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Daily Gospel Commentary


Fourth Sunday of Easter - Year C
Commentary of the day
Saint Gregory the Great (c.540-604), Pope, Doctor of the Church
Homilies on the Gospel, no.15[14] (trans. ©Cistercian publications Inc., 1990; cf breviary 4th Sunday of Easter)

"I give them eternal life"

The Lord says: “My sheep hear my voice, I know them and they follow me; I give them eternal life”. A little earlier he said to them: “Anyone who enters by me will be saved; he will go in out, and will find pasture”. (Jn 10,9) He will go in to faith; he will out from faith to vision, from belief to contemplation; will find pasture in eternal refreshment.

The Good Shepherd's sheep will pasture because whoever follows him with a guileless is nourished with a food of eternal freshness. What are the pastures of these sheep but the eternal joys of an ever-green paradise? The pasture of the elect is the countenance of God person. When we see him perfectly our hearts are endlessly satisfied with the food of life...

Let us seek these pastures, dearly beloved! There we may enjoy the celebration of so many citizens. Let the festival of those who rejoice attract us... Let us enkindle our hearts, my friends, let our faith grow warm again for what it believes, let our desire for heavenly things take fire. To love thus is to be already on the way. Let no adversity recall us from the joy of inner festivity: no difficulty on his journey alters the desire of a person wanting to go to some particular place. Let no seductive good fortune lead us astray: he is a foolish traveler who sees pleasant meadows on his journey and forgets where he is going.


18 posted on 04/20/2013 10:47:43 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All
Arlington Catholic Herald

GOSPEL COMMENTARY JN 10:27-30
Hear! Hear!
Fr. Paul Scalia

What does it mean to hear? Modern culture understands hearing (as it does most things) in mechanical terms. Something is heard simply when the sound causes a reaction in the listening device. The interaction between the hearer and the thing heard is just a matter of physics. The sound waves hit the receiver that gauges or registers them. Unfortunately, many human conversations fare no better. People in dialogue (or so they think) allow the sounds to register but do not allow the words to make a difference. The words or the information might be acknowledged (“Oh, that’s interesting”), but they are not assimilated.

The ancient Jews had a deeper sense of what it means to hear. For them it meant not merely to take in sounds by way of the ear but to be changed by the truths that one heard. To hear necessarily meant to respond appropriately to the voice of the speaker. Thus the Hebrew language does not have a distinct word for “obey.” There is only the one word — “shema” — for both “hear” and “obey.” In short, to hear means to respond properly — to obey. We are created for the truth in such a way that when we hear it we ought to conform ourselves to it immediately. Even more, we are created for Jesus in such a profound way that we are meant to respond and conform ourselves to Him as the Word of the Father.

“My sheep hear my voice” (Jn 10:27). Our Lord’s words proceed not from the modern but from the Hebrew understanding of “hear.” His sheep do not simply listen to His voice, nod an acknowledgement of it, and then go about their business as before. His sheep obey His word. They conform their lives to what they hear. If we are unwillingly to obey — because of an exaggerated sense of self, an attachment to sin, hardness of heart, etc. — then we cripple our hearing.

And if we get our hearing wrong we will also getting our believing wrong, for “faith comes from what is heard” (Rom 10:17). A hearing problem leads inevitably to a believing problem. The Virgin Mary — the greatest example of faith — is also the greatest example of hearing. Church Fathers would at times say that Mary conceived through the ear. That is, she came to believe by genuine hearing, by obeying the word spoken to her. “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord. May it be done to me according to your word,” she said (Lk 1:38).

And so it is that the world’s crisis of faith (which Pope Benedict hoped to address by the Year of Faith) is really a crisis of hearing. We hear only in the modern, mechanized sense. We might allow the sound of the Gospel to register in our ears, but we do not allow it to resonate in our hearts. We do not want to obey — that is, to change our lives — so we do not hear, however much we might listen.

Hearing is an activity. We must apply ourselves. We find sheep (whom Our Lord praises for their hearing) in quiet places, with no one other than their shepherd around. This indicates that to cultivate the power to hear we must remove ourselves from the world on occasion and remain just with the Shepherd. We will have difficulty hearing Him in the midst of everything else.

“My sheep hear my voice” (Jn 10:27). This is a declarative sentence. Perhaps the demands of it become clearer if we render it as follows: “Those who hear and obey my voice become my sheep.” We cannot hope to be His sheep, therefore, without first the willingness to obey, to be formed by his word, to hear.

Fr. Scalia is Arlington Bishop Paul S. Loverde’s delegate for clergy.


19 posted on 04/20/2013 11:08:05 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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