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Home Sections The Daily B.R.E.A.D. Apr 17, 2010 - Saturday Meditation (In Him We Live, Move and Have our Being!)
Apr 17, 2010 - Saturday Meditation (In Him We Live, Move and Have our Being!) PDF Print E-mail
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Sections - The Daily B.R.E.A.D.
Written by Bobot Apit   
Friday, 16 April 2010 04:27

 T

 he disciples, on their own, are making little progress against the waves until they invite Jesus aboard. Then suddenly they are at their destination. Humans, alas, fragment and divide. God gathers and unifies.

 

Saturday in the Second Week of Easter

Acts 6:1-7

Ps 33:1-2, 4-5, 18-19

 

J ohn 6:16-21 When evening came, his disciples went down to the sea, (17) got into a boat, and started across the sea to Caper'na-um. It was now dark, and Jesus had not yet come to them. (18) The sea rose because a strong wind was blowing. (19) When they had rowed about three or four miles, they saw Jesus walking on the sea and drawing near to the boat. They were frightened, (20) but he said to them, "It is I; do not be afraid." (21) Then they were glad to take him into the boat, and immediately the boat was at the land to which they were going.

 

 

Meditation by Robert P. Heaney

 

In the Readings from Easter to Pentecost, the first (from Acts) tells us, in a more or less continuous narrative, of the growth of the early Church and its movement from Jerusalem to Rome . It’s a story of growth and development. Today’s first reading presents us with a much toned-down instance of a very early dispute within the new Jewish Christian community.

 

As is so often the case in human affairs, the argument was about something deeper than sharing resources with the widows of the “Hellenists”. It’s helpful to understand that about 90% of the Jews alive at the time had been assimilated into the predominant Greek culture and most lived outside of Palestine . Not surprisingly, they approached their religion differently from the still Hebrew-speaking Jews living in and around Jerusalem . Early conversions to Jesus as Messiah included both the Hebrew-speaking and the Greek-speaking Jews (the Hellenists), and they carried their prior differences into the new Christian community. It was, to begin with, a disagreement about how to be a Jew, and now, within the Christian community, how to be a Jewish Christian. Sadly, the same sorts of disputes abound today in every branch of the Christian church, with various factions referring to one another as “so-called” Christians/Catholics, etc., failing to extend even common courtesy to one another.

 

Peter’s genius in this story was to refuse to take sides in this standoff, but rather to set up an arrangement that made it possible for the two groups to co-exist and, effectiv ely , to express their Christianity in their different ways. The late Raymond Brown, SS, perhaps the dean of Catholic Biblical scholars, referred to this episode as the perfect expression of the Petrine office – a model for how the papacy functions best. Note that what Peter achieved was not conformity or uniformity, but simply unity – a unity that permitted diversity.

 

The Gospel story, from John, as is so often the case during the Easter season, helps us understand what is going on in Acts. The disciples, on their own, are making little progress against the waves until they invite Jesus aboard. Then suddenly they are at their destination. Humans, alas, fragment and divide. God gathers and unifies.

 

It is important to understand that, as a consequence of the incarnation, just as Jesus had to learn how to be a human as does any other young boy, so the early Church, like its Master, had to grow and develop and learn how to be “Church” – often by making (and correcting) mistakes, just as we individually, our families, and our organizations must do as well.

 

 

Supplementary Reading

Joy Comes in the Morning

 

. . . weeping may last through the night, but joy comes with the morning -- Psalm 30:5

 

 

T he Scripture says in Psalms that joy comes in the morning. When you wake up each morning, God sends you a special delivery of joy. It comes knocking at your door. When you get up in faith and make the declaration that "this is going to be a good day," do you know what you just did? You just answered the door. You just received the gift of joy that God sent to you. The problem is that some people never answer the door. Joy has been knocking for months and months, years and years saying, "Come on! Let me in! You can be happy! You can cheer up! You can enjoy your life!"

 

I don't know about you, but I've made up my mind that I'm going to answer the door for joy. I'm going to wake up every morning and say, "Father, thank You for another beautiful day. I'm going to be happy. I'm going to enjoy this day. I'm going to brighten somebody else's life. I am choosing to receive Your gift of joy, today!"

 

Heavenly Father, thank You for joy. Thank You for peace. Thank You for walking me through the difficult times. I choose today to answer the door for joy every single morning so that I can walk in the strength You have given to me. In Jesus' Name. Amen. (Joel & Victoria Osteen)

 


 

 
GOD BLESS US ALL!
O Theos Na Mas Evlogisi!
PRAY as if everything depended on HIM. ACT as if everything depended on YOU.

 



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Last Updated on Friday, 16 April 2010 10:04
 

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