4th Sunday of Easter-B
Acts 4:8-12
Psalm 118
I Jn. 3:1-2
John 10:11-18
Open the Door to the Church
Beloved in Christ, I don’t remember many of the things I learned in high school, but one thing that stuck with me was something we read in my religious studies class. We were studying the similarities and differences between Christianity and other religions. In that class, we read that one reason why the Prophet Mohammed started a new community of believers was that the Christians in his area at that time did not want anything to do with him and his family. How I wish that those Christians had treated the Prophet Mohammed and his family differently.
In our first reading, St. Peter challenges the chief priest, the Sadducees, the Pharisees, and the leaders of God’s people to develop a deeper understanding of what it means to be an instrument of God’s salvation for others. The people of Israel were always aware of how other nations looked down on them because they often had a small army, were often defeated and were enslaved by other nations. But they also knew that when other nations looked down on them, God placed value on them, made a covenant with them, and made them an instrument of salvation for the world. That is why they would often praise God in the psalms like the one we sang today in our responsorial psalm (118): “The stone rejected by the builders has become the cornerstone.” This for them was salvation: that they were rejected by other nations, but God placed value on them and treated them as people with dignity. That explains why they saw themselves as a people sent to bring salvation to others. However, on many occasions, like the time of Jesus, the chief priest and the leaders of God’s people had forgotten what it means to be instruments of God’s love for others. Peter is telling them, if you really want to bring God’s salvation to people, there is only one way to do it: The say Jesus did it. There is no other way.
How did Jesus succeed in bringing God’s salvation to us? Our gospel reading today tells us that Jesus saves people by relating to them the way a good shepherd does by placing value on them, getting to know them, and loving them no matter what their condition in life. In the gospel, Jesus tells us that he is the Good Shepherd because he places value on even the lost sheep like you and me and lays down his life to save us. He also tells us that he has other sheep who are currently not in the sheepfold (the Church) and that our job is not to reject them but to find a way to bring them to the sheepfold. Our calling as disciples of Christ is to make sure every human being comes to know that they are valued by God, and that all are known and loved by God, no matter how different or sinful their lives might be. Beloved, people will be convinced that God values them, knows them, and loves them only if we can prove that we ourselves value, know, and love them.
Unfortunately, we, like the chief priests and elders in our first reading, at times fail to reach out to those who are rejected by society, those who look different than us and think differently than us. As I reflect on these readings, I ask myself what value do I place on strangers, on people who are different than me? What value do I place on people of different religions, worldviews, and lifestyles? I would like to challenge you to ask yourself the same questions: What value do you place on strangers, on people who are different than you? What value do you place on people of different religions, worldviews, and lifestyles?
Let’s pray in this Mass that God will open our eyes to see His face in those people we reject or look down on so that all meet us will come to believe that they are important to God, that they are known and loved by God. May Christ be our light, and may he shine in his Church.
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