Daily Reflection

The Advocate will Teach You Everything

April 29, 2024 | Monday
  • Memorial of Saint Catherine of Siena, Virgin and Doctor of the Church
  • John 14:21-26

    Acts 14:5-18

    Psalm 115:1-2, 3-4, 15-16

    John 14:21-26

     

    Jesus said to his disciples:

    “Whoever has my commandments and observes them

    is the one who loves me.

    Whoever loves me will be loved by my Father,

    and I will love him and reveal myself to him.”

    Judas, not the Iscariot, said to him,

    “Master, then what happened that you will reveal yourself to us

    and not to the world?”

    Jesus answered and said to him,

    “Whoever loves me will keep my word,

    and my Father will love him,

    and we will come to him and make our dwelling with him.

    Whoever does not love me does not keep my words;

    yet the word you hear is not mine

    but that of the Father who sent me.

     

    “I have told you this while I am with you.

    The Advocate, the Holy Spirit

    whom the Father will send in my name –

    he will teach you everything

    and remind you of all that I told you.”

     

    Opening Prayer: Lord God, send forth your Spirit and renew the face of the earth. Inflame my heart with the grace of your Spirit. Enlighten my mind with the wisdom of your Spirit. Remind me of all that your Son did and taught. Help me to be docile to your commandments.

     

    Encountering the Word of God

     

    1. God’s Plan: God brings to fulfillment his plan of salvation through Jesus’ redemptive passion and death on the cross. This plan is crowned by the sending of the Holy Spirit, who gives life to the new people of God and accomplishes the redemption of all nations. This redemption is accomplished by the Spirit in different ways. On the one hand, the gift of saving grace is given through the Gift of the Holy Spirit. On the other, the Spirit is the Spirit of truth, who after Christ’s departure to the Father, preserves “among the disciples the truth which he had announced and revealed” (John Paul II, May 17, 1989). The essential task of Christ’s apostles and disciples is to remain in God’s truth and be led by the Holy Spirit to the knowledge of all truth (John 16:3). The Spirit bears witness to Christ and discloses the content of revealed truth within the Church, so that she may proclaim it to the whole world (John Paul II, May 17, 1989).

     

    2. The Spirit and the Christ: The Holy Spirit does not present another revelation apart from Christ but rather recalls the words and deeds and saving mystery of Christ. The Spirit glorifies Christ and reveals what has already been said by Christ. “Thanks to the action of the Holy Spirit, the Church not only recalls the truth, but remains and lives in the truth received from her Lord” (John Paul II, May 17, 1989). The Spirit is man’s true Counselor; he is the Defender and Advocate of man, the Mediator who intercedes for us. He is the one who takes our side, even though we are guilty of sin. He defends us from the penalty due to our sins and saves us from the danger of losing eternal life and salvation (John Paul II, May 24, 1989). To save the world, the Spirit convinces the world of sin and demonstrates the guilt of the world in rejecting Christ and turning its back upon God.

     

    3. The Empowering Spirit: In the First Reading, from the Acts of the Apostles, the Spirit empowers Paul and Barnabas to speak out boldly on behalf of Jesus the Lord. God confirms their word by granting signs and wonders to occur through their hands. The two apostles are persecuted by the people, but defended by the Holy Spirit, who moves them to flee to the cities of Lystra and Derbe, where they will again proclaim the Gospel. The Spirit is close to the Apostles when they must profess the truth, justify it, and defend it. The Spirit inspires them and speaks through their words (John Paul II, May 24, 1989). Like Jesus and Peter, Paul heals a crippled man, who professes belief in Jesus Christ. Paul and Barnabas have to react quickly to the reaction of the people, who mistakenly equate them with Greek gods and want to offer sacrifice to them. The healing of the crippled man is not a proclamation of the Apostles’ divinity, but a confirmation of the truth of the Gospel message, namely, that the people should turn from pagan idols to the living God, who is the creator of all things. Creation speaks to all men and women of the one, true God’s goodness, beauty, power, and providential care.

     

    Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, thank you for sending the Spirit to teach and guide the members of your Body, the Church. I love you, Lord, and desire to obey the commandments of you and your Father. Reveal your love to me and comfort me with your merciful grace.

     

    Living the Word of God: Just as he opened the minds and hearts of those who heard Paul and Barnabas, so also the Spirit opens our minds and hearts to the mystery of God, who is at work in human history, and of his incarnate Son, Jesus Christ. In faith and through faith, we are guided by the Holy Spirit to the understanding of the Gospel and urged on by the Spirit to preach the Gospel to all men and women. Am I willing to let God open my mind and heart? What is the Spirit urging me to do today?

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