EASTER VI [A]: Acts 8:5-8, 14-17, I Pt 3:15-18, Jn 14:15-21
The Promise
in the Dark
Brothers and
sisters, of all the things Jesus says in the entire Gospel, these six words may
be the most tender: “I will not leave you orphans.”
Today, as we
draw ever closer to Pentecost, the Church invites us to sit with that promise.
It is not a historical footnote or a sentiment from a dead teacher. It is a
living word addressed to us, right now, in whatever "orphaning" we
may be carrying. Whether we are facing the loss of a loved one, the silence of
a broken relationship, or the spiritual desert of feeling abandoned by God, the
Risen Christ stands before us with a singular vow: You are not alone.
The
Border-Crossing Spirit
In the first
reading from the Acts of the Apostles, we see what this promise looks like in
action. We see the Holy Spirit moving like a wildfire—unpredictable,
unstoppable, and crossing boundaries that human beings had spent centuries
building.
The story
begins with Philip going to Samaria. To a first-century Jew, Samaria was
"out of left field"—a land of religious rivals and historical
enemies. It was a place you bypassed, not a place you blessed. Yet, Philip
doesn’t go there to argue; he goes there to proclaim the Christ.
The result
is startling: “There was great joy in that city.” It is a fascinating detail.
This joy didn’t come from a change in political status or a sudden influx of
wealth. It came because the people were "cured" and "unclean
spirits" were driven out. Joy is the primary symptom of God’s presence. If
our faith isn't producing joy—even in the midst of "Samaria-like"
challenges—we must ask ourselves if we have truly let the Spirit in.
The
Samaritans had been baptized, but the Holy Spirit “had not yet fallen upon any
of them.” This necessitated the arrival of Peter and John. When they laid hands
on the new believers, they received the Holy Spirit. This "laying on of
hands"—what we recognize today in the Sacrament of Confirmation—is the
"fire" that empowers the Christian life. It is the difference between
having a car and having the fuel to actually drive it. By sending the
"heavy hitters" from Jerusalem to Samaria, the early Church made a
radical statement: there is no "us" and "them" in the
Kingdom of God. The Spirit is the Great Unifier; He doesn't erase our
differences, but He makes them secondary to our shared life in Christ.
Love as an
Action
Turning to
the Gospel of John, Jesus provides the "nitty gritty" of how this
relationship with God works. He begins with a challenging premise: “If you love
me, you will keep my commandments.”
In our
modern world, we often treat love as a fleeting feeling or a chemical
reaction—the "spark." But for Jesus, love is a verb. It is measured
by our alignment with His will. He isn't setting a trap or a "loyalty
test"; He is explaining the mechanics of relationship. We cannot claim to
love the Artist while intentionally destroying the Artwork. To love Jesus is to
value what He values: mercy, justice, and sacrificial service.
The Advocate
in the Trenches
Jesus knows
that keeping His commandments is impossible by human strength alone. We cannot
"measure twice and cut once" in the spiritual life without guidance.
This is why He promises the Advocate.
The Greek
word Parakletos literally means "one called to the side of." It
refers to a legal advocate or a Comforter. Jesus is essentially saying, "I
am leaving, but I am sending you a Helper who will never leave." The world
cannot see Him because the world seeks tangible proof and immediate results.
But the believer knows Him. The Spirit is known not through a telescope, but
through the "quiet whisper" of conscience and the "fire" of
charity.
Through the
Holy Spirit, Jesus returns to us in a way that is more intimate than His
physical presence. When He was on earth, He could only be in one place at one
time. Through the Spirit, He resides within every believer simultaneously. This
is the goal of the Christian life: not just to "follow" Jesus like a
student follows a teacher, but to be in Him. This "indwelling" means
that when you suffer, He suffers with you; when you love, He loves through you.
A Mother’s
Mirror
Today we
also celebrate Mother’s Day, and these readings speak to this vocation with a
depth that goes beyond greeting cards.
Jesus says,
"I will not leave you orphans." A mother’s deepest instinct—that
bone-deep refusal to abandon her child—is one of the clearest human images of
this divine promise. A mother who sits with a sick child through the night, who
calls just to hear your voice, or who loves you even when you are not
particularly lovable, is imaging the God who promises never to leave.
The Holy
Spirit is sometimes spoken of in the Christian tradition using nurturing,
life-giving imagery—hovering over the waters, drawing forth life. The Spirit
who remains with us and teaches us from within is a love familiar to anyone who
has known a mother’s presence. Today we give thanks for our mothers—those still
with us and those who now see God face to face. We pray especially for those
for whom this day is "tender": the grieving, the estranged, and the
longing. We ask that the God who promises never to orphan us would hold them
close today.
This week,
when things feel uncertain or lonely, return to that single promise: I will not
leave you orphans. Let it land. Let it be true. And then, let it change how we
treat the people around us. The God who refuses to abandon us asks us to extend
that same refusal to one another.
To every
mother here: thank you for the ways, perfect and imperfect, that you have
embodied that promise. And to everyone here: you are not an orphan. You are
claimed. You are accompanied. You are loved—not as the world loves, but as only
God can.
Amen
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