Readings: - Acts 2: 42-47; - 1 Peter 1: 3-9; - John 20: 19-31
Introduction - Why we don’t like the Feast of Divine
Mercy?
The World is in need of Mercy, but it refuses to accept this need because ... the Mercy of God is remaining us about our sinfulness, about
our insufficiency, about the fundamental truth that I am NOT god? And I am
not able to save myself!!
Second Sunday of Easter, Cycle A
Homily from Father Clyde A. Bonar, Ph.D.
In the Old Testament, each year to cleanse the people of their sins, the priest offered animal sacrifices to God. Christ changed all that. Through the Blood of the Cross, Jesus himself became the sacrifice, the Lamb who was slaughtered.
On Good Friday, we witnessed the three hours
Christ spent on the Cross. On Easter Sunday, singing "Alleluia," we
rejoiced at the Resurrection of Jesus.
By his death on the Cross Christ demonstrated the
mercy of God. Today we celebrate God’s mercy for us sinners. We celebrate that
by the Divine Mercy of God, the Blood of the Cross cleanses us of our sins.
In his revelations to Faustina Kowalska
(1905-1938), Jesus told St. Faustina his "Heart rejoices in this title of
Mercy," and that he desires "that the first Sunday after Easter be
the Feast of Mercy."1 Today is the Sunday after of Easter. We call it
Divine Mercy Sunday.
"The Flower of Love"
St. Faustina wrote in her dairy, "Mercy is
the flower of love. God is love, and mercy is His deed."2 Story after
story in the Bible tells us of the mercy of God.
Remember the story of the Golden Calf (Exodus
32-34)? After leaving the slavery of the pharaoh, the Hebrew people are
traipsing in the desert. Moses goes up to Mt. Sinai to talk to God. And stays
on the mountain for 40 days. The people start to worry, ask themselves what
happened to Moses, where is God. Aaron tells the people to gather all their
gold, their rings and earrings; melts the collected items of gold, and makes a
golden calf. Aaron tells the people to worship the golden calf, to offer
sacrifices to the golden calf.
That’s the sin of apostasy, the people turning
away from God, putting their faith in an idol made of gold. God’s pretty upset,
Moses pleads for the people. What’s God do? Shows mercy. God renews his
covenant with the Hebrew people, tells them again he loves them and will take
care of them. "God is love, mercy is His deed."
In the New Testament we have the well known story
of the Prodigal Son (Luke 15: 11-32). The younger son tells his father to give
him his share of the family fortune. The father does and the son sets off to
look for a better life. As the story develops, the son commits one deadly sin
after another. To begin with, there is failure to honor his parents: the money
given to the son is the father’s old age insurance. The son just says, Give me
the money; and never worries about how his father will get on in his old age.
That’s the sin of pride, the son putting his own selfish wants before the needs
of others. And how does the son use his inheritance? He violates the Sixth
Commandment, spending his father’s money on high living and "loose women."
What’s the father do, when the prodigal son comes
home broke, hungry, and in rags? The father puts the finest robe on his son’s
shoulders and gives a party – his son is home. Jesus told the story of the
Prodigal Son to illustrate the mercy God has for us. Our Father in Heaven shows
us mercy even when we act like a prodigal son. "God is love, mercy is His
deed."
Check the Bible. Story after story telling us of
the Divine Mercy of God. He renewed his covenant with the Hebrew people after
they misbehaved. God forgives our sins. Whatever the sin, God shows mercy to
the sinner.
Are we the sinner in need of mercy?
Are we the sinner in need of mercy? You bet! As a
person hesitated in confession, the old priest reassured him: "Don’t be
afraid to mention your sins. You can’t tell me anything I haven’t heard
before." And, it’s true. In the confessional, priests are told every sin
you have ever imagined.
One heart rending confession I’ll always
remember. I was hearing confessions in the local jail. With tears in his eyes,
slowly in a whisper, the man said, "I shot my son." His old girl
friend, the mother of his son, was now sleeping with another man. In his anger
the inmate went after them, and in the bedroom, in the dark, he started to
shot. His bullets killed his own son. The sorrow in his voice pleaded for
mercy, for forgiveness of his dreadful sin.
Another time, in the hospital, a lady was
scheduled for major surgery. She’d asked to see a priest. She too began to cry
as she made her confession. She told of a loving husband, always kind and
considerate, but she’d been the one hard to live with. She always criticized
her husband, screamed and yelled at him. "I’ve been an awful wife,"
she told me. She continued, "And my son, I kicked him out of the house."
Probably the lady exaggerated. But faced with the uncertainty of her operation,
she wanted to hear of the mercy of God, to be forgiven for the times she failed
to show love.
All too often penitents confess violating the
Third Commandment: they miss Mass. One cheerful young chap told me he was a
"good Catholic," that he always came to Mass on Easter and
Christmas." His average, two Masses a year. Another penitent did better,
she got to Mass about six times a year. I tell them that’s not enough. God
forgives, God shows mercy. Then I tell them that God really does expect to see
us in church each Sunday and every Sunday.
We all have a list of sins, some sins more
serious, some less serious; some sins we do often, others very seldom. Truth
is, we always have some sins to confess; some temptations are hard to resist.
Yes, we are the sinners, we need God’s mercy.
"Fount of Mercy"
Christ told his disciples, "Whose sins you
forgive are forgiven them." God the Son instituted the Sacrament of
Reconciliation. For all those bad things we do, when we confess our sins, the
priest is ready and eager to tell us of God’s mercy, that God forgives all our
little transgressions and God forgives the worst things we might do. Every sin
can be forgiven, God’s mercy is boundless.
Jesus told St. Faustina, "When you approach
the confessional, know this, that I Myself am waiting for you there. I am only
hidden by the priest, but I Myself act in your soul." Jesus continued,
"there is no limit to My generosity." One day when she herself was
making her confession, Sister Faustina remembered that when the priest rose to
give absolution, "Suddenly his figure became diffused with a great light,
and I saw that it was not Father A., but Jesus."3 St. ThérPse of Lisieux
says God shows his mercy in the confessional like a mother lovingly clasping a
child to her heart.
That’s a prime place to hear of God’s mercy, in the
confessional
To remind us of his mercy, on the evening of
February 22, 1931, Jesus appeared to St. Faustina "clad in a white
garment. One hand [was] raised in the gesture of blessing, the other was
touching the garment to his breast. From beneath the garment, slightly aside at
the breast, there were emanating two large rays, one red, the other pale."
A pale ray for the waters of baptism, a red ray for the Blood of the Cross.
Faustina’s soul was in awe, she had great joy. Jesus told her to paint an image
just as she saw it, and add the words, "Jesus, I trust in you."
We call the painting the Image of Divine Mercy.
Christ promised that souls who venerated this Image would not perish. A
reminder that by the mercy of God we will become participants in eternal life.
A way to ask for God’s mercy is to pray the
Chaplet of Divine Mercy. The Lord told Sister Faustina, "Whoever will
recite it will receive great mercy at the hour of death."6 Jesus said to
recite the Chaplet for nine days, on the beads of the rosary. His instructions:
-
First of all, you
will say one Our Father and Hail Mary and the I Believe in God [Apostles’
Creed].
-
Then, on the Our Father
beads you will say the following words, ‘Eternal Father, I offer you the Body
and Blood, Soul and Divinity of Your dearly beloved Son, Our Lord Jesus Christ,
in atonement for our sins and those of the whole world.’
-
On the Hail Mary
beads, you will say the following words: ‘For the sake of His sorrowful
Passion, have mercy on us and on the whole world.’
-
In conclusion,
three times you will recite these words: ‘Holy God, Holy Mighty One, Holy
Immortal One, have mercy on us and on the whole world."7
When we pray the Chaplet of Divine Mercy, God
promises to embrace us with his mercy. God promises the same indulgence when we
pray the Chaplet of Divine Mercy for a dying person.
We have three very specific ways to seek and to
receive God’s mercy: during the Sacrament of Reconciliation, by venerating the
Image of Divine Mercy, and by praying the Chaplet of Divine Mercy.
Conclusion
Jesus told Sister
Faustina that he wanted a feast of Divine Mercy, and asked her who knows
anything about such a feast. On the occasion of the canonization of St.
Faustina Kowalska on 30 April 2000, Pope John Paul II decreed that throughout
the world the Second Sunday of Easter will receive the name Divine Mercy
Sunday.
The promise of Jesus is that God wants "to
grant a plenary indulgence [complete pardon] to the souls that will go to
Confession and receive Holy Communion on the Feast of My [His] Mercy." Today we celebrate, we rejoice in the Divine Mercy of God.
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Canonization of John XXIII and John Paul II
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