Monday, May 20, 2019

5th Sunday after Easter




By Father Scott Archer

“I leave the world and I go to the Father” (John 16:28).

As a man, in His human nature, Jesus told His disciples that He was going to the Father. As God, He was and always had been, with the Father and the Holy Spirit; one God with Three Divine Persons. He spoke here in His human nature because in His human nature He suffered, died, rose from the dead, and ascended into heaven.

This is a part of the mystery of the Incarnation, by which Christ united humanity to God. However, through the sacraments, mankind receives the divine life of God in their souls; that is, sanctifying grace. The Catechism of the Council of Trent states, “He vouchsafed to become man in order that we men might be born again as children of God.” It was necessary for Him to ascend to the Father that we may receive the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. We are born again through the Sacrament of Baptism, and this grace is increased in us through the other sacraments, or restored, if lost through mortal sin, by the Sacrament of Penance. Through grace, Christ lives in us and gives us the strength to carry out any task in our lives, no matter the sacrifice that is demanded. Saint Elizabeth of the Trinity wrote, “We must be mindful of how God is in us in the most intimate way and go about everything with him. Then life is never banal. Even in ordinary tasks, because you do not live for these things, you will go beyond them.” However, this is especially true in the extraordinary things God asks of us because we can do all things out of love for Him and with His grace.

To borrow an example from literature, in J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings Frodo, a hobbit, a race of small creatures related to men, set out to destroy a magic ring before it was found by the evil Sauron, the Lord of the Rings. The world would say a hobbit would likely be unsuccessful in such an undertaking; however, love and humility were his strengths. Tolkien wrote, “Frodo had done what he could and spent himself completely (as an instrument of Providence) and had produced a situation in which the object of his quest could be achieved. His humility… and his sufferings were justly rewarded by the highest honour…Frodo undertook his quest out of love – to save the world he knew from disaster at his own expense, if he could; and also in complete humility, acknowledging that he was wholly inadequate to the task.”

Frodo succeeded beyond expectation because of what he was humbly willing to undergo to save the world he loved with the help of grace as an instrument of Divine Providence. Tolkien wrote, “The Lord of the Rings is of course a fundamentally religious and Catholic work…The religious element is absorbed into the story and the symbolism.” It does not matter if we think we are up to the task of carrying out the will of God. We can accomplish anything Christ, by Whose Incarnation humanity was united with God, asks us to do. We, like Frodo, may not seem up to the task; however, as Saint Paul writes, “But the foolish things of the world hath God chosen, that he may confound the wise: and the weak things of the world hath God chosen, that he may confound the strong” (1 Corinthians 1:27).

Christ told his disciples that He must leave them so He could send the Holy Spirit upon them. With the Holy Spirit, the paraclete, they could accomplish the mission He would entrust to them, a mission for which they seemed unqualified in a worldly sense. They needed the grace of God, as do we, in order to endure the sacrifices and privations necessary to spread the Catholic faith to all the world.