"Amen, amen, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains just a grain of wheat; but if it dies, it produces much fruit. " (John 12)
Photo copyright : John R Portelli

Friday 27 April 2018

AN INVITATION TO MAKE OUR HOME IN JESUS

Fifth Sunday of Easter

                                     Il-Ħames Ħadd ta’ l-Għid   2018                                     
Messalin B 294
  
Reading 1   -   Acts 9:26-31
When Saul arrived in Jerusalem he tried to join the disciples, but they were all afraid of him,  not believing that he was a disciple.Then Barnabas took charge of him and brought him to the apostles, and he reported to them how he had seen the Lord, and that he had spoken to him, and how in Damascus he had spoken out boldly in the name of Jesus. He moved about freely with them in Jerusalem, and spoke out boldly in the name of the Lord. He also spoke and debated with the Hellenists, but they tried to kill him. And when the brothers learned of this, they took him down to Caesarea and sent him on his way to Tarsus. The church throughout all Judea, Galilee, and Samaria was at peace. It was being built up and walked in the fear of the Lord, and with the consolation of the Holy Spirit it grew in numbers. This is the Word of the Lord.

L-Ewwel Lezzjoni     =   Qari mill-Ktieb ta' l-Atti ta' l-Appostli  9, 26-31
F'dak iż-żmien,  meta Sawl wasal Ġerusalemm beda jfittex li jissieħeb mad-dixxipli. Imma  lkoll kienu  jibżgħu minnu, għax ma kinux emmnux li tassew ikkonverta. Imbagħad Barnaba qabdu u ħadu miegħu  għand l-appostli. Hu qalilhom kif Sawl kien ra lill-Mulej fit-triq u semgħu jkellmu,  u kif f'Damasku kien tkellem  b'wiċċu minn quddiem fl-isem ta' Ġesu'.   Għalhekk  Sawl baqa' magħhom, dieħel u ħiereġ f'Ġerusalemm, u  kien jitkellem  bil-miftuħ f'isem il-Mulej.   Kien  jitħaddet mal-Lhud Griegi u jiddiskuti magħhom;  iżda huma kienu jfittxu li joqtluh.   Meta l-aħwa saru jafu b'dan, niżżluh lejn Ċesarija u bagħtuh Tarsu. Il-Knisja kienet fis-sliem fil-Lhudija u l-Galililja u s-Samarija kollha;  kienet dejjem tikber u timxi 'l quddiem fil-biża'  tal-Mulej u  tiżdied fl-għadd  bl-għajnuna tal-Ispirtu s-Santu. Il-Kelma tal-Mulej

Responsorial Psalm    -    Psalm 22:26-27, 28, 30, 31-32
I will fulfill my vows before those who fear the LORD.
The lowly shall eat their fill;
they who seek the LORD shall praise him:
"May your hearts live forever!"                        
R./ Alleluia.

All the ends of the earth
shall remember and turn to the LORD;
all the families of the nations
shall bow down before him.                                         
R./ Alleluia.

To him alone shall bow down
all who sleep in the earth;
before him shall bend
all who go down into the dust.                         
R./ Alleluia.

And to him my soul shall live;
my descendants shall serve him.
Let the coming generation be told of the LORD
that they may proclaim to a people yet to be born
the justice he has shown.                                             
R./ Alleluia.

Salm Responsorjali          Salm 21 (22)
Irrodd il-wegħdiet tiegħi
quddiem dawk li jibżgħu minnu.
Jieklu l-fqajrin u jixbgħu;
ifaħħru l-Mulej dawk li jfittxuh.
Ħa tgħix qalbhom għal dejjem!              
R/ Hallelujah

Jiftakru t-truf  kollha ta' l-art;
u jerġgħu lura  lejn il-Mulej;
u quddiemu jixteħtu r-razez kollha tal-ġnus.
Lilu  jqimu l-bnedmin, li jmutu;
quddiemu jmil lull min nieżel ġot-trab
Ugħalih tgħix ir-ruħi.                                         
R/  Hallelujah

Lilu jaqdi n-nisel tiegħi.
Ixandru  'l Sidi lin-nisel li  għad jiġi,.
ixandru l-ġustizzja tiegħu
lill-poplu li għad jitwieled:
" Dan  għamlu l-Mulej "                         
R/ Hallelujah

Reading 2      -    1 John 3:18-24
Children, let us love not in word or speech but in deed and truth. Now this is how we shall know that we belong to the truth and reassure our hearts before him in whatever our hearts condemn, for God is greater than our hearts and knows everything. Beloved, if our hearts do not condemn us, we have confidence in God and receive from him whatever we ask, because we keep his commandments and do what pleases him. And his  commandment is this: we should believe in the name of his Son, Jesus Christ, and love one another just as he commanded us. Those who keep his commandments remain in him, and he in them, and the way we know that he remains in us is from the Spirit he gave us. This is the Word of the Lord.

It-Tieni Qari      mill-Ewwel Ittra ta' San Ġwann 3, 18-24
Uliedi, ma nħobbux bil-kliem u t-tpaċpiċ, imma bl-għemil u bis-sewwa. Minn dan naslu li nagħrfu  li aħna fil-verita', u quddiem Alla  nserrħu l-kuxjenza tagħna,jekk  il-kuxjenza ċċanfarna,  għax Alla hu aqwa mill-kuxjenza tagħna, u hu jaf kollox.  Għeżież,  jekk il-kuxjenza tagħna ma ċċanfarniex aħna qalbna qawwija quddiem Alla,u kull ma nitolbu  naqilgħuh mingħandu,għax qegħdin inżommu l-kmandamenti tiegħu,u nagħmlu dak li jogħġob lilu. Dan hu l-kmandment tiegħu: li nemmnu fl-isem ta'  Ibnu Ġesu' Kristu, u  nħobbu 'l xulxin, kif  wissiena hu.   Min iżomm  il-kmandamenti tiegħu jgħammar f'Alla u Alla fih.   B'hekk nagħrfu li hu jgħammar fina: bl-Ispirtu li hu tana. Il-Kelma tal-Mulej

Gospel      -      John 15:1-8
Jesus said to his disciples: "I am the true vine, and my Father is the vine grower. He takes away every branch in me that does not bear fruit, and every one that does he prunes so that it bears more fruit. You are already pruned because of the word that I spoke to you. Remain in me, as I remain in you. Just as a branch cannot bear fruit on its own unless it remains on the vine, so neither can you unless you remain in me. I am the vine, you are the branches. Whoever remains in me and I in him will bear much fruit, because without me you can do nothing. Anyone who does not remain in me will be thrown out like a branch and wither; people will gather them and throw them into a fire and they will be burned. If you remain in me and my words remain in you, ask forwhatever you want and it will be done for you. By this is my Father glorified, that you bear much fruit and become my disciples."  This is the Word of the Lord.

Evanġelju             Qari skond San Ġwann 15, 1-8
F'dak iż-żmien,  Ġesu' qal lid-dixxipli tiegħu: "Jiena d-dielja vera u Missieri l-bidwi.  Kull fergħa fija li  ma tagħmilx frott jaqtagħha; u kull waħda li tagħmel il-frott jiżborha u jnaddafha, biex tagħmel frott aktar.    Intom ġa ndaf minħabba  fil-kelma li għidtilkom. Ibqgħu fija, u  jien nibqa' fikom.   Kif il-fergħa ma tistax tagħmel frott  minnha  nfissha jekk ma tibqax  fid-dielja, hekk anqas  intom jekk ma tibqgħux fija.  Jiena d-dielja, intom il-friegħi.   Min jibqa' fija u  jiena fih, dan jagħmel ħafna frott;  għax mingħajri  ma tistgħu tagħmlu xejn.    Jekk wieħed ma jibqax fija, jintremma  barra  bħal fergħa u jinxef; imbagħad, friegħi bħal dawn  jiġbruhom u
jixħtuhom fin-nar u jinħarqu.Jekk tibqgħu fija u kliemi jibqa' fikom, itolbu kull ma tridu,  u jingħatalkom.   Din hi l-glorja ta'  Missieri, li intom tagħmlu ħafna frott u  tkunu dixxipli tiegħi." Il-Kelma tal-Mulej
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Making Our Home in Jesus
 Fr. Thomas Rosica, CSB

In John's Gospel (15:1-8) for the 5th Sunday of Easter, we have the image of the vine and its branches to express the relationship between Christ and his disciples. We should not be surprised that at one level it seems utterly simple, but that at other levels it fills us with a sense of mystery, awe, and beauty, always leaving us wanting more.

The branches of a vine have an intimate relationship with the vine, depending on it at all times and forming one living organism with it. The vine, which can be a bit foreign in northern climates, is natural for anyone in the Middle East, where many families possess a vine, a fig tree, or olive trees in their gardens.

Jesus tells his followers that he is the true vine, the real vine, and that they are the branches, whose task is to bear fruit by sharing his life: "I am the true vine, and my Father is the vinedresser. Abide in me, and I in you. If you abide in me, and my words in you, ask whatever you want. Apart from me, you can do nothing."

While the images of Christ as king and lord, teacher, shepherd and judge, have their own importance in forming our perspective on how Christ relates to us, these images need to be balanced by such images as the vine, which integrate the disciple into the life of Christ and Christ into the life of the disciple in an intimate unity and closeness that the other images might not always convey.

Sunday's passage is one of the classic descriptions of authentic Christian spirituality. The image of the vine, while inviting us to a depth of spirituality, sets that personal quest within the larger context of the family of God, stretching through time from Abraham to the present day and beyond, and through space from the Middle East in the first century to the four corners of the earth today.

If Jesus is the vine, we are summoned to ‘abide,' to ‘live,' to make our home ‘in him.' The Gospel text of the vine challenges us: How do we maintain intimacy with the living God as we strive to be obedient to our vocation of bearing fruit for the world? What does it mean, to ‘abide' or ‘dwell' in the vine, to be intimately attached to Jesus?

Abiding in Jesus includes being part of the life of the Church, committed to the daily and weekly fellowship of his people, in mutual support, prayer, common worship, sacramental life, study and not least, work for the Gospel in the world. In every Eucharistic celebration we are drawn into that intimate fellowship both with Jesus himself and with each other at his table.

Authentic Christian spirituality is the personal knowledge of Jesus Christ given to us, as the vine gives its sap to the branches, so that we can be extensions of his work, his love, his fruitbearing, his glorifying of the Father. That is the heart of the Eucharistic mystery. And yet, as soon as Jesus introduced the theme of the vine and the branches in the Gospel passage, he speaks of his Father, the vinedresser, doing two things that require a knife. Every branch that doesn't bear fruit, the Father removes, cuts away; and every branch that does bear fruit the Father prunes, so that it may bear more fruit.

The spirituality to which this Gospel passage invites us is not one of unbridled personal development, fulfilling all the potential we might discover within ourselves. As we follow Jesus and come to know him personally, we find him calling us to submit to the pruning-knife, to cut out some things from our lives that are good in themselves and that would even have had the potential to develop into fruitbearing branches, in order that other things may flourish. Pruning is always a painful process. It is a form of loss or death. The vinedresser is never more intimately involved than when wielding the pruning-knife!

The call to abide in the vine is a call to a personal and intimate knowledge of Jesus himself, not an idea, but a living person. True disciples of Jesus are dependent on the inner presence and activity of Christ for the renewal and regeneration of their own life into one of faith and love. True disciples can only be effective in the regeneration of the lives of others when they are "plugged into Jesus," grafted onto his life, allowing his very presence to pulsate through their minds and hearts.

The images of vine and vineyard are brought together beautifully in that well-known passage from "Lumen Gentium," No. 6, the Second Vatican Council's Dogmatic Constitution on the Church:

"The Church is a piece of land to be cultivated, the tillage of God. On that land the ancient olive tree grows whose holy roots were the Prophets and in which the reconciliation of Jews and Gentiles has been brought about and will be brought about. That land, like a choice vineyard, has been planted by the heavenly Husbandman. The true vine is Christ who gives life and the power to bear abundant fruit to the branches, that is, to us, who through the Church remain in Christ without whom we can do nothing."

To illustrate this dependency, this grafting on the Lord, let me share with you some profound words of a great woman of the Church, St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross [Edith Stein] (1891-1942), Carmelite, martyr, co-patroness of Europe, and one who knew what it meant to be intimately connected to the Lord. They are taken from Chapter 6 of her "Essays on Woman" (ICS Publications).

"The notion of the Church as community of the faithful is the most accessible to human reason. Whoever believes in Christ and his gospel, hopes for the fulfillment of his promises, clings to him in love, and keeps his commandments must unite with all who are like-minded in the deepest communion of mind and heart. Those who adhered to the Lord during his stay on earth were the early seeds of the great Christian community; they spread that community and that faith which held them together, until they have been inherited by us today through the process of time.

"But, if even a natural human community is more than a loose union of single individuals, if even here we can verify a movement developing into a kind of organic unit, it must be still more true of the supernatural community of the Church. The union of the soul with Christ differs from the union among people in the world: It is a rooting and growing in him (so we are told by the parable of the vine and the branches) which begins in baptism, and which is constantly strengthened and formed through the sacraments in diverse ways. However this real union with Christ implies the growth of a genuine community among all Christians. Thus the Church forms the Mystical Body of Christ. The Body is a living Body, and the spirit which gives the Body life is Christ's spirit, streaming from the head to all parts (Ephesians 5:23,30). The spirit which Christ radiates is the Holy Spirit; the Church is thus the temple of the Holy Spirit (Ephesians 2:21-22)."

This week, let us pray that our belonging to Christ be profound and real, going beyond all of the turbulence that exists on life's surface. May Christ's very life flow through us, building up the Body of Christ that is the Church.

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