Bulletins from April 2023
April 30th – Fourth Sunday of Easter
In the tenth chapter of the Gospel of John, Jesus describes Himself as
the Good (or “ideal”) Shepherd and the “Gate” for the sheep, the One
who will lay down His life for the sake of the flock. This biblical
image of shepherds and sheep reminds us of King David, who himself
was shepherding his father’s flock when he was anointed to be King
over all of Israel. Jesus, proclaimed as “Son of David,” is Shepherd-
King, the Servant of all.
We who follow Him are asked to be the same: authority is for loving
service, whether in our homes and families, in our parish and beyond.
In the Diocese of San José, “Good Shepherd Sunday.” (the Fourth
Sunday of Easter) is the weekend on which an annual collection is
taken to benefit the Retirement Fund for our Diocesan Priests.
This Sunday was chosen in the hope that parishioners throughout the
Diocese might relate the priests who served them for decades in the
past to Jesus, the Good Shepherd.
There is a lengthy announcement about this collection here in the
bulletin. I would ask you to review it when considering if you can
make a gift to support the retired and soon-retired priests of our
Diocese.
April 23rd – Third Sunday of Easter
A hymn comes to mind, in the original Spanish:
Por la calzada de Emaús
un peregrino iba conmigo.
No le conocí al caminar;
ahora sí, en la fracción del pan.
[Along the road to Emmaus
a pilgrim was with me.
I did not know him when walking;
now yes, in the breaking of the bread.]
The proverbial “Road to Emmaus” is the age-old story of disciples
encountering the Lord who walks with them along the paths of their
lives. It also presents the pattern of our worship: breaking open the
Scriptures and the Breaking of the Bread. It is through the latter that
the former makes sense, as recounted in the gospel account: “Were not
our hearts burning within us while he spoke to us on the way and
opened the Scriptures to us?” and “And it happened that, while he was
with them at table, he took bread, said the blessing, broke it, and gave it
to them. With that their eyes were opened and they recognized him, but
he vanished from their sight.”
Jesus does not wait for us to call upon Him or for us to go where we
expect Him to be (as in the church). He finds us and walks with us,
present to us especially in our time of need.
The Risen Lord continues to be present to us. We need to attune
ourselves to recognize Him in the Scriptures, the Eucharist and at
every moment of our lives.
April 16th – Second Sunday of Easter
Easter is so great a feast that it cannot be contained in one day alone.
For us, the “day” of Easter extends for a whole week, until today.
The Easter Season extends until Pentecost, which we celebrate on
May 28.
During this past week, we have been hearing gospel accounts of
Easter morning and Easter night. In today’s gospel reading, we join
the apostles – all of them except Thomas – on the night of Easter
and again the following week.
They were slow to understand and accept what had happened, even
as we might have been. After all, they knew that Jesus had died and
was buried; they could not imagine that he was alive again.
For us who have celebrate Easter and the Lord’s Resurrection for
most or all of our lives, perhaps the opposite is true: we are so used
to the idea of Resurrection that we do not appreciate how truly earthshaking
it is and what a rupture in the human condition it represents.
Psalm 118 captures this reality: “This is the day the Lord has made.
Let us rejoice and be glad.”
Only God turns death into life.
Let us rejoice and let us be glad!
April 9th – Easter Sunday
The Blessing of the New Fire and the preparation of the
Paschal Candle at the Easter Vigil proclaim that Christ,
the Risen One, could not be held by death, and that
darkness had no power over the Light of the World.
From Palm Sunday until Easter Sunday, we retrace the
steps of Christ: acclaimed as King, then Crucified and
Risen. Our celebrations proclaim life to be stronger than
death, love, more powerful than hatred, and hope that
dispels all fear. Please be with us in our prayer!
May Easter 2023 bestow on us hope that comes from the
Lord. We are challenged, commanded and missioned to
be that hope to one another.