Pro-life
Preaching Hints
April 11 - Second Sunday of Easter
Acts 5:12-16 Rv 1:9-11a, 12-13, 17-19 Jn 20:19-31
Homily Hints
“I hold the keys of death.” Only the Lord
Jesus Christ, risen from the dead, can say that, as we hear him
say in today’s second reading. It is a fundamental temptation of
the human family to think that some day, by our ingenuity,
technology, knowledge or power, we can hold the keys of death.
That’s what drives the culture of death. We want to be in
perfect control. Advocates of assisted suicide call for the
right of people to control the timing and manner of their own
deaths. We want to “tame” death so we can use it as a tool to
escape suffering. Hence we impose it on the unborn when they are
deemed too inconvenient, or when they have disabilities or
conditions like Down Syndrome. Some studies show that 80% or
more of unborn children who are diagnosed with Down Syndrome are
killed by abortion.
But if we want victory over death, it is
the Lord Jesus Christ to whom we turn. Rather than proclaiming
an ethic of death, we proclaim a Kingdom of Life. John “heard…a
voice as loud as a trumpet,” and he himself was on the island of
Patmos precisely because he had trumpeted the message of Christ.
The first reading shows us that the apostles’ preaching of the
Resurrection was accompanied by tremendous signs. The
Resurrection, in other words, gives rise to a community of those
who both believe and proclaim it, and bring its power to the
world. That is why we are pro-life.
Thomas doubted the victory of life over
death. Where was he the first Easter night? Scripture does not
tell us, except to say that he was not with the other apostles,
to whom the Lord appeared. Maybe Thomas was out looking for the
Lord! After all, if he was the kind of person who had to “see
for himself,” and had heard the announcement from the women that
morning that they had seen the Lord on the road, maybe he
thought that he could go out on the same road and find him! But
that was a mistake, because Thomas separated himself from the
community of believers. And he missed the Lord.
It was only when Thomas reunited himself
with the community that he, too, saw the Lord. Today, we are
that community of faith, the Body of Christ, bringing the world
to understand that the destiny of the human person is life, not
death, and that there is only one who holds the keys of death.
He is the Lord of our lives, our freedom, and our choices. He is
the Risen One!
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