Saturday, 29 April 2017

STAY WITH US, LORD

III EASTER SUNDAY - Luke 24:13-35
The death of Jesus on the cross came as a tremendous shock to the disciples, destroying all their hopes. They were disappointed and disillusioned. With heavy hearts, they went back to the village, to the old certainties, forgetting that we can never go back to the past. We can remember the past and learn lessons from it, but we cannot reenact it and when we try, we do something different. As they talked and walked, a stranger join them and got interested in their conversation, intervening with a simple question: What are you talking about? With sadness showing on “their faces downcast”, they showed their surprise: You didn’t hear what happened in Jerusalem during the last few days? How is it possible?
And they explained to this stranger about the crucifixion of the great prophet Jesus of Nazareth, whom they believed to be the Messiah who should have restored the Kingdom of Israel. Now their hopes and expectations have been dashed.
In this gospel passage, we have a journey of two people who lost hope and felt low and depressed, as if life is not worth living anymore. And Jesus came and started walking with them, allowing them to give expression to their worries and concerns. In their journey, they welcomed a stranger, who became their fellow traveller, and were able to engage in a dialogue with him. This stranger was Jesus, who opened their minds and brought a new understanding and a new way of looking at what happened - the passion and death of Jesus on the cross. They had followed Jesus with the hope of political restoration to the glory of the people of Israel, but Jesus did not come for that. And they avoided and feared suffering and death as the destroyers of life. Jesus embraced suffering and death and transformed them into the path of resurrection and life. As he explained to them, they began to understand and everything started to fall in place and to make sense.
Jesus is always able to transform our sadness into joy and our disappointments into hope. He brings new light into our hearts, making it possible to look ahead and to walk straight, knowing that he is with us.
The two travellers enjoyed the company of this stranger who had become a friend and they did not want to separate from him. As the evening approached when they reached the village, they invited him saying: “Stay with us!” (Lk 24:29). As he remained with them, he shared the bread with them, and they recognised that he was Jesus Christ, the Risen Lord.

It is in difficult times that we need most the company of the Risen Lord with us. Only with him, can we walk along the paths of life and experience a joy that we must share with others. Like those two disciples travelling back to the village, we must ask the Lord: “Stay with us!” Be with us, so that we may recognise you and experience your love and the power of your resurrection.

Saturday, 22 April 2017

BLESSED ARE THE MERCIFUL

II EASTER SUNDAY - DIVINE MERCY SUNDAY - John 20:19-31
Pope Saint John Paul II dedicated the Sunday after Easter to the celebration of the Divine Mercy. God’s mercy is bestowed on us through Jesus Christ. He offered himself in sacrifice for us - for the forgiveness of sins.  That’s why Jesus is our Saviour and Redeemer. It is through him and in him that we are reconciled with God and receive the grace that enables us to reconcile with each other. The resurrection of Jesus is the guarantee that we received mercy and have been forgiven.
Jesus entrusted his disciples with the same mission he had received from the Father. He sent them as ministers of mercy and reconciliation. And in order to enable them to carry out this ministry, he gave them the Holy Spirit, telling them:
Receive the Holy Spirit.
For those whose sins you forgive,
they are forgiven;
for those whose sins you retain,
they are retained. (Jn 20:22-23).
Jesus came to call people to repentance and to proclaim God’s mercy (Mt 4:17; Lk 4:19). The Church has been entrusted with this mission and she must be a presence of God’s mercy in the world. However, there are people in the Church who prefer to announce the wrath of God and his ready punishment to all who do not keep to all laws. It is true that we cannot take God for granted, but his loving mercy will have the last word. Even when we speak of God’s justice, we must remember that his justice is not retribution and revenge. God’s justice is the justice of a loving father, who forgets the wrongs done to him and celebrates with great joy the return of his lost children.
In the Catholic Church, in our approach to sin, we have been too legalistic, behaving like the Pharisees, always ready to condemn and to impose rules that in their harshness come from ourselves. Pope Francis has been calling the Church the be again a presence and a testimony of God’s loving mercy. We must keep the doors of the Church open to all who are searching for mercy and compassion. We must call everybody - and first of all, ourselves - to repentance and we must speak about the corruption of sin in our lives and in society, but like God, the Church must always welcome with open arms the sinners who are in need of salvation.
Experiencing God’s mercy, we learn how to be merciful.  And it is so difficult to be merciful. It is so difficult to do good to those who have done us wrong. Reconciliation is not an easy thing. But there can be no peace without reconciliation and reconciliation is impossible without forgiveness. May this Sunday of the Divine Mercy help us to experience God’s mercy to us and fill us with the Spirit of love which soothes our hearts, heals our pains and brings the joy of being merciful.

“Blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy.” (Mt 5:7).

Saturday, 15 April 2017

LET US CELEBRATE CHRIST’S VICTORY

EASTER SUNDAY - Colossians 3:1-4

He died for us, so that we may be reconciled with God, and he rose from the dead so that we may have life. Easter is the feast of the resurrection, and therefore the feast of the victory of life. This victory was not achieved by the boastful power which presses and crushes everybody else or by the clever mind which finds its own way and makes its own rules, ignoring uprightness and justice. It is a victory achieved by the selfless love of the one who offered his own life so that others may live. In spite of God’s silence, as if he was not there or had become deaf to the cries of the innocent, Jesus entrusted his spirit to the Father, knowing that he is the source of life. 
We are called to share in this victory by walking with Jesus through the same way that takes through death to life. As Paul wrote to the Colossians, our life is hidden with Christ in God, so that when Christ is revealed, we too may be revealed:
“Since you have been brought back to true life with Christ, 
you must look for the things that are in heaven, 
where Christ is, sitting at God’s right hand. 
Let your thoughts be on heavenly things, 
not on the things that are on the earth, 
because you have died,
 and now the life you have is hidden with Christ in God. 
But when Christ is revealed 
– and he is your life – 
you too will be revealed in all your glory with him.” 

Colossians 3:1-4

Friday, 7 April 2017

JESUS HUMBLED HIMSELF

PALM SUNDAY - Philippians 2:6-11
My first Palm Sunday mass in Lubengele
As he enters Jerusalem with the singing crowds, Jesus is acclaimed as the Messiah king, with everybody shouting Hosanna, as a cry for deliverance: Please, save us! Thad caused a commotion in Jerusalem, with the people from Jerusalem asking: Who is this?
It is indeed a strange sight. If he is the Messiah and a King, where is the show of power? And where are his armies? How is he going to defeat the enemy and to impose himself? Or is it a joke? How can he be the Messiah on a donkey, the humble animal used by the poor? Where are the generals and the army commanders? How does he enter Jerusalem, the holy city, accompanied of a rabble of poor people?
Matthew considers this event as the fulfilment of the prophecy of Zechariah:
Say to the daughter of Zion:
Look, your king comes to you;
he is humble, he rides on a donkey
and on a colt, the foal of a beast of burden. 
(Zech 9:9; see Is 62:11)
The Messiah would come in humility, not in power and glory. He is king, but of a different kind. He is not in the business of dominating and imposing himself. The famous kings and generals - like Nebuchadnezzar and Pompey - came into Jerusalem riding horses, shedding blood and vomiting fire. They did not bring peace, but destruction and death. Jesus comes in peace with a promise of life. That’s why the Church applies to him the passage of the prophet Isaiah, where the Messiah is like a servant and like a disciple:
The Lord has given me
a disciple’s tongue.
So that I may know how to reply to the wearied
he provides me with speech.
Each morning he wakes me to hear,
to listen like a disciple.
The Lord has opened my ear. 
For my part, I made no resistance,
neither did I turn away.
I offered my back to those who struck me,
my cheeks to those who tore at my beard;
I did not cover my face
against insult and spittle.
(Is 50:4-6)
He is ready to be obedient and to suffer. It is for us that he suffers, so that he may bring relief and peace.
Palm Sunday procession in Lubengele Parish, Chililabombwe
The first generation of Christians composed a hymn that Paul used in his letter to the Philippians (Phil 2:6-11) about the mystery of Christ, that is the mystery of his suffering and death and then the mystery of his resurrection and exaltation.
His state was divine,
yet Christ Jesus did not cling
to his equality with God
but emptied himself
to assume the condition of a slave
and became as men are;
and being as all men are,
he was humbler yet,
even to accepting death,
death on a cross.
Jesus humbled himself to the point of death, and death on a cross, which the most humiliating death.
This is the mystery that we are going to celebrate during the Holy week that starts this Sunday, the Palm Sunday. During this week, let us come close to Jesus to share in his pain and suffering, so that we may share as well in his glorification. With him, we will be able to learn how to live, passing through suffering and death and moving forward to the resurrection. Indeed, 
God raised him high
and gave him the name
which is above all other names
so that all beings
in the heavens, on earth and in the underworld,
should bend the knee at the name of Jesus
and that every tongue should acclaim
Jesus Christ as Lord,
to the glory of God the Father.

Saturday, 1 April 2017

CALLED TO LIFE IN JESUS

V LENT SUNDAY - John 11:1-45
The society we live in is puzzling. We make tremendous efforts to prolong life and then, being afraid of suffering, we are ready to kill or to facilitate their death when the hope of recovery is lost. And we do that claiming that everybody deserves a dignified death. We become the owners of life and death. The Bemba proverb says that umweo wa nkoko waba kuli cibinda (the life of the chicken is in the hands of the owner). On the other side, we feel children as a burden and reduce the number of those we are ready to accept. In Europe, due to the low birthrate, the keeping and development of society are becoming unsustainable, in such a way that our society is dying.
We need to speak about life and about death and the suffering that goes with it. Life is a gift, the greatest gift, which makes possible to accept other gifts. And in spite of becoming our life, it continues to be given and to be received as a gift. We are not the owners of our own life, and we have not the right to kill ourselves or the right to contribute to the death of somebody else. 
This Sunday’s readings are about life and death. With the resurrection of Lazarus, Jesus reveals to us the goal of life, which doesn’t end in death, but, passing through death, reaches its fulfilment in the resurrection. The resurrection is presented as the gift o life coming to its plenitude. It is a gift which we may receive in Christ and with Christ. 
Martha and Mary, the two Lazarus’ sisters, were overwhelmed with the sense of loss. Before their brother’s death, they consoled themselves with the hope of Jesus’ coming: he would heal Lazarus. But he did not hurry to come, and Lazarus died. All those who lose their beloved go through the same painful experience: they grasp anything that may measure them and give them a little hope until there is nothing to hope for. Martha’s words to Jesus sound like a reproach: “‘If you had been here, my brother would not have died”. Jesus himself felt the pain of loss and cried while trying to console Martha and Mary.
Lazarus’ death was an opportunity for Jesus to teach about the meaning of life and the hope of resurrection. And he said to Martha: 
     “I am the resurrection and the life.
     If anyone believes in me, even though he dies he will live,
     and whoever lives and believes in me will never die.
     Do you believe this?”
 It is by faith in Jesus Christ that our life will find meaning and purpose. Being one with Christ, we will share in his resurrection and find eternal life. And Christ becomes our hope in the middle of this hopeless world. The belief in the resurrection of Jesus Christ is the core of our Christian faith and the resurrection of Christ is the guarantee that we will rise as well from the dead.
Like Martha, we must proclaim our faith: “I believe that you are the Christ, the Son of God, the one who was to come into this world.” (Jn 11:27).
In the second reading, taken from the letter to the Romans, Paul tells us that if the Spirit of Christ is in us,  then, even if our bodies die because of sin, we have been justified “and if the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead is living in you, then he who raised Jesus from the dead will give life to your own mortal bodies through his Spirit living in you.” (Ro 8:11).

In this last week of Lent, before the beginning of Holy Week, let us open our hearts to the Spirit of Christ so that he may have his home in us; let us allow him to transform us from within, so that we become more and more like Jesus Christ and the day will come when we will share fully in his resurrection. Giving thanks to God for this gift, let us ask the strength to offer the world the light of hope, which will guide it to peace and life.