Homily: June 7, 2025, Saturday of the Seventh week of Easter (More Stories)

 “There are also many other things that Jesus did, but if these were to be described individually, I do not think the whole world would contain the books that would be written.” 

Imagine that! The whole world would not be able to contain all the details of what Jesus did!

Still, I often wish that we could have more stories about Jesus, more miracles recorded and more details about His life especially in His youth. Even though we have about 20 apocryphal gospels, which offer imaginative accounts of His childhood and youth, most of them were written two centuries after Jesus and can’t be fully verified for accuracy. The four Gospels remain silent about Jesus’ life between the ages of 12 to 30 before His public ministry.

I sometimes wonder if John the evangelist, who took Mary into his home, would have asked her all the details about living with Jesus from His childhood days. Maybe he did and there was so much that he thus explained that the whole world would not be able to contain all, thus what has been written are the essentials of His life.

Today’s first reading is from the final chapter of the Acts of the Apostles. And again, I find myself wishing we had more details, more stories of the other apostles, their missionary journeys, their personal sacrifices and miracles. Perhaps God, in His wisdom, knew we didn’t need more.

Would having much more detail and stories help strengthen our faith better?

Back then, writing wasn’t easy. Papyrus was expensive and limited in availability. Ink was rare. And Jesus’ disciples lived a life of radical poverty, they likely did not have the resources to write more than necessary.

We have to believe that what has been recorded was essential, relevant and sufficient, every detail was inspired by the Holy Spirit, the true Author of Holy Scripture.

More stories do not necessarily lead to better faith. A thicker Bible does not mean more readership. The story of salvation in the Scriptures gives us everything we need to love Jesus, follow Him, and imitate Him.

What is lacking is not the Bible content, but that our eyes are not reading, our minds are not understanding, our hearts are not responding.

If we have faith and love for God, we can read just a few words from the Gospels and feel our hearts burn with joy. Without faith and love, we can read volumes and remain unchanged.

So let us ask for the gift of faith and love, the kind of faith that allows us to see the hands of God at work in Scripture, the quality of love that helps us feel the heart of God yearning for humanity in the holy words. Amen.


Comments

Read

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

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

Homily: November 30,2025 First Sunday of Advent (Peace)

Homily: November 22, 2025, Saturday of the Thirty-Third Week in Ordinary Time (The end).

Homily: November 3, Monday of the Thirty-First Week in Ordinary Time (Poor)

Homily: July 29, 2025 Feast of Saints Martha, Mary and Lazarus (Presence)

Homily: August 30, 2025, Saturday of the Twenty-first Week in Ordinary Time (Work Hard)

Homily: February 17, 2025 Monday of the sixth week in Ordinary time (genration of sin)

Homily: November 1, 2025-All Saints Day (Children of God)

Homily: January 18, 2025, Saturday of the first week in Ordinary Time (High-Priest)