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Reading
I: Acts 8:5-8, 14-17
The Acts of the Apostles is planned to trace the expansion
of the Church’s mission from Jerusalem, Judea, and Samaria
to the ends of the earth (Acts
1:8). The campaign undertaken
by Philip, one of the seven, after the martyrdom of Stephen
marks, for Luke, a decisive stage in the execution of this
plan (Samaria).
Equally important for Luke is the concern that
each successive stage should receive the imprimatur of the
original Jerusalem community and its apostles. Hence the curious
anomaly that in this story baptism does not convey the gift
of the Spirit, as is normally the case in Acts, but has to
await the arrival of Peter and John to lay hands on the Samaritan
converts.
In later times, especially in Anglican thought during the past century and in
revisions of the Book of Common Prayer produced in the 1920’s,
this passage was taken as the Magna Charta for the episcopal confirmation of
children baptized in infancy.
This exegesis has thus passed into the theology
of the average Anglican parish priest without question. Let it be said with all
emphasis that such an interpretation has no foundation in this passage, in the
rest of the New Testament, or in the early Fathers.
The author of Luke-Acts knows
nothing of “confirmation” as a separate rite, distinct from baptism,
performed by the apostles or their successors (however justifiable such a development
may have been in later times, granted the practice of infant baptism).
Rather,
he is concerned with one of his major theological themes—the maintenance
of the ties between the expanding mission of the Church and the Mother Church
at Jerusalem as the center of salvation history. |
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Responsorial
Psalm: 66:1-3, 4-5, 6-7, 16, 20
Precisely the same selection of verses from Psalm 66 is used
on the fourteenth Sunday of the year in series C. The only
variation here is the optional substitution of the Easter Alleluia
for the refrain.
However, this is an excellent example of the
way in which the liturgical use of Scripture is itself an exegetical
act.
The psalm originally celebrated some historical deliverance
of the nation. It picks up the traditional language of the
Exodus: “He turned the sea into dry land; men passed through
the river on foot” (stanza 3).
Now, in this season, the
mighty acts thus described as an exodus become the resurrection
of Christ and our participation in it through baptism. |
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Reading
II: 1 Peter 3:15-18
The baptismal material in the first part of 1 Peter, which
runs through 4:12, includes warnings of possible persecution
(after 4:12 the tone changes and the persecution becomes actual).
The references to persecution in the present passage are contingent
in character: “Always be prepared . . . when you
are abused . . . if that should be God’s will.”
The newly baptized, thrilled at their admission to all the privileges of the
people of God as detailed in last Sunday’s second reading, are here reminded
that it will not be smooth sailing all the time. They must know what they are
in for.
Indeed, how could it be otherwise, since the Christian life is a following
in the footsteps of Christ? That is why the passage ends with a quotation from
an early Christian hymn about the death and resurrection of Christ (the hymn continues
beyond the present reading through verse 22).
The words “the righteous for the unrighteous” are thought to have been
added to the hymn so as to adapt it to its present position (see vv. 14, 16),
in which the passion of Christ is treated as an example for the persecuted Christians
to imitate.
In this way we see how a hymn receives new applications by being
taken up successively into new contexts, namely (1) into a baptism homily; (2)
into a letter warning Christians for whom persecution is an impending reality;
(3) as used in today’s liturgy, where the whole passage receives yet another
interpretation.
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Gospel:
John 14:15-21
We see here the same kind of
spiral thought that characterizes the farewell discourse throughout and of which
we spoke in our comments on last Sunday’s gospel. The points made are:
1. Love of Christ
means obedience to his commandments.
2. The promise of the Paraclete (RSV: “Counselor”) sent by the
Father in response to the prayer of the Son.
3. The Spirit, whom the world cannot receive, will dwell in the community.
4. The coming of the Spirit is equivalent to the return of the Son and almost
completely fulfills the primitive expectation of the parousia.
5. The world will no longer see the Christ, but the community will (a) see
him, (b) live because he lives, (c) know the mutual indwelling of Christ
with the Father and of Christ with the community.
6. This indwelling is a relationship of mutual love that includes obedience
to Christ’s commandments.
It will again be
noted how point 6 brings us full circle to where we were
at point 1. Yet, the spiral leads to an enrichment of understanding.
The
Christian life is not an external observance of Christ’s
commandments but an intense relationship of the community
to the three Persons of the Trinity, each with a specific
role to play in this relationship.
The Spirit conveys the
presence of the Son, who reveals the Father.
But this intense
personal relationship is not dissolved into mere emotion;
it is concretely and soberly manifested in a life of obedience
to Christ’s commandments.
The departure of Jesus does not mean that he is now absent. It means his ever-renewed
presence through the coming of the Spirit to the community. That is the Easter
message of this gospel reading.
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Reginald H. Fuller |
Copyright © 1984
by The Order of St. Benedict, Inc., Collegeville, Minnesota.
All
rights reserved. Used by permission from The Liturgical
Press, Collegeville, Minnesota 56321
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Preaching the Lectionary: The Word of God for the Church Today
Reginald H. Fuller. The Liturgical Press. 1984 (Revised Edition),
pp. 85-87.
New in 2006, the third edition!
To purchase or
learn more about the third edition of Preaching the Lectionary go
to http://www.litpress.org/Detail.aspx?ISBN=0814627927
Back

Art by Steve Erspamer from Religious
Clip Art for the Liturgical Year (A, B, and C).
Used by permission of Liturgy Training Publications. This art may be reproduced only by parishes who purchase the collection
in book or CD-ROM form. For more information go to:
http://www.ltp.org/
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