Second Sunday of Easter

Second Sunday of Easter

There’s a sense of church at its best going on this weekend.  It’s that early enthusiastic  excitement of a new relationship or hobby.  We’ve got all the gear and are ready to spend ourselves fully in the pursuit of love of person, sport or activity.  We couldn’t imagine missing a meeting, training session or opportunity to progress our interest.  “The whole group of believers was united, heart and soul..”,  “the apostles continued to testify to the resurrection of the Lord with great power …” Certainly it was a great time to be alive in the wake of a wake and the awe-filled wonder of an emptied tomb.

We move then to John’s letter and he laying it on the line for us.  Commandments and the keeping of them are discussed.  Recipes are given for overcoming the world.  “Only the one who believes that Jesus is the son of God” can overcome the world.  It looks like the cycling gear, the fitness regime, the daily texts or calls of friendship and love are gathering a bit of dessert dust.

Enter Thomas – the Twin!  Rather don’t enter, for he wasn’t there when the Lord came.  He had his doubts much and all as he wanted to believe.  He knew the marks had to be left on Jesus and unless he could see them, touch them (maybe even weep because of them) he could not believe.  Yes, he’d heard the tomb was empty. He’d heard of the Emmaus conversation and broken bread but it wasn’t sinking in.  “Unless I see the holes that the nails made in his hands ….”

“Peace be with you”, Jesus had told them but Thomas wasn’t there to hear.  He had to rely on others and he found it difficult to accept their version of events.  Chances are he wanted to but couldn’t.  What did the others lack in their telling that stalled the transmission of Jesus’ message?  “Where did we go wrong?” parents sometimes wonder when their children give up on the faith.  Sometimes we priests wonder too when people seem to drift away from church and practice. The closer people can be to the direct word the better.  Hearsay evidence is only part of the story.  It’s a pity Thomas wasn’t there with the others, even in the confusion of that room. Maybe that’s why the church places such strong emphasis on the weekly call to Sunday worship – so that it’s not hearsay for people but first hand.

Despite all this Thomas had his moment.  Wounded flesh touched, he came to know the man he had walked and worked with for three years in a way that hadn’t fully dawned before.  Yes he knew him as friend, one for whom he had mourned, but more than that, he recognised him as “My Lord and my God”.  It’s appropriate that in Ireland we have made these words our own.  God is recognised.

For this, Thomas gets the title “The doubting Thomas” and it seems so unfair to label him – anyone for that matter, based on a single event.  Thomas asked the question and received an answer that took us to a deeper place.  It wasn’t the first time he’d done that.  “I’m going to prepare a place for you”, said Jesus, “and after I’ve prepared it you can come with me.  You know the way to the place where I am going”.  They hadn’t a clue but stood there and said nothing.  Not Thomas though – “We don’t know where you are going, so how can we know the way …” and this led to the words that are central to all we’re about today; “I am the way, the truth and the life, no one can come to the Father, except through me”.

Good man Thomas! From hearsay, to recognition and the new enthusiasm that is Faith in action.

Reaching out …

Reaching out …

Hello again!

Today's "stats" tell me that there have been 238625 views of this blog since its first day out!  There have been 525 comments made (on-line) and thankfully many more "off line"!

I have been doing this now since July 2008.  It seems quite a while.  The least number of posts I had in any month since then is one and the most, fifteen. Some have been quite personal and others shamelessly "borrowed" from YouTube or other sources but all, I hope, with some degree of purpose.

Why?  I suppose that's a key question.  I like to think it's because I believe in communication and, since a lot of my life's energy goes into communication, it seemed a natural way of trying to reach out to people - known and unknown to me.  Maybe too it's about wanting to have something of a voice.  Maybe it's vanity!  Yeah, that too is a real possibility and one that I don't easily ignore or enjoy.  I hope it's more than that - I really want to have something to say.

Some of what has gone into this blog has been very personal to me.  Real, painful and life-changing.  I think especially of sitting at a keyboard and typing "my mother died ....." those words were important to me and the words that followed helped me put some shape on that truth.  My father's funeral, followed a week later by my uncle's, brought me to a place of deep searching too as I saw life change before me and knew that home, though always welcoming to me, would never be the same again.

Moments and events have shaped much of the content of this blog.  Donal Walsh's interview with Brendan O'Connor made me want to write, to remember and re-echo his courage and determination.  Other moments too have made me want to say something - to add my voice and maybe lengthen the conversation a bit.  Lighter moments too - concerts attended, songs heard, YouTube videos watched combined to make me want to share them with people.

I like the blog.  I tried Facebook for a while but don't fully get it.  I know, to its credit, that it reaches so many people.  Indeed when I recently re-printed a piece I wrote around the death of Fr Andrew Finan, I was amazed at the number of "hits" received around those days and the wonderful messages received from some of Andrew's past pupils.  I realised "Facebook" was the reason and that someone, or maybe few, linked my post on their Facebook page and it went from there.  That said, I don't fully get it and chose quite some time ago to discontinue with Facebook (now I don't think that had any negative impact on Facebook's ratings!!) and focus on the blog. To date, I'm not sorry about that.

I've been trying "Twitter" too but wonder how far anything I have to say there goes.  My "followers" are few and re-tweets infrequent but there's something very addictive about it.  Despite myself, I find I check it a lot and generally find some comment/tweet of interest and that makes it seem worthwhile.  That said, maybe I can't say what I want to say in soundbytes and, for that reason, this journey continues.

I'd love more interaction with people, where possible, through the blog and I suppose that's the reason for this post!

Thanks for listening ....

courageousthing

RSS
Follow by Email
WhatsApp