Pontifical North American College
Fifth Sunday of Easter, Year B
Rev. Kurt Belsole, OSB
April 29, 2018
As we continue to celebrate the resurrection of the Lord—we come face to face with the mystery of a shared life and a love beyond all telling.
It is nothing less than intimacy with Jesus Christ, our Resurrected Lord—in whom we live and move and have our being.
Seven times in the gospel today, we hear the word remain, and we are confronted with the call from the Lord to remain in Him as He remains in us.
It is a question of the interior life and participation in divine life—or as we read in the Letter to the Colossians: Be intent on things above rather than on things on earth. After all, you have died! Your life is hidden now with Christ in God (Col. 3:3).
Remain in me as I remain in you.
I am the vine and you are the branches.
Today, I would like to reflect with you, not on bearing fruit, but on the more fundamental and profound dimension of abiding in the life of God.
Remain in me—I am the vine and you are the branches.
To consider these words of Jesus—leads us to an understanding of the deepest dimensions of the life that we share with him.
The branches are an extension of the vine—and the task of the branch is above all to remain.
And it is a remaining in love. The verse immediately after today’s gospel has Christ calling us again and saying: Remain in my love (Jn 15:9).
To remain attached to the vine—to live in
shared life with Christ—is nothing but shared love—and—to be honest—it can only be expressed in the language of love.
I must say that I have a certain sympathy for Saint Peter—who at the washing of the feet on Holy Thursday says to the Lord: You shall never wash my feet. But when the Lord clarifies things with Peter saying: If I do not wash you, you will have no inheritance with me—then Peter exuberantly says: Not only my feet, but my hands and head as well.
Christ clarifies things with Peter—or corrects him—whichever you prefer—and he does that with you and with me at times as well—saying—Just your feet, Peter.
I also have a certain sympathy with Peter on the mountain of the transfiguration—when after seeing the transfigured Lord, he says: Rabbi, let us make three tents: one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah. And the evangelist comments: He did not know what he was saying.
He did not know what he was saying—in other words, he did not know what to say—what poor love—what paltry devotion—would know what to say—would know what were the right words to use—after seeing the Lord in glory. Stuttering or misspeaking oneself is actually not such a bad response.
What a fraud we would be—and how inauthentic—if we thought that we knew what to say in light of divine love. It is not a matter of speaking but abiding—remain in me. In light of the mystery of God the best response sometimes might well be silence.
I am the vine—you are the branches—remain in my love—remain in me, as I remain in you.
Today, in the gospel, we meet that love—that shared life—of the vine and the branches—sharing the same nature—the Eternal Word through his Incarnation has taken our nature upon himself—that we may become sharers in his divine nature.
Remain in me
Or as we read in Saint Paul: It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me (Gal. 2:20). There is really no other way for us to live.
Remain in me.
In a few moments, we will hear the priest say: Behold the Lamb of God, behold him who takes away the sins of the world. Blessed are those called to the supper of the Lamb.
That is: the priest, before Communion holds the Host and says: Behold the Lamb of God, behold him who takes away the sins of the world. Blessed are those called to the supper of the Lamb. The Latin reads: Beati qui ad cenam Agni vocati sunt. Literally, Blessed are those who have been called to the supper of the Lamb. It is a perfect tense in Latin and a perfect tense in the Greek of the Book of Revelation from which it is taken Happy are they who have been called to the wedding feast of the Lamb (Rev. 19:9)—and I think that it would be only right to keep the obvious strength of the perfect tense. There is nothing futuristic about it. You have already because of your baptism been called to the Lamb’s Supper—to participate here and now—in heaven upon earth—to share in divine life because of nothing less than divine adoption.
You have been called—in these divine mysteries—which we celebrate now—as heaven comes down upon earth—you have been called to the wedding feast of the Lamb—which is present here and now—not just in some distant future—and not just in hope—and priests and deacons do not so much distribute Communion—as through their ministry, they give you the Lord’s Body and Blood and thus enable you to consummate sacramentally your participation in the eternal heavenly wedding banquet—here and now—by which Christ is united to his Beloved Bride the Church—and where the fruitfulness of the Bride—the Church—is made evident—and strengthened.
I am the vine, you are the branches—remain in me as I remain in you.
You share in the very life of God—by reason of your baptism—and the Spirit that courses through the life of the Father and the Son courses through your body and your soul as well.
In Christ the fullness of deity resides in bodily form. Yours is a share in this fullness (Col. 2:9).
One thing that the
vine and the branches share is the sap—that is, the vitality, the life, and the
vigor—that runs through them both—for us, it is the Spirit of the Lord.
And as regards the Spirit:
we read elsewhere in the Gospel of John: The One whom God has sent . . . does not ration the gift of the Spirit—or in the Letter to the Romans: We have received the Spirit of adoption by which we cry out: “Abba, Father”—or again, when Samuel anointed David as King we read that from that day on the spirit of the Lord rushed upon David (1 Sam. 16:13).
In a mere three weeks, we will celebrate the sending of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost—the Spirit by which we cry out Abba, Father, the Spirit who is not rationed, but given generously, and the Spirit whom, we pray, will rush upon us—all the days of our lives.
As Saint John also says: The way we know that we remain in him and he in us is from the Spirit that he gave us (1 Jn 4:13).
To Jesus Christ who is the true vine, to his Father who is the vine grower, and to the Holy Spirit—who is the love between them both—and who is the love that courses through our bodies and our souls as well—to God, One and Three, be glory now and forever. Amen.