venerdì 26 aprile 2024

B - 5 SUNDAY OF EASTER



 

 

6 commenti:

  1. READING OF THE DAY
    First reading from the Acts of the Apostles
    Acts 9:26-31

    When Saul arrived in Jerusalem he tried to join the disciples,
    but they were all afraid of him,
    not believing that he was a disciple.
    Then Barnabas took charge of him and brought him to the apostles,
    and he reported to them how he had seen the Lord,
    and that he had spoken to him,
    and how in Damascus he had spoken out boldly in the name of Jesus.
    He moved about freely with them in Jerusalem,
    and spoke out boldly in the name of the Lord.
    He also spoke and debated with the Hellenists,
    but they tried to kill him.
    And when the brothers learned of this,
    they took him down to Caesarea
    and sent him on his way to Tarsus.

    The church throughout all Judea, Galilee, and Samaria was at peace.
    It was being built up and walked in the fear of the Lord,
    and with the consolation of the Holy Spirit it grew in numbers.



    Second reading from the First Letter of John
    1 Jn 3:18-24

    Children, let us love not in word or speech
    but in deed and truth.

    Now this is how we shall know that we belong to the truth
    and reassure our hearts before him
    in whatever our hearts condemn,
    for God is greater than our hearts and knows everything.
    Beloved, if our hearts do not condemn us,
    we have confidence in God
    and receive from him whatever we ask,
    because we keep his commandments and do what pleases him.
    And his commandment is this:
    we should believe in the name of his Son, Jesus Christ,
    and love one another just as he commanded us.
    Those who keep his commandments remain in him, and he in them,
    and the way we know that he remains in us
    is from the Spirit he gave us.

    GOSPEL OF THE DAY
    From the Gospel according to John
    Jn 15:1-8

    Jesus said to his disciples:
    “I am the true vine, and my Father is the vine grower.
    He takes away every branch in me that does not bear fruit,
    and every one that does he prunes so that it bears more fruit.
    You are already pruned because of the word that I spoke to you.
    Remain in me, as I remain in you.
    Just as a branch cannot bear fruit on its own
    unless it remains on the vine,
    so neither can you unless you remain in me.
    I am the vine, you are the branches.
    Whoever remains in me and I in him will bear much fruit,
    because without me you can do nothing.
    Anyone who does not remain in me
    will be thrown out like a branch and wither;
    people will gather them and throw them into a fire
    and they will be burned.
    If you remain in me and my words remain in you,
    ask for whatever you want and it will be done for you.
    By this is my Father glorified,
    that you bear much fruit and become my disciples.”

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    Risposte
    1. POPE FRANCIS
      REGINA CAELI 2 May 2021

      Dear Brothers and Sisters,

      Buongiorno!

      In the Gospel of this Fifth Sunday of Easter (Jn 15:1-8), the Lord presents himself as the true vine, and speaks of us as branches that cannot live without being united to him. He says: “I am the vine, you are the branches” (v. 5). There is no vine without branches, and vice versa. Branches are not self-sufficient, but depend totally on the vine, which is the source of their existence.

      Jesus insists on the verb “to abide”. He repeats it seven times in today’s Gospel reading. Before leaving this world and going to the Father, Jesus wants to reassure his disciples that they can continue to be united with him. He says, “Abide in me, and I in you” (v. 4). This abiding is not a question of abiding passively, of “slumbering” in the Lord, letting oneself be lulled by life: no, it is not this. The abiding in him, the abiding in Jesus that he proposes to us is to abide actively, and also reciprocally. Why? Because the branches can do nothing without the vine, they need sap to grow and to bear fruit; but the vine, too, needs the branches, because fruit does not grow on the tree trunk. It is a reciprocal need, it is a question of a reciprocal abiding so as to bear fruit. We abide in Jesus and Jesus abides in us.

      First of all, we need him. The Lord wants to tell us that before the observance of his commandments, before the beatitudes, before works of mercy, it is necessary to be united to him, to abide in him. We cannot be good Christians if we do not abide in Jesus. With him, instead, we can do all things (cf. Phil 4:13). With him we can do all things.

      But Jesus needs us too, like the vine with the branches. Perhaps to say this may seem bold to us, and so let us ask ourselves: in what sense does Jesus need us? He needs our witness. The fruit that as branches we must bear, is the witness of our lives as Christians. After Jesus ascended to the Father, it is the task of the disciples — it is our task — to continue to proclaim the Gospel in words and in deeds. And the disciples — we, Jesus’ disciples — do so by bearing witness to his love: the fruit to be borne is love. Attached to Christ, we receive the gifts of the Holy Spirit, and thus we can do good to our neighbour, we can do good to society, to the Church. The tree is known by its fruit. A truly Christian life bears witness to Christ.

      And how can we achieve this? Jesus says to us: “If you abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask whatever you will, and it shall be done for you” (v.7). This too is bold: the certainty that what we ask for will be given to us. The fruitfulness of our life depends on prayer. We can ask to think like him, to act like him, to see the world and things with the eyes of Jesus. And in this way, love our brothers and sisters, starting from the poorest and those who suffer most, like he did, loving them with his heart and bringing to the world fruits of goodness, fruits of charity, fruits of peace.

      Let us entrust ourselves to the intercession of the Virgin Mary. She always remained completely united to Jesus and bore much fruit. May she help us abide in Christ, in his love, in his word, to bear witness to the Risen Lord in the world.

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  2. BENEDICT XVI - Jesus of Nazareth - The parable of the Vine in Jesus' Farewell Discourses carries forward the entire history of biblical thought and discourse on the vine and opens up a final depth.
    "I am the True Vine," says the Lord (Jn 15:1). First of all, the adjective "true" is important.
    But the essential and most important element in this phrase is "I am"; the Son Himself identifies Himself with the Vine, He Himself has become Vine.
    He allowed Himself to be planted in the earth. He has entered the Vine: the mystery of the Incarnation, of which John spoke in the prologue, is taken up again in a surprising way. Now the vine is no longer a creature that God looks upon with love, but that He can also uproot and reject.
    In the Son He Himself has become Vine, He has identified Himself forever and ontologically with the Vine.
    This Vine can never again be uprooted, it can never again be abandoned to plunder: it belongs definitively to God, through the Son Himself who lives in it.
    The promise is irrevocable, the unity has become indestructible. This is God's new great historical step which constitutes the deepest meaning of the parable: Incarnation, Death and Resurrection are revealed in all their significance.
    The "Son of God" Jesus Christ ... was not "yes" and "no", but in Him there was Yes.
    And in fact all the promises of God in Him have become Yes (2 Cor 1:19) is how St. Paul expresses it.
    Psalm 80:18 had closely linked the "Son of Man" with the vine. But if the Son has now become the Vine Himself, it follows reciprocally that He in this very way remains one with His own, with all the scattered children of God whom He has come to gather (Jn 11:52).
    The vine as a Christological attribute also contains within itself an entire Ecclesiology.
    It indicates the inseparable union of Jesus with His own who, with Him and through Him, are all "vine" and whose vocation is to remain in the Vine. The parable expresses the inseparability of Jesus from His own, their being one with Him and in Him. The discourse of the Vine thus demonstrates the irrevocability of the gift given by God, which will not be taken away.
    The vine can no longer be uprooted, it can no longer be abandoned to plunder. However, it continually needs purification.
    Purification, fruit, remaining, commandment, love, unity - these are the great keywords
    of this drama of being in the Vine in and with the Son, a drama that the Lord places before our soul with His Words.
    Purification - again and again the Church, the individual, needs purification: the processes of purification, as painful as they are necessary, pervade the whole history, pervade the lives of men who have given themselves to Christ.
    In these purifications, the mystery of death and resurrection is always present.
    The self-exaltation of man as well as of institutions must be cut off, what has become too great must be brought back to the simplicity and poverty of the Lord Himself.




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  3. -->It is only through such processes of death that fertility persists and is renewed.
    Purification aims at fruit, the Lord tells us. What is the fruit He is looking for? Let us look first of all at the fruit that He Himself bore by His dying and rising.
    Let us remember that the parable of the vine is in the context of Jesus' Last Supper.
    After the multiplication of the loaves, Jesus had spoken of the true Bread from heaven that He would give, thus giving a profound interpretation in advance of the Eucharistic Bread.
    It is difficult to imagine that, in the discourse of the Vine, He does not tacitly allude to the New Wine, to which He had already alluded at Cana and of which He now gives us the gift - the Wine derived from His Passion, from His Love "to the end" (Jn 13:1).
    From this point of view, the parable of the Vine undoubtedly has a Eucharistic context.
    It refers to the fruit brought by Jesus: His Love given on the Cross, which is the New Fine Wine destined for God's nuptial banquet with men.
    The Eucharist thus becomes comprehensible in all its depth and greatness.
    It reminds us of the fruit which we, as branches, can and must bear with Christ and in virtue of Christ: the fruit which the Lord expects from us is love - which, with Him, accepts the mystery of the Cross and becomes a sharer in His self-giving - and thus the true justice which prepares the world for the Kingdom of God. Fruit and love go together .
    The true fruit is the love that went through the cross and God's purifications.
    If the fruit that we must bear is love, its presupposition is precisely this "abiding" that profoundly has to do with that faith that does not leave the Lord. Prayer is mentioned in v. 7 as an essential moment of this "abiding": the prayerer is promised a sure accomplishment.
    Praying in the Name of Jesus, however, does not mean asking for just any old thing, but rather asking for the essential gift that Jesus, in His farewell discourses, describes as "joy", while Luke calls it the Holy Spirit, which is basically the same thing.
    The words about abiding in love already refer to the last verse of Jesus' Priestly Prayer (Jn 17 ): I have made known to them Thy Name, and I will make it known, that the Love with which Thou hast loved me may be in them, and I in them). thus linking the discourse of the Vine to the great theme of unity, which the Lord presents as a supplication to the Father.

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  4. FAUSTI - "I AM the vine", the real one, as he said he was the bread, the real one.
    He is the true vine, unlike others that do not bear fruit, like the true bread, different from other foods that do not satisfy, the true light, different from other flashes that do not illuminate.
    The vineyard is the symbol of the people of the Covenant.
    Here the vine is substituted for the vineyard, from the collective to the individual who represents everyone.
    This passage from the multiple to the One is fundamental: in Him, the Son, we all become children, true people of God, who bear the fruit of the Covenant.
    In Jesus, Son of Man and Son of God, finally the eternal Covenant of God finds an answer in man.
    The Father is compared to the farmer, or better, to the hard-working and experienced, loving and patient winegrower who cultivates his vineyard. The union between the Son and every man is like that between the vine and the branch.
    They have one life and produce the same fruit.
    In Him, True Life, we return to God and His Covenant.
    Being or dwelling "in" Him is a condition for living and being fruitful. Jesus spoke of abundant masses and of wheat that bears much fruit (12:24). To bear no fruit is to be outside the command and the fundamental blessing of the Creator who wants creatures to share in His fruitfulness.
    The fruit of which we speak will only be clear at the end.
    Unfortunately we can be disciples of Jesus only in words, without living His Word.
    It is a severe warning because we do not love in words or with our tongue, but with deeds and in truth. But if we do not live by Him and do not love our brothers and sisters, we are dead branches, we are not children, who exclude themselves from the Son and the Father, cut off from the source of life. This is the drama of man, but also of God who will find His solution on the Cross, where green wood carries within itself the curse of dry wood. "For God so loved the world that he gave the Only Begotten Son" (3:16). In the Covenant, both Old and New, God is always faithful.
    What is missing is our response, left to our freedom.
    The Word reveals our truth, it is a constant exorcism that frees us from lies.
    The Word of the Lord is Spirit and Life (6:63): it communicates to us the Spirit, the Life of the Son.
    The Baptism of Christ is above all an immersion in the Word, which makes us know and love it.
    "Remain in me" It is an imperative: the Lord begs us to be branches united to the vine.
    We dwell in Him by dwelling in His Love for us, the source of our mutual love.
    To love Jesus and to do His Will is an act of our freedom, which no one, not even God, can do in our place.
    We are always in Him because He loves us
    The union with Him, not only affective but also effective, is the very possibility of a fruitful life.
    It corresponds to the enthusiastic "being in Christ" of Paul, the refrain of all his letters.
    Our action springs from what we are: united to the Son we are children and we can bear fruits of fraternal love.
    Especially in apostolic action, our union with the Lord is decisive.
    If we do not know Him, we are wrong to do good, if we do not love Him, we lack the strength to do so.
    Here John is speaking of our "Life in the Spirit",
    indispensable for glorifying and witnessing to the world the Love of the Father and the Son.
    Not to dwell in Him, the life of what exists, is equivalent to being already dead. The warning is addressed to the disciples, so that they may dwell in Him, in His Love, so that He may dwell in them. Otherwise, all their activity is straw, which will be burned.

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  5. The prophet Hosea, reports the conditions of a return to the Lord, of our conversion: "I will be like dew for Israel; it will bloom like a lily and take root like a tree of Lebanon, its shoots will spread and it will have the beauty of the olive tree and the fragrance of Lebanon. They will return to sit in my shadow, they will revive the grain, they will grow the vines, famous as the wine of Lebanon. Ephraim, what do you still have in common with the idols? I will fulfill it and watch over it ,
    I am like a cypress tree that is always green, thanks to me you will find fruit" (Hos 14,6-9)
    Ezekiel describes the Source of the Temple, the Living Water that flows from the right side of the Sanctuary, from the wounded Side of Christ, from which flow the Blood and Water, the Sacraments from which we are born again; Baptism and Eucharist.
    The living Water of the Spirit flows into the world, healing its waters and reviving all that it irrigates. On the banks of the river there will be fruit trees, whose fruits will not cease, and every month they will ripen and become food, and the leaves will be medicine to heal every evil and satisfy every need!
    Of what fruits does the Lord speak?
    Of those that we can give ourselves, grafted into Him, nourished by His Life, which manifests in us the feelings of Jesus ("Who, though He was divine in nature, did not regard His equality with God as a jealous treasure... He humbled Himself, becoming obedient unto death" Phil 2,5-11) and His Spirit. ." The fruit of the Spirit is: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, meekness, self-control; against these things there is no law.
    If we live by the Spirit, we also walk according to the Spirit" (Gal 5:22-25).
    The Spirit, the Vital Lymph of the Vine Tree, love is always the basis, the source of every fruit and joy indicates its presence, every fruit is the conjugation of love in different circumstances, times and ways.

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