HOMILY EASTER WEEK 04 04
After God’s Own Heart – Living a 9thBeatitude
(Acts 13.13-25; Ps 89; Jn 13.16-20)
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If you were invited to speak in a Jewish synagogue, what would be your message?
The readings today provide us with one: have faith in Jesus and do the will of the Father; be a person after God’s own heart, and live the ninth Beatitude.
The first reading from Acts today has St. Paul and his companions invited to speak to a Jewish congregation in a synagogue in Antioch. Paul’s method of evangelizing is clear – he recounts salvation history, the plan of God. Paul starts with the Exodus from slavery in Egypt, then mentions the forty years in the wilderness after the covenant was given to Moses on Mt. Sinai.
The Israelites had to learn two important lessons in the wilderness before they could enter the promised land: to live one day at a time (manna in the morning for that day only and quail in the evening), and to look forward to a savior on a standard who would have no sin (poison) in him. Then Paul brings in the judges who dealt with justice issues, prophets who spoke truth and called the people back to the covenant, and finally kings. The numbers involved (40 years; 7 nations; 450 years) are important. They all signify wholeness, time for completion – the perfection of God’s plan.
Paul then focuses on King David with a remarkable comment: “God said, ‘I have found David to be aman after my own heart.’” God took a different tack with David, and made an unconditional covenant with him, promising to be with him no matter what he might do. And what did David do? Lust, adultery and arrange a murder – pretty serious stuff.
What set David apart, however, is that when confronted by the prophet Nathan, David genuinely repented and experienced God’s unconditional love as pure forgiveness. That experience transformed David into the only true king Israel ever had. David walked intimately with God after that, knew the will of God, and did his will. David knew as king he was God’s representative here on earth and acted accordingly. That is why he was able to tell the temple priests to give him the bread of presence only the priests could eat, because he knew that was what God would do. In short, David did the will of the Father, which made him a “man after God’s own heart.” Paul then ends his history, fittingly, with John the Baptist, the precursor of Jesus.
The psalm picks up the specialness of David, portraying him as part of the goodness of God – that God’s faithfulness and steadfast love will be with him – and in God’s name he will be exalted. It adds that he would proclaim God as Father, God and the rock of salvation. No wonder Jesus was always referred to as Son of David and never Son of Moses, because David, even before John the Baptist, prepared the way for Jesus.
Of course, all Paul is proclaiming in the first reading is a lead-up to his proclamation of Jesus as the long-awaited Messiah, and now Risen Lord. The Gospel flashes back to the Last Supper, to highlight one particular quality of this Son of David, the real King of Israel, and that is humble love as service – to the extent of washing his disciples feet. Jesus then tells the apostles they, as servants, must do what he, their master, has done, and “blessed are you if you do this.”
There is the 9thBeatitude – to do the will of the Father, and in the process, to be a person after God’s own heart. That is what King David did to prefigure Jesus, and that is what Jesus did par excellence, assuring us many times in the gospels he came not to be served, but to serve, and to do the Father’s will. So on top of the eight beatitudes: being poor in spirit, able to mourn, be gentle, seek justice, be merciful, purity of heart, peacemaking and accepting hardship for his sake without bitterness or resentment, we can add a ninth – blessed are we if we simply do the will of the Father.
The March for Life took place recently in many cities in Canada. Surely all those who participated were living this ninth beatitude and doing the will of the Father – to respect all life, from conception to a natural death. An appalling aversion to suffering and inconvenience, as well as a culture of death has insidiously weaseled its way into the minds and hearts of our modern society, manifesting itself in abortion (murder in the womb) at one end of life’s spectrum, physician-assisted suicide (MAID) at the other end, and a crisis of addictions in between.
In the gospel, Jesus asks us to believe he is the Son of Man who would be betrayed by Judas, and to receive him is to receive the Father. Our society has lost its faith in Jesus, in his truth, and in his pattern of passion, death and resurrection. We have reverted back to the original sin of our ancestors, to decide for ourselves what is right and wrong, to do our own will instead of God’s will, because it might involve some inconvenience or suffering. We justify our self-will by deceptive language such as “fetus, tissue, dignity in dying, compassion,” when in reality it is ending innocent life, whether pre-born or palliative. Those who struggle on the front lines against this terrible mentality and for a greater respect for life deserve to be lauded and given all our support.
There is a psychologist in Ottawa who was quoted in Maclean’s Magazine as saying, “We used to think the enemy was death. Now we know it is suffering.” Our society simply has no concept anymore of redemptive suffering, that our suffering, if accepted and lived as Jesus accepted and lived it, without resentment or bitterness, can have profound meaning and purpose, connected as it is with that of Jesus, and can be a blessing to all who know us, as well as a source of deep peace and even joy.
To follow in the footsteps of St. Paul and King David, doing God’s will, not our own, and being persons after the heart of God, and above all to be like Jesus, totally obedient to the Father’s will and humbly serving the deepest needs of humanity, is a great challenge. The Eucharist is our daily manna, our nourishment and source of strength to meet that challenge.
So let us take to heart the message of St. Paul – let us put our total faith in Jesus as Messiah and Risen Lord, and strive to do the will of the Father. In doing so, we become “persons after the Father’s own heart,” and live the ninth beatitude.
We are consistently living out the ninth beatitudes by being the persons that God wants us to be. We must follow Jesus’ footsteps or be like St. Paul like claiming Jesus as the Messiah, the son of Man and the Risen Lord. He was sent forth to complete his father’s mission while preaching the gospel or teaching the word of God to people including his disciples. While he died on the cross and resurrected then it is to prove to us that he is really the the Messiah and son of God. We are the ones who condemn to death because we are sinners and we do not believe he is the life saviour. His people or Jews are still waiting for the Christ the King and life saviour when he is right in front of them. We are to do the will of God by respecting and celebrate life as human beings.So, We are on this earth because of God; so we should thank him and bless him by celebrating his life on this earth by going to Church. Amen . Praise to you Lord Jesus Christ.
Thanks again for the wonderful homily about maintaining the ninth beatitudes and sharing your reflections and stories . We should know that Jesus’ has Risen and we are to spread the word of God to people who have not recognize The Lord being the Messiah. It is a lovely message once again. I hope other people understands the word of God or even hearing the word of God. Amen . Bishop Sylvain Lavoie Gracias! Bravo!
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