Saturday, May 01, 2021

Where Homeless Hearts Find Rest


5th Sunday of Easter

Readings: Acts 9:26-31; Psalm 21(22):26-28,30-32; 1 John 3:18-24; John 15:1-8

Picture: cc Brian Evans


My dear friends, do you know the difference between a house and a home? We all do, right? A house provides us a place to lay down our bodies for the night. But a home is where our hearts find rest. As they say, home… is where the heart is.


And hasn’t the current pandemic highlighted this difference to us? Despite being forced to spend more time indoors, we still don’t always succeed in finding rest. Though our bodies may be cooped up in the house, our hearts may remain as burdened or bored as ever. Where and how to find true rest?


These are the questions that our readings help us to ponder today. In the gospel, Jesus invites his disciples – you and me – to remain in him. To make our home in him. To be nourished by him, the way a branch draws sustenance from the vine. In other words, the Lord offers himself to us as a suitable resting place for tired and troubled, wounded and wayward hearts.


The second reading then tells us how to accept the Lord’s offer. How to quieten our conscience. Or, in another translation, how to reassure our hearts. Interestingly, for us Christians, the resting of the heart is closely connected to the activity of the body. For the reading begins by telling us that our love is not to be just words or mere talk, but something real and active. Our hearts find rest in the Lord, when our bodies are devoted to keeping his great commandment of love. Restful hearts find expression in merciful minds, hands and feet.


We see what this looks like in the first reading… When the newly converted Saul is initially rejected by the Jerusalem Christians, whom he had been persecuting, Barnabas goes out of his way to help him gain acceptance. And, when Saul is finally accepted, he doesn’t simply build a comfortable nest for himself in his new home. Instead, he goes out and preaches courageously in the name of the Lord. The reading then ends by telling us that, after Saul’s departure for Tarsus, the Christian community was left in peace. Which is not to say that it was not at peace before. Rather, the interior rest that it had already enjoyed earlier, is now matched by an external freedom from harassment. 


Generous hospitality… even to former enemies. Passionate preaching… even before stiff opposition. Peaceful perseverance… even under fearsome persecution. This is what it looks like when hearts find rest in Christ.


But it’s not always easy to rest in this way. Seduced as we often are by the addictive delights of an illusory world. Isn’t this why we need this beautiful season of Easter? A privileged time for us to gaze more intently into the gentle eyes of the One who died and was raised to life for us. The better to enter more fully into his warm welcoming embrace.


Sisters and brothers, particularly at a time when so many hearts remain restless, what must we do to continue claiming our rightful home in Christ, and to share it with others today?

No comments:

Post a Comment