Fourth Sunday of Easter / Msgr. Owen F. Campion
The Sunday Readings
The first reading for Mass this weekend is from the Acts of the Apostles. Acts is fascinating. It reveals the priorities and beliefs of the first Christians.
The setting is Jerusalem. A Christian community has formed, very visibly and deliberately clustered around St. Peter and the other Apostles. Prayer, total devotion to the Lord, great charity and a sense of unity characterize the early days of the Church there.
Also vital to the community is its solemn responsibility to make Jesus known far beyond the circle of believers.
In this reading, Peter preaches. He speaks for all the other Apostles and the community as a whole. Peter is the unchallenged leader of the Christians.
Acts says that Peter was “filled with the Holy Spirit” (Acts 4:8). He was speaking in and with the power and grace of God. Peter emphasized that, in healing a cripple (recalled earlier in Acts), he acted with the healing power of Jesus.
In his sermon, Peter insists that salvation is impossible without Jesus, because God gave Jesus to the world as the redeemer of humanity.
The First Epistle of St. John is the source of the next reading.
The three epistles attributed to John all have an eloquence and depth that is most appealing. The passage offered in this reading in fact is rather brief, only two verses, but it nonetheless is most expressive, reassuringly a declaration of the theological fact that believers are nothing less than God’s beloved children.
The imagery is strong. No other human relationship so directly and well conveys the notion of love, caring, and the giving of life than that of a parent and child.
This reading also says that those who are worthy of being God’s children one day will see God and will be with God.
St. John’s Gospel supplies the last reading. It is a glorious revelation about the Lord Jesus. Everyone in Roman Palestine at the time knew what herding sheep was about. It was, by and large, an agricultural region in which shepherding was common.
The image of sheep is important. Sheep are gentle animals, vegetarian and not at all aggressive. They also are quite vulnerable. Predators easily make sheep their prey. Aggressors hunt for them, particularly the weak, young and unhealthy. Unable because of their placid nature to fight for their lives, sheep very much need their shepherds. Good shepherds care for the sheep, helping them to overcome the vulnerability created by their meekness and lack of fighting skills.
Jesus, in this passage, compares us humans to sheep.
Reflection
On several occasions in the Gospels, Jesus compares humans and sheep. The likeness is a fact, but a fact that humans prefer to forget. We are vulnerable. We need a shepherd. Jesus is the Good Shepherd. He lays down life itself for us. He wishes that none of us be lost.
He is the Good Shepherd. It is an image that has survived the cultural transition in much of the world from the agrarian to the technological.
This weekend’s liturgy builds on this image, presenting it in this marvelous reading from St. John’s Gospel. When the superb literary technique of this Gospel is added to the process, the image is stunning and beckoning in its brilliance. So, its meaning is clear because of the frankness of the Gospel.
It is vital that believers, indeed all people, realize that humans are very much like sheep. In so many ways, humans are at risk. Our instincts do not always serve us well. Sin threatens our eternal lives.
Jesus is the Good Shepherd who supplies all that we lack. He defends us against peril. He leads us to safety. In Jesus alone is life, as St. Peter proclaimed. †