Sixth  Sunday of Easter. Year B -MOTHERS DAY -- Sunday,  May 9, 2021
  (EPISODE: 297)
  
  

  Readings for Sixth Sunday of Easter. Year B
  FIRST READING: Acts 10: 25-26, 34-35, 44-48 (diff)
  Ps 98: 1, 2-3a, 3b-4. "The Lord has revealed to the  nations his saving power. "
  SECOND READING: 1 John 4: 7-10
  GOSPEL ACCLAMATION (John 14: 23). Alleluia, alleluia! All who love me will keep my words, and my Father will  love them and we will come to them. 
  GOSPEL: John 15:  9-17
  
  Image Credit: Photo by Greg Rakozy on  Unsplash
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  Please listen to the audio-recordings of the Mass – (Readings,  prayers and homily), for Sixth Sunday of Easter. Year B - Sunday, May 9, 2021 by clicking this link here: https://soundcloud.com/user-633212303/easter-6b-2021-episode-297  
  (EPISODE: 297)
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  *  (Prologue:  Fr Paul Kelly)
  
  All of the scripture readings this weekend say a lot about the core of  Christ's message.  There are quite a few lines that jump out at me as we  listen to the readings this weekend.
   
  Lines such as these:
   
  Saint Peter said to Cornelius: "Get up. I myself am also a human  being."….. 
   
  "the believers who had accompanied Peter were astounded that the gift  of the Holy Spirit should have been poured out on the Gentiles …."
   
  Beloved, let us love one another, because love is of God; everyone who  loves is begotten by God and knows God.
   
  Whoever is without love does not know God, for God is love.
   
  God sent his only Son into the world so that we might have life  through him. ,…..he loved us first and sent his Son as expiation for our sins.
   
  Jesus said to his disciples: "As the Father loves me, so I also love  you. Remain in my love. If you keep my commandments, you will remain in my  love, just as I have kept my Father's commandments and remain in his love.
   
  "I have told you  this so that my joy may be in you and your joy  might be complete.
   
  "No one has greater love than this, to lay down one's life for one's  friends. You are my friends if you do what I command you.
  I no longer call you slaves, because a slave does not know what his master is  doing. I have called you friends
   
  It was not you who chose me, but I who chose you and appointed you to  go and bear fruit that will remain, so that whatever you ask the Father in my  name he may give you. This I command you: love one another."
   
  These lines from the readings this weekend are profound and important,  and worth deeper thought and reflection.
   
   In summary, what these lines say to me is, we must keep in mind  that our Christian faith is not ultimately about us, but it is about God. That  might, at first glance, seem to be an obvious truism, however, we do  acknowledge that in a world where ME, ME, ME  is often front and  centre,  we as a whole, can sometimes forget that we are merely men and  women and not 'little gods' in charge of our destiny, and we are ultimately not  the centre of our own world or the world around us. 
   
  How wonderful that the Holy Spirit of God took initiative and fell  upon Gentiles even before they were baptised. God's Spirit blows where it wills  and inspires and acts upon people in and outside the visible confines of  religion and church and does what God wants.  That is also an important  and humble corrective. We will never be able to limit God's generous and  proactive activity in and among the peoples and cultures of the world. Nor  should we ever want to stop this divine right of God to do as God wishes and  act in and through whom God wants. (nor could we ever stop God anyway).
   
  Also, the readings today remind us that God's very nature is LOVE. One  cannot know God if we do not know love and do not show love. This love is to  show itself in the way Jesus showed love. And the kind of love Jesus shows us  is self-sacrificing love which gives and does not count the cost, and reaches  out to give rather than grasping to possess. 
   
  And in connection to this, God's desire and plan for us is to have joy  to the full and to be not servants or slaves but friends who are willing  co-workers and colleagues with God, in God's plans. We are indeed friends and  colleagues with Jesus, but also friends who know our place; in the sense that  we never get a 'big head' and think that since we are "co-workers" and  "friends" of Christ, we could ever "play God for our own benefit" over others.
   
  So, today's readings say to me: Be joyful, be loving, be free, be  friends, be not slaves and nor ever be begrudging labourers, but rather,   be as Christ showed us, because God is all about self-giving,  self-forgetting  love which reaches out to everyone without fear and  favour, and which is about practical and joyful service and compassion which  reduces ego and self-interest and acts and thinks more as a brotherhood and  sisterhood of humanity rather than "them and us"    These are sound  foundations upon which to build our true discipleship of  Christ.   
   
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  (Homily:  Fr Peter Dillon). 
  Wendy Mary Beckett (25 February  1930 – 26 December 2018), better known as Sister Wendy, was a British religious sister and art historian who  became well known internationally during the 1990s when she presented a series  of BBC television documentaries on the history of art. Her programmes, such as  Sister Wendy's Odyssey and Sister Wendy's Grand Tour, often drew a 25 percent  share of the British viewing audience. Her quaint and simple appearance had The  New York Times described her as "a sometime hermit who is fast on her way  to becoming the most unlikely and famous art critic in the history of  television."
  
  I became a great fan of Sister Wendy avidly following her instruction to "look  deeper than what you first see, there are many layers of meaning to be  discovered". Her particular passion was for religious paintings urging the  viewer to try to get into the mind of the painter. To see and feel what they  felt. The very same instructions certainly apply to the gospels and their  authors.
  
  
  Gospel always like those pictures with different levels of meaning. The  underlying truth or picture is mean to be God. But that clarity is not always  clear on first hearing the words. We sometimes need to let their intention sink  in. We need to sometimes sit before the text and allow it to wash over us,  again following the Sister Wendy method. How can we see or understand God, and  how much of that meaning is influenced by our own circumstances at the time.  Are we allowing God to speak to us through the descriptions of the ancient  author?
  
   The gospel gives us certain pictures  that we can initially relate to. God is a rock, a king, a shepherd, a parent, a  vine with branches. But God transcends all these images, visual and verbal, and  in the end the mystery that is God cannot be limited.  Just like love, we are told today. True love  has no limits and that is what God is. This must always be the starting point in  trying to understand God. Because of love, God sent Jesus to save us. To do  this by giving us an example of limitless loving, to the end, to death.
  
  Mahatma Gandhi, the Hindu pacifist and admirer of Jesus, was asked once, 'Why  don't you become a Christian?' He answered 'Because I have never met one'.
  We often rack our brains in our struggle to encompass God and the ways of God,  but the mystery of life consistently evades our grasp. John's message is that  truth is both simpler and deeper than we imagine. It lies at the heart of the  search.
The paintings of one of the great masters. But the secret to the mystery, to understanding the heart of the message, is to understand what love feels like. If we know what it is like to love one another, if we love our world in the way the Son revealed to us, then we unlock the mystery. The words give up their true picture, and the world takes on a sense we otherwise cannot see. If we don't know what love feels like, if we have never felt love, then it is impossible to grasp the depth of what Jesus is trying to convey through the Gospel writer. The parables become simply abstract stories with no place to settle in our own experience.
Imagining the audience 'in front of the text'. Why is the community of John being told so repeatedly about the centrality of love, over and over again? Have they not got the message? Are they slow to love others, especially strangers? It's the same issue in the first reading. Peter's dreams while asleep on the roof of the house of Simon the tanner (earlier in chapter 10) opened him to the possibility of admitting outsiders to the community of faith. Peter would have caused enough trouble by lodging with someone in an 'unclean' occupation, a tanner, without now saying that Gentiles were to be admitted to the Jewish Christian community. Peter comes to an understanding that God does not have favourites, but that anybody of any nationality who fears God and does what is right is acceptable to God. The Holy Spirit offers proof of this when he comes down on all the listeners, including the Gentiles, just as at Pentecost.
  Our parish can suffer similar divisions and exclusiveness, and lay us open to  the charge of Mahatma Ghandi. Do we really see Christ in one another? Do we  even want to see Christ in each other? Do we see Christ in our pastor, does our  pastor see Christ in us? If faith is deficient, failure to love will surely  follow.
  
  People often complain about sermons on love - unrelieved saccharine nonsense,  with little or no practical application. Today's readings have a direct bearing  on the survival and growth of our Christian communities. I commissioned you to go out and to bear fruit, fruit that will last.... what I command you is to love one another. If faith and love are not the basis of our pastoral endeavours,  we shall achieve nothing, and as Sister Wendy might say "all we see is paint on a canvas".
  
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  References:
  
  Homily – fr peter Dillon
  
  Prologue - Fr Paul W. Kelly
  
  Image  Credit: Photo by Greg Rakozy on Unsplash
  
  
  Sixth Sunday of Easter. Year  B  (Sunday,  May 9, 2021)  (EPISODE: 297 )
  
  The Lord be with You
  
  HAPPY MOTHERS  DAY!
  Happy Mother's Day to all mums as we here  in Australia celebrate Mother's Day. Different parts of the world celebrate  mother's Day on different dates in the year, but whatever date it is  celebrated; it is no coincidence that Christ used the image of an  unconditionally loving parent to describe an essential characteristic of God's  nature. What better example of unconditional love can be witnessed than the  love of a Mother or a Father for their cherished child? Christ wants us to know  and experience the deep and abiding love that God has for us, in calling us  God's daughters and sons.  This weekend we pray for all Mothers, that they  may be blessed for their goodness, kindness and self-forgetting love.
  
  
  As one family in Christ, let us prepare ourselves to celebrate the  sacred mysteries by calling to mind our sins.  
  
  Lord Jesus, you have revealed yourself as the way to the Father: Lord,  have mercy
  
  You have poured out on your people the Spirit of truth: Christ, have  mercy
  
  You are the Good Shepherd, leading us to eternal life: Lord, have mercy.
  
  May almighty God have mercy on us, forgive us our sins, and bring us to  everlasting life.  Amen.
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  Memorial Acclamation
  3. Save us, Saviour of the world, for by your Cross  and Resurrection you have set us free.
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  Ps 98: 1, 2-3a, 3b-4. "The Lord has revealed to the nations his  saving power. "
  
  GOSPEL ACCLAMATION (John 14: 23). Alleluia, alleluia! All who love me will keep my  words, and my Father will love them and we will come to them. 
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  PREFACE: Easter V
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  Let us pray in heartfelt thanksgiving  to God, for all Mums on this Mother's Day weekend. That God bless them .   for their unconditional love and care. ………..(PAUSE)……. Lord hear us
  
  For those who have passed into eternal life.....especially all dear-departed  mothers, who have gone to their eternal rest and remain in cherished memory.  That they now are enjoying the heavenly and eternal banquet feast of the  Kingdom...... ………..(PAUSE)……. Lord hear us
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  A Prayer in Gratitude and Blessing for Our Mothers.
   
  Good and Gentle God, Lord of creation, we pray in  gratitude for our mothers and for all the women who have joined with you in the  wonder of bringing forth new life and nurturing with love, young lives. Jesus,  you became human through the Blessed Virgin Mary. Grant to all mothers the  grace and strength they need to face the uncertain moments that life often  brings us all.  Give them the ongoing strength to love and to be loved in  return. Give them the faithful support of family and friends and the wider  community.  May they receive peace and joy through their family and friends.    Give them joy and delight in their families and friends, to sustain them  through joys and sorrows. Most of all, give them the wisdom to turn to you for  help when they need it most.  Bless all our mothers and grant them reward  for their unconditional love and kindness. Through Christ our Lord.    Amen.
  
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  {thank you so much for taking this time to listen to,  and reflect upon  God's word and praising God's goodness and care. }
  
  Go and announce the Gospel of the Lord.
  
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  Archive of homilies and  reflections:  http://homilycatholic.blogspot.com.au
  To contact Fr. Paul,  please email:  paulwkelly68@gmail.com
  
  To listen to our weekly homily audio  podcast, please click this link here:  https://soundcloud.com/user-633212303/tracks
  
  You are welcome to subscribe  to Fr Paul's homily mail-out by sending an email to this address: paulkellyreflections+subscribe@googlegroups.com
  
  Further information relating to the audio productions linked  to this Blog:
  "Faith, Hope and  Love - Christian worship and reflection"  - Led by Rev Paul Kelly
  
  Prayers and chants  — Roman Missal, 3rd edition, © 2010, The International  Commission on English in the liturgy. (ICEL)
  
  Scriptures - New Revised Standard Version: © 1989,  and 2009 by the NCC-USA. (National  Council of Churches of Christ - USA)
  
  "The Psalms" ©1963, 2009,  The Grail - Collins publishers.
  
  Prayers of the Faithful -   " Together we pray" by Robert Borg'.    E.J. Dwyer, Publishers, (1993) . (Sydney Australia).
  
  Sung "Mass In Honour of St. Ralph Sherwin" -  By Jeffrey M.  Ostrowski. The Gloria, Copyright © 2011 ccwatershed.org. 
  
  "Quiet Time."   Instrumental Reflection music. Written by Paul W Kelly. 1988, 2007. & This  arrangement: Stefan Kelk, 2020. 
  
  - "Today I Arise" - For  Trisha J Kelly.  Original words and music by Paul W. Kelly. Inspired by St  Patrick's Prayer.  Arranged and sung, with additional lyrics by Stefan  Kelk. 2019.
  
  [ Production -  KER -  2021]
  
  May God bless and keep you.
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