Pro-life
Preaching Hints
April 18 - Third Sunday of Easter
Acts 5:27-32, 40b-41 Rv 5:11-14 Jn 21:1-19 or 21:1-14
Today’s readings make it clear that Jesus’ resurrection does
not only bring life to him. Rather, it begins a process whereby,
through our obedience, life comes to us and extends through us
to all the world.
The theme of obedience to the Risen Christ comes through in
the Gospel passage where the fruitless, all-night efforts of the
fishermen-apostles are contrasted to a simple act of obedience
to one command of the Risen Lord. The 153 fish, as some
commentators have pointed out, represents the number of known
kinds of fish in that day, and therefore symbolizes that people
of every race, nation, and language are called to acknowledge
the Lord and will be brought into the Kingdom by the preaching
of the Church. As the second reading mentions, “every creature”
will worship before the throne. Obedience to God and to the Lamb
is the call of everyone.
In the first reading, the apostles obey the Risen Lord rather
than the misguided commands of human authority. More
fundamentally, they point out that obedience to the Lord yields
the fruit of the Holy Spirit, who gives life to all through
repentance and faith.
This overarching theme of obedience that leads to life
contrasts powerfully with the attitude of the culture of death
that real freedom consists in forging our own way through life,
insisting on our own choices, and arranging both our private
lives and public policies in such a way that protects absolute,
or nearly-absolute, personal autonomy. That is simply not the
way of salvation or even of earthly happiness. Instead, the only
way to both is a resounding “Yes” to life, in obedience to the
one who conquers death and gives life abundantly.
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