Thursday, May 3, 2018

THE BOY WHO MET JESUS



          “Love one another as I love you,” Jesus tells us in today’s gospel. Six years ago a book was published about a 15-year old penniless boy in the African country of Rwanda who had a special experience of Jesus’ love. The book was called The Boy who Met Jesus. The boy’s name was Segatashya. He had never been to school or a church. He had never seen a Bible. Resting under a shade tree one day in 1982, he was visited by Jesus, who asked Segatashya if he’d be willing to go on a mission to show people how to live a life that leads to heaven.

         Segatashya accepted the assignment under one condition: that Jesus answer all his questions  --  about faith, religion, the purpose of life, and the nature of heaven and hell. Jesus agreed to the boy’s terms, and Segatashya set off on what would become a most miraculous journey.

“What you need to know is this,” Segatashya told the book’s author. “Jesus knows us all to the very depths of our souls, all our dreams and worries, all hopes and fears, all our goodness

and all our weakness. He can see our sins and faults and wants nothing more than for us to heal our hearts and cleanse our souls so that we can love him as immea­surably as he loves us. When he sends us suffering, he does it only to strengthen our spirits so we'll be strong enough to fight off Satan, who wants to destroy us, so that one day we can bask in the glory of Jesus’ presence forever.”

            In the first reading last Tuesday we heard Paul telling the Christian community at Antioch:  “It is necessary for us to undergo many hardships to enter the Kingdom of God.”  I discovered those words myself  some 75 years ago. They have helped me through I couldn’t tell you how many trials ever since.

          “I no longer call you slaves,’ Jesus tells us in today’s gospel. “I have called you friends, because I have told you everything I have learned from my Father.” Segatashya must have heard those words, for he told the book’s author: “When I was with him, I never wanted to leave. If he asked me to come and be with him now, I would leave this world for­ever without the slightest hesitation. To be near him is to live in love; no words need be spoken. In his presence, your soul is at peace and completely joyous. Know that his love is real, and that it is eternal and ours to have if we love him and do his will on earth. Ask him into your heart, and all his graces are yours. He will refuse you nothing. If you were able to know only one truth in your life, you should know this truth: Jesus loves you.”

          Sadly, the young man who spoke those words was killed in the Rwandan slaughter of 1984. Our Christian faith gives us reason to hope that we’ll meet him one day in heaven.

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