Homilly For The Seventh Sunday Of Easter, Year C.
Acts 7:55-60; Psalm 97:1.2.6.7.9; Apocalypse 22:12-14,16-17:20; John
17:20-26.
“FORGIVE
AND FORGET!”
By: Rev. Fr. Charles Onyeka Ezejide
· Today,
on this seventh Sunday of Easter, we celebrate God’s love for us. We are
gradually winding down on the Easter season and predisposing ourselves for the
outpouring of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. We have the Holy Spirit already. But
always, we can renew that desire to share more in the Spirit and to have the
courage to live and preach our faith.
·
Today, the church wants us to reflect on
the theme of forgiveness. Science has proven that there are a lot of strange
illnesses around, which are more psychological than physical. They are
psychological because of the bottled-up anger in the minds of many, so much
unforgiveness, so much hatred, so much malice, and so much stress and anxiety.
·
One may ask in the face of all these
strange illnesses and maladies why the church still expects us to forgive those
who wrong us unconditionally (Matt. 6:12). It may be possible to forgive, but
is it also possible to forget?
·
Talking about forgiving and forgetting, our
Lord Jesus becomes our model: “I, it is who blots out your transgressions for your
own sake and shall forget your sins” (Is. 43:25). This is the first time
weakness is associated with God. Not remembering our sins presupposes weakness.
But it is not a weakness per se, because it is a deliberate choice for our
sake. God chooses not to remember our sins, not because of his inability, but
because of his love for us as God. If God can forgive and forget, how much more
you and I?
·
We may argue that he is God, therefore, he
could choose to forgive and forget. We as humans may not be able to do the same.
Do not forget that the same God created us together with our memories. Hence,
he has the best of memories, yet he chooses to forget our sins. We have no
option but to forgive and forget.
·
In the first reading, Stephen filled with
the Holy Spirit and fully aware of the reward of forgiveness and the
consequence of unforgiveness after being beaten and stoned, in that
excruciating pain, still found time to pray for the forgiveness of his executioners
“Lord, do not hold this sin against them” (Acts 7:60).
·
For Stephen, he was in great agony; his
only crime was believing the good news and preaching the message of salvation.
Yet he paid the ultimate price for them, not forgetting to forgive and to
forget.
·
The second reading (Rev. 22:12-14.16-17:20)
reminds us of the urgency of forgiveness because the Lord is coming to reward
us all according to our deeds. Everyone will get what he or she deserves (Rev.
22:12). To wash our robes clean means to symbolically keep our hearts pure and
spotless, free from all forms of malice and hatred, ungodly refusal to forgive.
When we vow not to forgive, we should remember that “If you, O Lord, should
mark our guilt, who would survive?” (Ps. 130:3).
·
Unforgiveness breeds disunity among
believers. The gospel reading today (Jn. 17:20-26), which is one of the farewell
discourses Jesus had with his disciples and by extension all of us (Jn. 17:20),
he left them with the last wish and a prayer that we all be reconciled and be united.
·
Dear friends in Christ, how can we be
reconciled and united if we do not forgive and forget? True forgiveness and
reconciliation presuppose that we forgive and forget. Some of us, when we claim
to have forgiven, merely practice avoidance. We say, “I have forgiven you from
my heart, but please, I do not want to have anything to do with you”, “I have
forgiven you, but just go your way”. If we truly forgive, words like these
cannot and should not be heard among us Christians.
·
Since we live in a human society, people
will always hurt us knowingly or unknowingly, but if the Lord does not count
how many times we have wronged him, we too must learn to forgive and forget
unconditionally. Yes, it is possible to forgive and forget! We may not forget people’s
wrongdoings after we have forgiven them because we are human beings with
cognitive faculties and sound memory. What it simply means is that when we
truly forgive and we encounter the person who has hurt us, we no longer remind
them of it, we remember it with pain, we nurse our pain, or desire vengeance,
or pray that something bad happens to that person.
·
Humanly speaking, it may sound and seem
impossible, but with the grace of the Holy Spirit, it is possible. The first
reading says, “Stephen, filled with the Holy Spirit, was able to forgive his
executioners. A lot of people may have hurt us too; they may have caused us so many
pains and heartbreaks in many ways, so many disappointments, and failed promises.
But with the grace of the Holy Spirit, we must forgive and forget. If not for
the love of God and the fear of damnation, then we should forgive and forget
for the sake of our health. When you refuse to forgive, you look older than
your age, you live in fear, you are always thinking and frowning, and you
suffer chronic illnesses like ulcers, high Blood pressure, amnesia, etc.
·
No matter how people have hurt us, if we
are still alive, it means that the door to forgive and forget is still open to
us; today is the favourable time to do it, tomorrow may be too late. A lot of
us are still living with the regrets of our missed chances to forgive those who
wronged us, and they are now dead.
·
The Holy Spirit is the primary agent of
true forgiveness and reconciliation. We must open ourselves to be transformed: change
our hearts of stone to hearts of flesh, that we may be united, reconciled, and
forgive and forget.
·
Today, we are challenged to pick up our
phone to call our long-standing enemy and tell him or her, “I have forgiven you”!
Call your husband or wife whom you no longer want to have anything to do with,
and say, “I have forgiven you”! We must use the opportunity today to empty our
hearts of every bitterness and pain. Today, we must truly forgive and forget.
May God, who is king, most high above all the earth (Ps. 96:1.9), through the
power of the Holy Spirit, give us the grace to do so now and always. Amen!
·
Happy Sunday!!!
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