Homily for April 2nd, 2016: Mark 16: 9-15.
Throughout
Easter week we have been hearing gospel readings which tell of the risen Lord
Jesus sending out those to whom he appeared to proclaim that he is risen. On
Monday he encountered the women visiting his empty tomb and told them: “Do not
be afraid! Go and carry the news to my brothers . . .” On Tuesday we heard him
giving the same command to Mary Magdalene. On Wednesday he encountered two of
his disciples on the road to Emmaus and made himself known to them “in the
breaking of the bread” – the first post-Easter celebration of Mass. On Thursday we heard the account of
Jesus appearing to the apostles, with the previously missing Thomas, a week
after Easter. “You are witnesses of all this,” he tells them: not just a
statement, but also a command. Yesterday we heard about Jesus encountering
seven of his apostles, tired from a night of fruitless fishing on the lake, and
charged Peter to “feed my sheep.”
Today’s gospel
reading is a kind of summary of all this. Twice over we hear that even after hearing
the testimony of people who had seen the risen Lord, “they refused to believe.”
Sitting at table with the eleven remaining apostles Jesus “takes them to task
for their disbelief and stubbornness,” Mark writes, “since they had put no
faith in those who had seen him after he had been raised.”
Note what
immediately follows. To these men whose faith was not merely weak, but missing
entirely, Jesus says: “Go into the whole world and proclaim the good news to
all creation.” That challenged not only those eleven at table with Jesus. It
also challenges us. When we think our faith is too weak to enable us bear
witness to the risen Lord, and to proclaim his good news to an often hostile
though hungry world, we should remember: the first witnesses were also weak in
faith, even lacking in any faith. Yet Jesus did not hesitate to send them. He
knew that in the very act of proclaiming the good news to others their own
faith would be kindled, and deepened.
Another man who knew that was the
namesake of the present Pope: St. Francis of Assisi . “Preach always,” Francis said. “When
necessary, use words.”
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