EASTER V [B]: Acts
9:26-31; 1Jn 3:18-24; Jn 15:1-8
Today’s
Scripture selections emphasize the need for Christians to abide in Christ as a
condition for producing fruits of kindness, mercy, charity and holiness. Jesus
assures his disciples, using the parable of the vine and branches, that the
life-giving Spirit Whom Jesus will send to them, will be present and active
within and among his disciples and their successors.
The vine was
part and parcel of Jewish imagery and the very symbol of Israel. The vine was
grown all over in Palestine. Therefore it was easy for the listeners
to understand what Jesus was speaking about. The vine grows luxuriantly and
it requires drastic pruning. A young vine is not allowed to bear fruit for
the first three years and each year it is cut drastically back to develop
and conserve its life and energy. Two kinds of branches grow on vine.
One that bears fruit and one that does not. The branches that do not bear
fruit are pruned back so that they will not drain away the plant’s strength. In
order to make us useful branches constant pruning is required. This
pruning takes the form of suffering.
It may be
painful, physical sufferings, like sickness, disease, financial
insecurity, or old-age.
It may
be hidden, interior sufferings, like losing a loved one or watching a
dear relative abandon their Catholic faith.
Whenever
God permits these kinds of sufferings - the ones that we don't seem
to have any control over - we have to let our faith remind us that they
are under his control.
He is the
vine-dresser. He knows how much pruning we can handle (and the amount
is different for each branch).
And he knows
how to use that suffering to unite us more deeply with
Christ, who suffered on the cross to redeem the world.
Allowing
these prunings will allow us to become more fruitful, even if we don’t
understand how. We are not to be bitter or angry about those sufferings. The
Lord gives, the Lord takes away, blessed be the name of the Lord – as the
psalmist says.
In times of pain
and hardship, God is begging us to trust in him more and
more, to pray in the depths of our hearts that beautiful prayer that he himself
taught us through his revelations to St Faustina of the Divine Mercy: "Jesus,
I trust in you."
The first
and foremost thing that stands as hindrance to our submission to Jesus is
our "ego". It will turn us into a useless branch that will never
produce any fruit. So, prune it; identify and cut it off.
Accepting the
Cross, not rebelling when God tries to prune us, is the secret of all
the saints.
As St
Ignatius of Loyola put it:
"If God
causes you to suffer much, it is a sign that he has great designs for
you, and that he certainly intends to make you a saint. And if you wish to
become a great saint, entreat him to give you much opportunity for suffering;
for there is no wood better to kindle the fire of holy love than the
wood of the Cross, which Christ used for his own sacrifice of boundless
charity."
Prayer, the
sacraments, loving obedience, and suffering in union with Christ are what keep the
Christian sap flowing in our lives.
Staying
united to the vine means constantly growing in our life of prayer. Prayer
is how we expose our souls to the divine sunlight. Just as plants need
exposure to sunlight for energy, so we need to expose ourselves to God's
truth and love through reading and reflecting on the sacred
scriptures, and through conversing with him in the quiet of our
hearts.
And so, if
our prayer life is the same when we are fifty as it was when we were fifteen,
it could be a sign that we are stunting our spiritual growth.
For Blessed Mother
Teresa of Calcutta, listening to God in prayer was the very first link in the
sacred chain of interior peace.
Here's how
she put it:
The fruit of
silence is prayer;
the fruit of prayer is faith;
the fruit of faith is love;
the fruit of love is service;
the fruit of service is peace...
When we lead
a life that resounds with meaning and energy, a life that positively
impacts others and exudes joy and enthusiasm, a life that changes
this world for the better in a profound way as Christ's own life did, we
are glorifying the Father.
"By
this is my Father glorified,
that you bear much fruit and become my disciples."
Bearing such
fruit makes life worth living; without it we are dry, dead branches
good for nothing except the fire.
As we
continue with this Mass, let's thank God from the depths of our
hearts for uniting us to the vine of Christ.
And when we
receive our Lord in Holy Communion, let's promise him that this
week we will make a decent effort to do our part to protect
and strengthen that union.
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