Friday, May 1, 2026

 EASTER V [A]: Acts 6:1-7, 1Pt 2:4-9, Jn 14:1-12

I. The Growing Pains of a Living Body

The readings for this Fifth Sunday of Easter provide a masterclass in the evolution of the Church. We often look back at the "early Church" with rose-colored glasses, imagining a period of perfect, unbroken harmony. However, the first reading from the Acts of the Apostles (6:1–7) offers a more grounded reality. The Church was a living, breathing, and multicultural organism, and like any growing body, it experienced growing pains.

The tension between the Hellenists and the Hebrews was a crossroads for the faith. This wasn't just a dispute over food; it was a crisis of inclusion. The Greek-speaking widows were being overlooked. In this moment, the Apostles demonstrated a divine wisdom that remains the gold standard for leadership. They realized that they could not do everything. To preserve the "ministry of the Word," they had to empower others for the "ministry of the table."

By calling the community to choose seven men—the first deacons—the Apostles taught us that the Church is at its best when responsibility is shared. The Church is not a theatre where the clergy perform and the laity watch; it is a workshop where every baptized soul has a tool in hand. When the Seven were ordained, the result was not a diluted mission, but an accelerated one: "the number of disciples increased greatly." Today, this serves as a reminder that our parishes flourish only when we stop asking, "What is the priest doing for me?" and start asking, "What is the Spirit doing through me?"

II. Built on the Living Stone

If Acts shows us the structure of the Church, the second reading from 1 Peter 2:4-9 shows us its substance. Peter uses the imagery of architecture to describe our spiritual identity. He calls us "living stones" being built into a "spiritual house."

This is a profound metaphor. A stone by itself is just a rock—heavy, cold, and stationary. But when it is shaped by the Master Builder and fitted against other stones, it becomes part of a cathedral. Christ is the "Cornerstone," the one that determines the alignment of every other stone. If we are out of alignment with Him, the whole structure of our lives—and our parish—becomes unstable. Peter reminds us that we are a "chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation." Our purpose is to "announce the praises" of the One who called us out of darkness. Our identity is not found in our careers, our politics, or our social standing, but in our proximity to the Living Stone.

III. The Revolutionary Claim: "I Am"

In the Gospel of John 14:1–12, we enter the Upper Room. The atmosphere is thick with anxiety. Jesus has just told the disciples He is leaving. Thomas, ever the realist, voices the collective fear: "Lord, we do not know where you are going; how can we know the way?"

Jesus responds with a declaration that remains the most controversial and revolutionary claim in human history: "I am the way, and the truth, and the life."

To a Jewish ear, this was explosive. In the Hebrew tradition, Yahweh (God) was the source of Truth and the author of Life. By using the "I Am" formula, Jesus was not merely claiming to be a good teacher or a wise philosopher; He was claiming equivalence with the Creator of the universe. He was asserting that the "map" to God is not a set of rules, some moral codes, but a Person.

IV. Confronting the "Many Roads" Myth

In our modern, pluralistic world, there is a strong social pressure to claim that "all religions are essentially the same." While this sounds tolerant and "open-minded," it is often a product of what we might call "intellectual laziness." To say all religions are the same is to ignore the fundamental, often contradictory, truth-claims they make.

Christianity is fundamentally different from the human quest for the divine. Most world religions represent man’s heroic effort to climb the mountain to find God—through meditation, law, or ritual. Christianity is the story of God coming down the mountain to find man. It is not a "man-made" road; it is a "God-made" rescue mission.

As the text reminds us, if God had provided dozens of contradictory paths to salvation, He would be a "fickle and schizophrenic deity," content to leave His children in a fog of confusion. But God is Love, and Love is clear. He provided one definitive path: His Only Begotten Son. To accept this is not "arrogance"; it is the highest form of humility. It is the humility of a lost traveler finally accepting the only map that actually leads home. As St. Peter boldly declared in Acts 4:12: "There is salvation in no one else."

V. The Narrow Way of Abundant Life

However, we must be careful. While the path is exclusive in its source (Christ), it is universal in its reach. The Second Vatican Council (Nostra Aetate) beautifully balanced this. It acknowledged that there are "rays of truth" in other faiths that reflect the light of Christ. We respect the sincere search for God in every heart. Yet, we can never "relativize" Jesus. If someone is saved without knowing the name of Jesus, they are still saved by the merit of Jesus. He is the bridge, even for those who do not yet realize they are crossing it.

Jesus calls this way "narrow." It is narrow because it requires the "stripping away" of the ego. You cannot carry the baggage of pride, hatred, or self-centeredness through the "Gate" that is Christ.

Let me close the homily with this anecdote: Evangelist Billy Graham tells of a time during the early years of his preaching ministry when he was due to lead a crusade meeting in a town in South Carolina, and he needed to mail a letter.  He asked a little boy in the main street how he could get to the post office.  The boy gave him directions.  Billy said, “If you come to the Central Baptist Church tonight, I’ll tell you how to get to Heaven, God the Father’s house.” The boy replied, “No thanks.  You don’t even know how to get to the post office, and you are going to teach me how to go to Heaven?!”

This is the case with most religious founders. They didn’t know about their own destiny. Like Muhammad who said, “I do not know what Allah do with me.” (Q 46:9). If he wasn’t sure of his own destiny how can we believe what he taught about God and our destiny. Let’s trust the words of Jesus, I AM the Way, the Truth and the Life. No one comes to the Father, but through me.

 

 

 

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