Pro-life
Preaching Hints
May 2 - Fifth Sunday of Easter
Acts 14:21-27
Rv 21:1-5a Jn 13:31-33a, 34-35
Tying this weekend’s readings with the
theme of life brings us right to the powerful promise in the
second reading from Revelation 21, “There shall be no more
death.” The Easter season celebrates the basis of this promise:
Christ has conquered the kingdom of death by his own death and
resurrection, and has given us a share in this victory through
our faith. Moreover, the victory embraces the entire universe,
spiritual and physical: “I…saw a new heaven and a new earth.”
Any power that death exercises now, through evils like abortion
or the threat of our own death, is a temporary and fleeting
power that has lost both its foundation and finality. That’s why
the Church proclaims the Gospel of Life with utter confidence,
and why we are to engage in pro-life activities with the same
confidence. We do not just work “for” victory; we work “from”
victory.
Christ’s victory over death, which we now
share, is a victory to which we give expression in the world by
changing the shape of society and its policies and bringing this
world into line with the demands of a culture of life. A new
heaven and new earth have already begun in Christ. “Behold, I
make all things new.” These are words God speaks daily. He
speaks them to us and through us.
This new order of reality, in which death
no longer has the final word, is the context in which the Lord
says that his commandment, “love one another,” is “new.” The law
and the prophets had already instructed love; but only in Jesus
Christ’s victory over sin and death can love and life have the
final word. Only in him can we love with a divine as well as
human love. Only in him can we love the vulnerable and the
unborn, and all people, with the very love that he has, and
therefore persevere through the “many hardships” that are
necessary “to enter the Kingdom of God” (First reading).
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