Homily for May 4th, 2015: John 14:21-26.
“Whoever loves
me will keep my words,” Jesus tells his friends. He is speaking to the apostles
at the Last Supper, after washing their feet. He did this to show them that he
was sending them to serve others, and not to be served. That is what Jesus
means by keeping his words: being servants of others. Jesus was speaking not
just to those twelve men in the Upper Room at Jerusalem . He is speaking also to us. If we
keep his words, he is telling us, his heavenly Father will love us, and both Jesus
himself and his Father will love us and come to us, and make their dwelling
with us. What a wonderful promise that is! And of course whenever Jesus
promises something, he always keeps his promise.
None of us
ever keeps God’s words completely. All of us fail at times. That was why Mother
Teresa – now Bl. Teresa of Calcutta
– used to say: “God does not ask us to be successful. He asks us to be
faithful.” When we fail, we need to remember what our wonderful Pope Francis
never tires of telling us: God never grows tired of forgiving us. It is we who
grow tired of asking for forgiveness.”
Speaking to a vast crowd
of young people in Germany
in September 2011, his predecessor, now Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI said: “Dear
friends, Christ is not so much interested in how often in our lives we stumble
and fall, as in how often with his help we pick ourselves up again. He does not
demand glittering achievements, but he wants his light to shine in you. He does
not call you because you are good and perfect, but because he is good and wants
to make you his friends. Yes, you are the light of the world because Jesus is
your light. You are Christians – not because you do special and extraordinary
things, but because he, Christ, is your life. You are holy, we are holy, if we
allow his grace to work in us.”
Pope
Benedict’s words were an example of something else that Jesus promises in
today’s gospel reading, at the close. “The Holy Spirit whom the Father will
send in my name will teach you everything and remind you of all that I told
you.” On that evening with those young people in Germany almost five years ago, the
Pope of that time was doing just that.
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