Homily For The 3rd Sunday Of Easter, Year A.
Acts 2:14, 22-23; Psalm 15:1-2, 5, 7-11; 1 Peter 1:17-21, Luke 24:13-35.
“A LONG WALK TO EMMAUS!”
By: Rev. Fr. Charles Onyeka Ezejide.
· Today, we celebrate the third Sunday of Easter. These are indeed uncertain times. We need a good dose of hope and courage in the word and promises of God. There is nothing that makes our hope and joy possible beyond the Easter experience. The Easter experience assures us that since Christ died and rose again, we have a sure hope for an afterlife despite all odds.
While the news that Christ died and is now risen from the dead filled many with Joy and courage, some others were devastated and decided to return to normal life, return to their former ways. They were unsure if that news was anything to go by.
· This
is the story of the two disciples on their way to Emmaus in the gospel reading.
Their names were not given, which means that it could be any of us. For them,
Jesus had disappointed them by dying in the way he did, since he is now buried,
and his body was probably stolen, with conflicting reports. Therefore, the
religious empire they thought they would build around the name Jesus has
crumbled.
· Hence,
these disciples, not wanting to completely lose out, decided to return to their
former way of life in Emmaus, after all, the former way is still tempting and
attractive. Though a long distance away, they were prepared to go through it
rather than remain in uncertainty.
· Dearly
beloved in Christ, throughout the season of Lent, we journeyed with Jesus for
40 days from Emmaus, from our various wildernesses of sin to a life of grace
and righteousness through our various Lenten disciplines and observances.
· We
too may not be different from these two disciples, who are disappointed that
Jesus had to die and may have since reached our own various Emmaus. Lent and
Easter have come and gone; we must return to business as usual – a life of sin
and recklessness.
· Today,
Jesus comes to join us on our Journey to prevent us from returning to sin, but
to continue to dwell in Jerusalem, which represents a life of grace and
holiness. Hence, he makes himself known to us in the breaking of bread. Today,
also at this mass, he will be broken and received by you; let that be an
important moment of a complete turnaround for you, just like the two disciples.
· In
the first reading (Acts 2:14, 22-33), we see that while the other disciples
were running away, Peter stayed back in Jerusalem to continue to witness the
power of the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
· This
is exactly the courage that is expected of every good Christian who has passed
through the rigour of the Lenten discipline and is now basking in the Easter
Joy that Christ is risen.
·
If Jesus died and rose again, then we have
a sure hope that even if we die while witnessing a life of grace, he will
surely raise us. But unfortunately, many of us have since returned to Emmaus,
abandoning all we imbibed during the Lenten season. Today, the Lord invites us
to self-realisation and for us not to make a mockery of his sacrificial death
on the cross.
·
For many who have returned to a normal
life of sin while waiting for the next Lenten season to “repent”, Jesus invites
you today that it is not too late to decide to return to grace because the
second reading (1 Peter 1:17-21), clearly tells us that God has no favourites
and judges everyone according to his deeds, it means that if we repent, he will
surely forgive and accept us back.
·
In that same reading, St. Peter warns us
that we “must be scrupulously careful as long as you are living away from your
home” (1 Peter 1:17). It simply means that we must be very careful while living
here in this world because it is not our home; our home is in heaven.
Therefore, we must flee from temptations, shun vices, and embrace virtue.
·
When we are tempted to sin, when we are
tempted to abandon the way of God, we must remember that Jesus paid the
ultimate price that you and I may be freed from the claws of sin and death.
·
Today, the Lord challenges us all to
return home, irrespective of how far we have wandered away from him and his
commandments; he is ever ready to receive us and to welcome us. There are no
sins too great that He cannot forgive, so we must come back to Him.
·
Dear friends in Christ, when we decide to return
to obeying the commandments of God and witnessing the power of the resurrection,
that does not immunise us from occasional temptations to stray from the right
path. Like the Psalmist, we must constantly say to God, “Show us, Lord, the
path of life” (Ps. 16:11).
·
May the good Lord bless his word in our
hearts through Christ our Lord, Amen!
·
Happy Sunday!!!
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