Homily: June 6, 2025, Friday of the Seventh Week of Easter (Alive)

 “…and about a certain Jesus who had died but who Paul claimed was alive.”

St. Paul claimed that Jesus was alive. That was the truth. It still is the truth. Jesus IS alive.

This is what makes Christianity so radically different. We do not worship or follow a master who is dead. No. We worship and follow a living God.

St. Paul says, “In Him we live, and move, and have our being.” We live because He lives, we move because He moves, we are because He is. We are preserved not by tradition alone but are sustained by His real presence.

Is God real to you?

Is Jesus alive in your life?

For the Jewish leaders who planned the crucifixion of Jesus, His resurrection was a terrible scandal, a huge threat to their status and authority. I am sure they did believe that Jesus was alive, but they just didn’t want the rest of the Jewish people to believe it. They had to hide the truth.

It might be relatively easy to stop people from believing that a dead person has come alive again, because it is logically and scientifically impossible. But when a non-believing persecutor converts suddenly and completely to become a believing preacher, his declaration is convincing and highly believable.

St. Paul, who was once a fervent persecutor of Christians, became a front-running preacher for Christ. He proclaimed that Jesus is alive.

Paul didn’t proclaim a memory, a philosophy, or a moral teaching. He proclaimed a living person, the truth and the way to immortality. Even when tortured and faced with death, he did not stop proclaiming. It was obvious he did not receive any worldly benefit or reward for his preaching, only trouble and more trouble.

His preaching must thus be true, it was believable. People who heard Paul believed and were converted. The Jewish authorities who heard Paul believed but were disturbed.

Believing that Jesus is alive is a powerful faith. This faith can transform lives and change the world.

Look at the saints and martyrs, missionaries and mystics, ordinary people who were powerful in the way they lived and died, because they truly and fully believed that Jesus is alive.

If we have faith like theirs, we too will be transformed. Our life and death, words and actions, can cause others to believe that Jesus is alive. Amen.


Comments

Read

Homily: December 21, 2025, Fourth Sunday of Advent (Joseph -Trust)

Homily: December 23, 2025 Tuesday of the Fourth week of Advent (Stories)

Homily: December 20, 2025, Saturday of the Third Week of Advent

Homily: December 22, 2025 Monday of the Fourth week of Advent (Surrender)

Homily: December 23, 2024 Monday of the Fourth Week in Advent (Purification)

Homily: September 15, 2025, Memorial of Our Lady of Sorrows (Entrustment)

Homily: December 28, 2024 Feast of the Holy Innocents (Suffering).

Homily: October 21, 2025, Tuesday of the Twenty-ninth Week in Ordinary Time (Sin-Grace)

Homily: November 7, 2025, Friday of the Thirty-first Week in Ordinary Time (Knowledge)

Homily: August 10, 2025, Nineteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time.