Homily: April 20, 2024 Saturday of the third week of Easter (True peace).

 "The Church throughout all Judea, Galilee, and Samaria was at peace. She was being built up and walked in the fear of the Lord, and with the consolation of the Holy Spirit, she grew in numbers.”

What peace did the early Church have?

There was a period around when I was four or five years old, gangs of robbers were attacking the nearby villages. They came from a neighboring state and broke into many houses. They stole and robbed everything in these houses. The families who tried to fight back would be brutally killed. No one knew when they would suddenly attack again.

My family was terrified because there was one family, whom my parents knew, was robbed and killed. We were afraid they would come to our village, to our home. We were afraid to be robbed and killed. We didn’t have any police protection, no helpline to call, no one to save us. 

Some evenings when my papa was delayed in returning home from the farm, we children would be so frightened and anxious, worried that the robbers would come and there would be no one to protect us. All seven of us children would huddle with grandpa and grandma in their room. We did not open the door if someone knocked. Only when papa reached home did we feel at peace. Even though we knew that our papa would be too weak and too kind to fight back the robbers if they had come, somehow his presence at home with us was enough to give us peace and courage.

So, peace is not the absence of trouble, not the lack of danger, not void of problems. So, what gives us peace?

If we look at the early Christian communities again, how could they be at peace when they faced constant persecution and the risk of death every day?

The first reading from a few days ago, we heard about Jews like Saul “entering house after house and dragging out men and women; he handed them over for imprisonment.” Many were arrested, tortured and killed just for believing in Jesus. How could they be at peace?

Yes, they could.

The peace they had was not of this world, it was the true peace of Jesus. When we truly believe in Him, we will not worry about what is going on around us, we will not be anxious about what will happen ahead of us, because we have total trust that Jesus is with us always and even if our enemies kill our bodies and we lose this life, we will simply enter heaven faster and enjoy eternal life with Him.

True peace comes from faith, not fear, as expressed in Psalm 23: “Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me.”

Jesus is with us, the Holy Spirit is our consolation and is actively present in our Church. Let us close our eyes for a moment and remind ourselves with confidence. Jesus is with me, I fear no evil, His peace He gives to me. Amen.


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