us geographically, ethnically, religiously. But
God loves all, without discrimination, and calls us to be like God in loving
all people.
The reading from the first letter of John reminds us that we
know of Gods love for us because he sent his son into the world so that we
might have life through him. And God not only sent his son, but sent him as
an offering for our sins; God sent him to die for us.
The reading from the gospel according to John is the
continuation of last Sundays gospel reading. It tells us that the coming
of the son of God into the world is not only Gods act of love for us, but
also that of the son. As Jesus says, No one has greater love than this, to
lay down ones life for ones friends.
It is chiefly the reading from the Acts of the Apostles that
shows that Gods love is offered to all without discrimination. In this
reading we hear what happened when Peter was sent to preach to the household
of Cornelius, a Gentile. According to Acts, this was the first time that
the early church preached the good news to someone who was not a Jew.
Before this time the early Christians had assumed that Jesus was simply the
fulfillment of Gods promise of salvation for Israel, the people of God.
But when God poured out the Holy Spirit on Cornelius and his family, Peter
realized that the life, death and resurrection of Jesus meant salvation not
only for Israel, but also for the Gentiles, in other words, for all people.
The readings not only tell us that God loves all, but also call
us to be like God in loving others. The reading from Acts makes this point
indirectly when Peter, having seen Gods acceptance of the Gentiles,
concludes that neither he nor anyone else should prevent their being
baptized.
The reading from the first letter of John gives us a logical
argument. Love is so characteristic of God that anyone who has really known
God will love. This is so much the case that the presence (or absence) of
love in our lives can be used as a test of whether we really do have
knowledge of God (or do not).
Finally, the gospel reading speaks of our need to keep Jesus
commandment, the commandment to love one another as Jesus has loved us. And
since Jesus loved us to the fullest possible extent, laying down his life
for us, he calls us to have that same love for each other. This seems too
much to ask. But Jesus also promises the Fathers help; he says that
whatever we ask the Father in Jesus name, the Father will give us. This is
the source of our hope to be able to love each other as Jesus loved us.
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