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  • Writer: Admin
    Admin
  • Mar 29, 2024
  • 3 min read

Updated: Oct 11, 2024


ree

April 01 - April 06, 2024


Acts 2:14, 22-33


Peter speaks on Pentecost The cross was a shock to the first Christians and so was the resurrection. In this speech of Peter, we “overhear” the first disciples using the Old Testament—especially the psalms—to understand what had taken place. The primary proclamation is focused on Jesus of Nazareth.


Matthew 28:8-15 The central proclamation—Jesus’ appearance to the women at the tomb—is unique to Matthew. In effect, it places the previous proclamation of the angel on the very lips of Jesus himself. In this way, Matthew—ever the teacher—make the implicit explicit.


Acts 2:36-41


Peter’s speech on Pentecost: the reaction. The opening verse is really the climax of yesterday’s reading. The text responds to the question: if the Easter proclamation is true, what difference should it make and what should we do?


John 20:11-18 The question in today’s gospel is powerful: “Who are you looking for?” With this question the Gospel comes full circle, because the very first words of Jesus in this Gospel are “What are you looking for? The shift from “what” to “who” marks the Christian journey. We are not looking for philosophy but a person.


Acts 3:1-10


The healing at the Beautiful Gate. Already in Acts 2:43 we read: Reverential awe came over everyone, and many wonders and miraculous signs came about by the apostles. This story is not just a healing from the past but a metaphor for the present, offered to us today as believers who may feel paralyzed.


Luke 24:13-35 The disciples on the road to Emmaus is a powerful account. At the center stands a recognition/ accusation of “slowness of heart”, that is, resistance to the Easter proclamation. As we listen, we hear the stages or marks of an authentic journey to spiritual insight and faith.



Acts 3:11-26 Peter explains Jesus’ destiny through the OT. Sometimes Christians today feel that the God of the Old Testament is somehow a different God. In contrast, the early Christians felt a very strong desire to show that the surprising outcome of Jesus life and ministry—his death and resurrection—was in reality a fulfilment of things foreshadowed in the Old Testament. God’s continued fidelity was an important part of their faith.


Luke 24:35-48 Our Gospel today evokes several resurrection themes: failure to recognize the risen Lord, the gift of peace and the confirmation of the reality of the resurrection. Perhaps, however, the very last lines speak directly to us today: in his name, repentance for the forgiveness of sins would be preached to all the nations, beginning from Jerusalem. You are witnesses to this.


Acts 4:1-12


Peter proclaims Jesus to the religious authorities. The religious authorities of the time were against the teaching of resurrection at all and very much against saying Jesus was risen. These are the very same people who brought about the crucifixion of Jesus. Here Peter, using the Old Testament, make the case for the resurrection of Jesus.


John 21:1-14 Chapter 21—an early addition to John —reminds us of the three-fold denial of Peter by means of his three-fold restoration. The fishing scene takes us back to the original call of Peter and his brothers. That earlier call is still “valid” and at the same time strengthened in the light of the resurrection.


Acts 4:13-21


The authorities try to stop the apostle proclaiming Jesus, but they fail. The early Christians experienced opposition—but this only strengthened their courage. Anyhow, it looks as though those who were against them were “flummoxed” as we say!


Mark 16:9-15 These few verses—a very late addition to the Gospel text and not from Mark— form a kind of late synthesis of disparate material. Nevertheless, the Great Commission is repeated, for them and for us.


References

-United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. (2024ad, March 31). Easter Sunday The Resurrection of the Lord. USCCB. https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/033124.cfm

-Sunday readings. (n.d.-s). Hearers of the Word. https://www.tarsus.ie/SundayReadings/


 
 
 
  • Writer: Admin
    Admin
  • Mar 29, 2024
  • 2 min read

Updated: Jul 26, 2024


ree

March 31, 2024


On the first day of the week, while it was still dark, Mary Magdalene came to the tomb


See


Traditionally, we have found it easier to think of the cross as the measure of God’s love for us. Perhaps, because of the focus on the cross, we find it more difficult to think of the resurrection as also the love of God, even “all the more so”! The originality of the Fourth Gospel says it all: the disciple Jesus loved, the head cloth recalling Lazarus (see how much he loved him) and, not least, the great figure of Mary Magdalene (Mary!). In summary, Jesus died and rose again for love of us.


Listen




Reflect


(John 20:1-18)


-The disciples are in a state of shock after their traumatic loss. Jesus, the one in whom they had placed so much hope, has been murdered and buried. Then, before they have time to recover they get another shock. The body of Jesus is missing. Have you had experiences in which one tragedy or crisis follows quickly after another? What was that like for you? How did you cope? Who, or what, sustained you?


-Mary and Peter, and the other disciple, came and discovered that the tomb was empty. In this text no explanation is given. They are left in a state of bewilderment ‘for as yet they did not understand the scripture, that he must rise from the dead’. Have you been in situations, faced with events you cannot explain, possibly events that have dashed your hopes in another person, or in God? What has that been like for you?


-Yet in spite of the lack of explanation, the beloved disciple ‘saw and believed’. Have there been times when others have done something that you could not understand, and which they could not explain at the time, and yet you believed that all was not as it seemed; times when you decided to trust in spite of the evidence? Have there been times when others have shown this kind of faith in you, when you were not able to offer satisfactory explanations, and all you could say was ‘trust me’?


-Have there been times in your relationship with God when you have felt that you were faced with an empty tomb, and still you believed? What have you learned about life, about love, from such experiences?


Pray


God of undying life, by your mighty hand you raised up Jesus from the grave and appointed him judge of the living and the dead. Bestow upon those baptised into his death the power flowing from his resurrection, that we may proclaim near and far the pardon and peace you give us. Grant this through our Lord Jesus Christ, first-bring from the dead, who lives with you now and always in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God for ever and ever. Amen.


Act


-Embrace God's love fully, seeing challenges as opportunities for growth.

-Practice gratitude daily for blessings and acts of love around you.

-Align your actions with values of love and service, living with purpose inspired by Jesus' sacrifice and resurrection.


References

-United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. (2024ad, March 31). Easter Sunday The Resurrection of the Lord. USCCB. https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/033124.cfm

-Sunday readings. (n.d.-s). Hearers of the Word. https://www.tarsus.ie/SundayReadings/


 
 
 
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