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Fifth Sunday of Easter

"‘The stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone"

QR Code for Readings at Mass

By scanning this with your phone, you will be able to access each of the Mass Readings for today. 

As we continue to live through this joyful Eastertide, the readings this week show us the new Christians attempting to organise their community.

 

After prayer and discernment, they solve the dispute between the Hebrews and the Hellenists and appoint seven leaders. (First Reading)

 

The Psalm celebrates in song the word of the Lord, who is merciful and loves justice and right.

 

The Second Reading seeks to reassure us. We are a chosen race, a royal priesthood and a holy nation. Christ is the cornerstone of the building, and all Christians its living stones.

 

The Gospel comes from the Last Supper discourse, where Jesus prepares his friends for his departure. Thomas and Philip find it hard to follow his words, but they will never be alone, for Jesus will be alongside them. He is the way, the truth and the life.

 

This week, we pray for all who are unable to accept Jesus as the cornerstone of their life. As we go about our own lives in the coming days, we might use the response to the psalm: ‘May your merciful love be upon me, as I hope in you, O Lord’.

(c) Elizabeth Wang: "Christ leads us at every stage of the spiritual life"

Here’s a text if you’ve only a minute …

 

May your merciful love be upon us, as we hope in you, O Lord.   Psalm

 

You are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation. Second Reading 

‘I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life.’  Gospel

Further Reflection

1 Peter 2: 4–9

For the past five weeks, we have been reading and praying this first letter of Peter. It was written to Gentile Christians living in different parts of Asia Minor to console and strengthen them as they faced opposition and trials in a hostile cultural environment. Their difficulties came both from the resistance of traditional Jews, and from civil pressures from a government that had come to tolerate the Jewish people, but could not cope with a new religious group.

 

Opinion as to the authorship of the letter is divided. It was written either after Peter’s death, by someone using his name as an act of homage (common practice at the time) or by Sylvanus (see 1 Peter 5: 12), a companion of Paul who acted as his secretary. Come what may, the Church recognises in this letter a document of inspired writing celebrating our Christian heritage.

The main topic throughout the letter is the nature of Christian life and the best way for Christians to behave amidst persecution and abuse from pagan neighbours. In this week’s passage, the main image is that of stones. At the time, it may have brought to mind the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple and the large stones of the pillars lying on the ground. For us, too, there is an immediate association: the Church is not just a stone building. It is a spiritual space, a ‘spiritual house’, with Jesus Christ as its base or ‘cornerstone’.

 

Each Christian is a ‘living stone‘ brought to life by their baptism. The stone imagery is all inclusive: rocks come in all sorts of shapes and sizes, colours, strengths or brittleness, so they represent all of us. The emphasis on a chosen race, a royal priesthood, and a holy nation unifies the different groups of Gentiles to whom this letter is addressed. Their allegiance to the Lord transcends their disparity. The unbelievers who stumble over the stones and remain in darkness, are probably the Jews who have not accepted Christ. The community of early Christians which this letter is seeking to comfort have been ‘called into his marvellous light’ .

 

Gospel John 14: 1–12 ‘I am the way, and the truth, and the life’

This passage belongs to the farewell discourses of Jesus.

The ancient world paid great attention to people’s final words. They stress the most important things we should remember about the one who is near to death, and they also look to the future.

 

In the Old Testament, we find them when Jacob blesses his sons (Genesis 49); before the death of Moses (Deuteronomy 32); and in King David's farewell to his son Solomon (1 Kings 2).

 

‘Let not your hearts be troubled. Believe in God’ Jesus is reassuring the disciples. The way to reduce worry is to trust in God and have faith. John is writing for first-century Christians who were often persecuted.

 

many rooms in my Father’s house The ‘Father’s house’ is often understood by scholars as a synonym for heaven, though others focus on the more generic meaning of house – i.e. not a building, but a group of people belonging to an extended family. They see it as a symbol of the intimate relationship between God the Father and Jesus, in which we can all have a share. Whoever is with God is in his ‘house’, and there is room for all. The Last Supper takes place on the night before Passover and the language is reminiscent of Moses addressing the tribes of Israel in the land of Moab, beyond the Jordan (Deuteronomy 1: 29, 33).

 

‘I am the way, and the truth and the life’ The previous ‘I am’ statements in John’s Gospel (4: 26; 6: 20) show clear parallels with the Old Testament revelation formulas (Exodus 3: 6, 14 and 20: 2). Here, Jesus elaborates and gives a fuller explanation of who he is.

The way This can be seen as an actual road or path, but also as a means of getting somewhere. If Jesus is the way, ‘knowing the way’ is to know Jesus and through him to know the Father. There are no intermediaries. It is also possible that ‘the way’ is used in opposition to the law, which the Jews believed to be the only way to God.

 

Philip: ‘Show us the Father’ Jews believed that one could not see the face of God and live (Exodus 33: 18–23), so Philip’s request is truly amazing. So too is Jesus’s answer, which also recalls John’s prologue: Jesus is the Word of God, made flesh, and dwelling amongst us. Jesus is not only talking to Philip but also to all the disciples; to us. It is difficult in an English translation to distinguish between ‘you’ meaning one person, and ‘you’ meaning a group of people. The different forms of ‘you’ are interwoven throughout Jesus’s reply.

To aid our reflection on the Sunday readings each week we are reproducing, with permission content from St Bueno's outreach.

if you would like to know more about them or access their guided prayer resources, 'prego', you can contact them via their website

O Jesus, our Way, our Truth, and our Life,
We come before You seeking direction in a world of many paths.


Be our VIA—the narrow path of righteousness, our light in the darkness, and our strength in every step, leading us safely to the Father.

Lord, be our VERITAS—the absolute Truth in an age of confusion. Lighten our minds with Your wisdom, that we may discern right from wrong, speak with honesty, and live with integrity, standing firm upon Your word.

Lord, be our VITA—the true Life that transcends the mundane. Fill us with Your Spirit, transforming our daily efforts into noble purpose, and our mortal days into a reflection of Your everlasting life and love.

By Your grace, may we not just walk, but abide in You.


Via, Veritas, Vita—now, always, and forever.

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