5th Sunday of Easter-Year B
God: The Vine Dresser
One of my most favorite passages in the Bible is Jeremiah 29:11, when God tells us, “ I know the plans I have for you, …plans for your welfare and not for harm, to give you a future with hope.” I can tell you that inasmuch as I love this passage, there have been many moments in my life that I have asked: “God, is this also part of your plan? What good can come out of this pain?
In our gospel today, Jesus talks about how God brings the best out of us and makes us bear more fruit and become more of a blessing to family, friends, church, community, and the world. Jesus describes the process as pruning and God the Father as a vinedresser. Physical pruning involves cutting off part of a tree in order to make it more healthy and beautiful. In the spiritual sense, this might be likened to any suffering that God allows us to go through. Today’s gospel teaches us that sufferings can be God’s tool for spiritual pruning. That even though God does not cause the suffering, He can allow it if it is important for our pruning.
We see this in the life of Jesus when he became man. The Father pruned him. Jesus suffered not because of any sin he had committed but because the Father wanted Him to bear much fruit: To save the world through sacrificial love. No wonder Jesus calls his Father: the vinedresser. Remember in the Garden of Gethsemane, that difficult conversation between Jesus and his Father when Jesus cried out, “ Father if it is your will let this cup pass me by, take this cup away if it is your will”. Did the Father prune Jesus? Yes, he allowed Jesus to go through the agony of the Cross because Jesus was going to bear much more fruit that way.
In the first reading, we heard about one of the most important figures in Christianity, St. Paul. He wrote about 40 percent of the entire New Testament. When you look at his life, you can come to one conclusion that suffering can be a tool that God uses to prune us to bear more fruit. In today’s reading, Paul is going through great suffering for the sake of the gospel. The Christian community in Jerusalem does not trust Paul because of his past. They know him to be a murderer and persecutor of Christians. The Hellenist want to kill him because he is preaching the gospel. The result of this confusion is the Church in Jerusalem asking Paul not to do what he desired most, preaching the Word of God but sending Paul into a kind of silent retreat for about 10 years in Tarsus. However, all these very painful experiences and sufferings drew Paul closer to Christ and the Church and gave him all the deep insights into God. That is what he wrote down in the New Testament. The suffering that Paul went through were tools that God used to make him bear fruits that will last for all generations.
Beloved, Spiritual pruning is not something that only Jesus and Paul went through. All the early prophets in the Old Testament, all the early Christians, and indeed all people who want to live and bear fruit in the Name of God went through and will go through some sort of pruning. St. John, in the second reading, tells us the way to respond to spiritual pruning in order to bear much fruit is to respond to suffering from a loving heart. What are the most challenging situations you are going through right now? What brings tears into your eyes? Could God be using that as a tool to prune you? May God give us the strength to respond to any pruning he takes us through with a loving heart and hope in him. When we go through suffering, let’s remember God’s words to us “Do not be afraid! I am with you! I have called you each by Name! You are Mine!
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