Homily for April 30th, 2021: John 14:1-6.
“In my
Father’s house there are many dwelling places,” Jesus tells us, “I am going to
prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come
back again and take you to myself, so that where I am you also may be.” What a
tremendous promise! Jesus’ words address our greatest enemy, and for most of us
our greatest fear: death. Down through the centuries Christians have pondered
and prayed over this promise. Here is what three of them have said.
St. Cyprian, 3rd century Bishop of
Carthage in North Africa : “We reckon paradise to be our home. A
great throng awaits us there of those dear to us, parents, brothers, sons. A
packed and numerous throng longs for us, of those already free from anxiety for
their own salvation, who are still concerned for our salvation. What joy they
share with us when we come into their sight and embrace them! What pleasure
there is there in the heavenly kingdom, with no fear of death, and what supreme
happiness with the enjoyment of eternal life.” [Office of Readings for Friday of the 34th
week of the year)]
“How happy will be our shout of
Alleluia there, how carefree, how secure from any adversary, where there is no
enemy, where no friend perishes. There praise is offered to God, and here too;
but here it is by people who are anxious, there by people who are free from
care; here by people who must die, there by those who will live forever. Here
praise is offered in hope, there by people who enjoy the reality; here by those
who are pilgrims on the way, there by those who have reached their own country.”
[Office of Readings
for Saturday of the 34th week of the year)]
Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI:
“Christianity does not proclaim merely a certain
salvation of the soul in some imprecise place beyond, in which everything in
this world that was precious and loved by us is erased, but it promises eternal
life, ‘the life of the world to come’: nothing of what is precious and loved
will be ruined, but will find its fulfillment in God. All the hairs of our head
are numbered, Jesus said one day (cf. Matthew
10:30). The final world will also be the fulfillment of this earth, as St. Paul states: ‘Creation
itself will be set free from slavery to corruption and share in the glorious
freedom of the children of God’" (Romans 8:21). [Aug. 15, 2010]
How
do we reach the joys of which these three great Christians speak? Jesus tells
us in the final sentence of today’s gospel: “No one comes to the Father except
through me.”
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