Suy Niệm Tin Mừng
Thứ Bẩy Tuần thứ 6 Phục Sinh
Trong bài đọc thứ Nhất, chúng ta thấy, ông Appôlô là người có học thức và có được cách ăn nói hùng hồn. Hai điều kiệm rất quan trọng cho người đàn ông trong thế giới thời cổ đại. Ông đã được Chúa Thánh thần nung đốt trong niềm tin vào Chúa Giêsu và rao giảng to dân ngoại về Chúa Giêsu Kitô. Mặc dầu thế, sự hiểu biết về Tin Mừng và phép rửa của Chúa Kitô của ông chưa được đầy đủ, và ông đã nhờ sự chỉ bảo của bà Priscilla và ông Aquila để ông có thể hiểu biết vể Chúa hơn. Tài hùng biện hay sự thong minh của một người không nhất thiết là đã hiểu biết tất cả về chan lý và sự thật.
Chúng ta không bao giờ có thể nghĩ rằng chúng ta có tất cả những câu trả lời cho mọi thứ, và chúng ta nên cởi mở vả sẵn sang, khiêm thốn để hõi hỏi nơi những người khác. Điều này cũng sẽ giúp rất nhiều cho chúng ta để chúng ta có thể thừa nhận những sai lầm và sửa sai những ý kiến của chúng ta. Không một ai có thể hiểu biết mọi thứ và có tất cả những câu trả lời cho những thắc mắc của con người.
Trong bữa ăn tối sau cùng, Chúa Giêsu nói với các môn đệ rằng ngày sẽ đến Chúa Giêsu sẽ phải trở về với Chúa Cha, Ngày đó Ngài sẽ ban Chúa Thánh Linh xuông trên những ngưòi theo và Tin vào Ngài. Họ có thể cầu xin Thiên Chúa bất cứ điều gì họ cần một cách trực tiếp trong danh Ngài . Ngài đã kêu gọi họ nên trưởng thành trong tâm linh hơn là phụ thuộc vào người khác như trẻ con hoặc thụ động.
Tất cả chúng ta đã được Chúa Giêsu ban trao cho mỗi người quyền thiêng liêng như Ngài đã ban cho các môn đệ. Nhưng đây không phải là một việc cho không, biếu không, chúng ta phải thực hiện những điều cam kết với Chúa như các môn đệ để trở thành nhựng môn đệ thực sự của Chúa. Chúa Giêsu sẽ rất vui mừng nếu chúng ta tiếp tục công việc mà Ngài đã bắt đầu. Lạy Chúa, xin ban cho chúng con những hồng ân và ơn Chúa Thánh Thần của Ngài để hướng Dẫn chúng con tiếp tục sống và thực thi ý Chúa.
Saturday Sixth Week of Easter
Apollos was educated and eloquent, both of which were very important in the ancient world. He was on fire for his new-found faith in Jesus. But his understanding was incomplete, and it was up to Priscilla and Aquila to set him straight. Eloquence or brilliance are not the same as truth. We should never think we have all the answers, and we should be open to correction from others. It would also help immensely if we could admit when we are wrong and revise our opinions. No one has all the answers.
At the last supper, Jesus told his disciples that the day was coming when they would no longer ask him for anything. At first, it sounded as if he was cutting them off, but that was not the case. He was speaking of their empowerment. Since Jesus was returning to the Father, he was empowering his followers with the Spirit. They would be able to ask God directly in Jesus’ name for whatever they needed. He was calling them to spiritual maturity rather than childish dependence or passivity.
We are offered the same spiritual empowerment that he gave his disciples. But this is not a free pass — we have to make the commitment to be real disciples. Jesus would be delighted if we continued the work that he began and do even greater things than he. Lord, grant me the gift of Your Spirit.
Saturday of the Sixth Week of Easter
Jesus said to his disciples: “Amen, amen, I say to you, whatever you ask the Father in my name he will give you. Until now you have not asked anything in my name; ask and you will receive, so that your joy may be complete.” John 16:23–24
During Jesus’ Last Supper Discourse, the theme of praying to the Father in Jesus’ name comes up repeatedly. Each time, Jesus reassures His disciples that whatever they ask for in His name, the Father will grant. That’s quite a promise! How do we make this promise a reality?
Today’s Gospel is the third and final time this theme appears. Jesus informs the disciples, “Until now you have not asked anything in my name…” He highlights this to ensure they understand what awaits them: praying in His name will bring about complete joy: “Ask and you will receive, so that your joy may be complete.”
Complete joy is not a fleeting emotion or the satisfaction of earthly desires. It is the deep and abiding happiness that flows from union with God—the fulfillment of our deepest longings. This joy is rooted in the very life of the Trinity, which we begin to share when we enter into a relationship with the Father through Christ. It is a foretaste of the eternal joy of heaven, where our love for God will find its perfection.
Though every rational person desires this joy, we often extinguish it in our hearts by choosing sin. Sin deceives us into believing it will bring happiness, but it ultimately separates us from the source of true joy—God Himself. Jesus instructs us that to receive this joy, we must ask for it in His name. But what does it mean to pray in His name? Jesus provides the answer: “On that day you will ask in my name, and I do not tell you that I will ask the Father for you. For the Father himself loves you, because you have loved me and have come to believe that I came from God” (John 16:26–27).
Praying in Jesus’ name means
loving Jesus by believing that He is God and treating Him as God. This is
authentic prayer. It is an act of divine worship of the Son of God. Worship is
the highest form of love because it acknowledges Jesus not only as our Savior
but as our God. Worship goes beyond charity and is the form of love owed
uniquely to God. This worship transforms us, drawing us into the Son’s perfect
relationship with the Father. Through worship, we are united with Christ so
intimately that we become one with Him, making His prayer to the Father our
own.
This oneness with Christ earns us the Father’s love because the Father loves the Son perfectly. As we unite ourselves with Jesus through worship, the Father looks upon us and sees His beloved Son. Worship is not merely one aspect of Christian life; it is central to everything Jesus teaches us. It is the means by which we attain the fullness of joy and participate in the life of the Trinity.
Reflect today on your desire for complete joy and the means to attain it: divine worship. When you pray, do you only ask for favors, seek consolation, or pursue understanding? Or do you move deeper into the heart of prayer by worshiping God with all your heart, mind, soul, and strength? One of the most profound ways to worship Jesus is through Eucharistic adoration. Spending time on our knees before Jesus, praising Him because He is worthy of our praise and is God Almighty, must be the foundation of our prayer. Believe that the Father will grant everything you pray for in the name of His Son. Pray that way through divine worship so that the Father will bestow countless blessings on you and the world through you.
My divine Lord Jesus, I believe that You are God and worship You with all the powers of my soul. I praise You, adore You, and glorify You as my God and my all. Please deepen my worship and transform me by it, so that as I pray, the Father hears Your sacred voice and answers Your every prayer. Jesus, I trust in You.
Saturday of the Fifth Week of Easter 2026
Opening Prayer: Lord God, I thank you today for introducing me through your Son and Spirit into your own divine life. I do not in any way deserve this great gift and yet you generously offer it to me out of love. I pray that all people may enjoy the gift of divine life.
Encountering the Word of God
1. Paul’s Third Missionary Journey: The First Reading follows the end of Paul’s second missionary journey (A.D. 50-52) and narrates the beginning of his third journey (A.D. 53-57). During his second journey, Paul had stayed in Corinth for about a year and a half (Acts 18:11). Paul left Timothy and Silas to care for the Church in Corinth, and departed the city with Aquila and Priscilla, a married Jewish Christian couple who had been deported from Rome by the Emperor Claudius in A.D. 49. The party stopped at Ephesus, and Paul left the couple behind to evangelize there. The city of Ephesus would become the focal point of Paul’s third journey. Paul made his way to Antioch, his home base, and remained there “some time” (Acts 18:23). The First Reading picks up with Paul departing on his third journey and proceeding through Galatia and Phrygia, the area that he had earlier evangelized.
2. The Ministry of Apollos: The First Reading describes the preaching of Apollos in the city of
Ephesus during Paul’s absence and before Paul’s arrival (Acts 19:1). Apollos
had a Greek name but was a Jew from Alexandria in Egypt. While
Apollos was able to preach accurately about Jesus, about John’s preaching on
preparing the way of the Lord, and about the baptism of John, Apollos needed
Priscilla and Aquila to explain the Way of God more accurately. Apollos knew
about some of Jesus’ deeds and sayings, but not with the full truth of Jesus’
identity as the Christ, Jesus’ mission, Jesus’ death and resurrection, the
mystery of the Church, and the Sacrament of Baptism. Priscilla and Aquila
likely taught Apollos that “the Lord proclaimed by John is the crucified and
risen Lord Jesus and that ‘the Way of the Lord’ is the path of discipleship
that one enters through baptism into Christ” (Kurz, Acts of the
Apostles, 288). Aquila and Priscilla had been with Paul in Corinth for a
year and a half and had learned much from Paul. They were a husband-and-wife
team who were able to pass on the doctrine of the Christian faith and build
Apollos up in the faith.
3. The Primitive Church: After this encounter with Priscilla and Aquila, Apollos left Ephesus and
went to Corinth in Achaia and proclaimed from the Scriptures that Jesus was the
long-awaited Messiah (the Christ). “The success of Apollos in establishing the
faith was noted by Paul (1 Corinthians 3:6), who said that Apollos had watered
what Paul had planted. A group of Christians, however, formed a separatist
faction in the Corinthian community in Apollos’ name. Paul did not consider
Apollos at all responsible for the formation of the faction (1 Corinthians
3:3-9; 4:6), as Paul clearly respected Apollos as a fellow laborer. Instead
Paul tries in 1 Corinthians to break down the divisions among the Corinthian
Christians” (Catholic Bible Dictionary, “Apollos,” 58). We know from
Paul’s First Letter to the Corinthians, that the house of Priscilla and Aquila
in Ephesus was used as a primitive Church (1 Corinthians 16:19). “Hence, we
come to know the most important role that this couple played in the environment
of the primitive Church: that of welcoming in their own house the group of
local Christians when they gathered to listen to the Word of God and to
celebrate the Eucharist. … In the house of Aquila and Priscilla, therefore, the
Church gathered, the convocation of Christ, which celebrates here the Sacred
Mysteries” (Benedict XVI, February 7, 2007). Aquila and Priscilla would one day
return to Rome, where they once again welcomed the church into their home
(Romans 16:3-5).
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus,
you have revealed to me the mystery of divine life and how I am called to share
in that life. Teach me to pray and converse with the Father in union with you.
May the Holy Spirit animate my prayer and inspire me to ask for good things from
the heavenly Father.
Saturday of the Fifth Week of Easter
Jesus said to his disciples: “If the world hates you, realize that it hated me first. If you belonged to the world, the world would love its own; but because you do not belong to the world, and I have chosen you out of the world, the world hates you.” John 15:18–19
No one wants to be hated. Yet our Lord makes it very clear that because He has “chosen you out of the world, the world hates you.” He doesn’t say that the world “might” hate you or that you “might” suffer some injustice. He declares that those whom He has chosen out of the world will be hated by the world. This is one of the paradoxes of our faith—living in Christ brings love from Him but hatred and persecution from the world. Yet this hatred is a sign of a deeper reality: We are no longer bound by the fleeting values of this fallen world but are participants in God’s eternal Kingdom, where joy, peace, and true freedom are found.
The “world” in this context is not Creation itself. All that God created is good. The world represents the fallen spiritual order, caught up in sin. Those who “belong to the world” are those who conform to diabolical values, such as seeking power for power’s sake, wealth as a selfish means to fulfillment, or carnal indulgence in an attempt to satiate oneself. Living in accord with the values of the fallen world is foolishness. It leads to a superficial life that cannot ultimately satisfy our deeper spiritual cravings and shares in the envy and hatred of the demons.
Breaking free of worldly attachments is difficult at first because those who have become worldly are blinded by their disordered desires. Sin is a slippery slope: compromising even in small ways to gain acceptance risks losing clarity of purpose and rootedness in Christ. The more people sin, the more miserable they become, and the more miserable they become, the more they seek satisfaction from sin. Only when that cycle is broken does peace begin to take hold and freedom is found. Yet, in the midst of this struggle to detach from worldly illusions, Jesus offers a profound truth: “I have chosen you out of the world.”
To be chosen by Christ is to be set apart for a life of divine purpose and eternal fulfillment. This call draws us into communion with Him, transforming suffering into a path to glory. The disciples’ identity is not self-made but rooted in His choice. This divine election sets them apart for a mission that challenges the temptation to worldly ambitions. Their call to holiness and truth inevitably provokes hostility because it shines a light on the darkness of the world’s sin and draws others to conversion. Yet with this call also comes the promise of eternal joy.
This raises an important question for each of us: Does the world love or hate you? Do you fit in or stand in opposition to worldly values? If we try to gain the world’s love, from those who have embraced worldly ambitions and values, then we will find ourselves compromising to gain acceptance. But if we remain steadfast, even when persecuted, we share in Jesus’ victory and the promise of eternal life.
Jesus tells us this sober truth as a way of preparing us for the inevitable: “Remember the word I spoke to you, ‘No slave is greater than his master.’ If they persecuted me, they will also persecute you” (John 15:20). We must remember His word, His warning, so that if we experience persecution, hatred, or any form of judgment or criticism, we will not become discouraged or fearful. Understanding the consequences of living contrary to worldly values will prepare us for the rejection that our Lord Himself experienced.
Reflect today on being chosen
by God and the consequences of being called out of the world. Consider any ways
that living your faith openly results in criticism or persecution. As you do,
recall that you are called to be like Jesus, including being given a share in
His sufferings—but also a share in His glory. As Saint Paul reminds us, “I
consider that the sufferings of this present time are as nothing compared with
the glory to be revealed for us” (Romans 8:18). Do not give in to fear.
Remain courageous and confident that along with Jesus’ call comes the grace to
respond and endure whatever comes your way, knowing that the joy of the
Resurrection awaits.
Victorious Lord, You have
conquered the world, sin, and death, and You have called me out of this fallen
world into the light of Your grace. Strengthen me with courage and
steadfastness when I face persecution for my faith. Help me to trust in Your
victory, to endure with hope, and to find joy in the promise of sharing in Your
eternal glory. Jesus, I trust in You.
Saturday of the Sixth Week of Easter 2026
Opening Prayer: Lord God,
guide me always with your Spirit. Help me to be docile to the Spirit’s urgings
so that my faith may work through love and charity to extend your Kingdom.
Encountering the Word of God
1. Paul and Timothy: After the Council of Jerusalem in A.D. 49, Paul and Barnabas, accompanied by Judas and Silas, went to Antioch to deliver the decree of the Council (Acts 15:22-23, 30). Paul and Silas continued on to the churches of Syria and Cilicia and delivered the decisions (dogmata) that had been reached by the apostles and presbyters (priests) who were in Jerusalem (Acts 16:4). “IN the nearby city of Lystra, they were joined by Timothy, ‘the son of a Jewish woman’ (Acts 16:1) who had probably become a disciple during the earlier journey of Paul and Barnabas (see Acts 14:6-7). Although Timothy’s father was a Gentile, he would have been considered a Jew by other Jews on account of his mother, albeit one who was living in violation of the Deuteronomic Law due to his lack of circumcision. Paul therefore circumcised Timothy to avoid giving scandal to other Jews” (Pimentel, Envoy of the Messiah, 5).
2. Paul’s Second Missionary Journey: The Acts of the Apostles narrates the beginning of
Paul’s Second Missionary Journey (A.D. 50-52). Paul set out and invited
Barnabas to come with him, saying, “Come, let us return and visit the brethren
in every city where we proclaimed the word of the Lord, and see how they are”
(Acts 15:37). Barnabas wanted to take Mark with them, but Paul disagreed with
Barnabas because Mark had abandoned them during the first missionary journey.
Thus, Paul and Barnabas decided to separate: Barnabas took Mark with him and
sailed to the cities of his homeland in Cyprus. Paul, on the other hand, took
Silas with him and went through Syria and Cilicia and returned to the cities of
Derbe, Lystra, Iconium, and Antioch in Pisidia. During their journeys, both
Barnabas and Paul were able to communicate the recent decision of the Council
of Jerusalem to the newly founded churches. The Council had decided that
Gentiles who came to believe in Jesus did not have to be circumcised according
to the Law of Moses. There were still some difficulties in accepting this
teaching. We see this in Paul’s decision to circumcise Timothy. Paul did this
“on account of the Jews” of the region and because Timothy was considered a
Jew, and not a Gentile, on his mother’s side. As Paul handed on the teaching of
the Council to the recently founded churches, they grew stronger in faith and
increased in number.
3. Persecution Awaiting in Macedonia: After ministering to the churches in Galatia, Paul and
Silas wanted to go north toward Bithynia, but were prevented by the Spirit of
Jesus and led instead to the port city of Troas. During the night, Paul had a
vision of a Macedonian imploring him to cross over to Macedonia and help them.
In the morning, Paul and Silas discerned that this was God’s will for them:
they would preach the Gospel of the Kingdom in Europe. At Troas, they probably
met up with Luke, who accompanied them for a time and set sail with them to
Macedonia. During their evangelizing mission, Paul and Silas suffered
persecution in Macedonia, especially in the city of Philippi: they were
stripped, beaten with rods, and imprisoned. Jesus’ Last Supper discourse in the
Gospel of John refers to the persecutions that the Apostles would endure as
they spread the Gospel to all nations. Jesus’ disciples must know that the
world will hate them because it first hated him. Jesus tells us (in John 7:7)
that the world, considered here as something negative, hates him because he
shows the world that its sinful ways are evil. As the Lamb of God, however,
Jesus has come to take away the sin of the world and purify and renew it.
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus,
when I contemplate your life, I see how you were driven by the Spirit in every
moment. Your apostles, too, were led by the Spirit. I need to imitate your
example and that of the saints, and discern in prayer how the Spirit is guiding
my thoughts, words, and actions.
Saturday of the Sixth Week of Easter
“I have told you this in figures of speech. The hour is coming when I will no longer speak to you in figures but I will tell you clearly about the Father.” John 16:25
When is it that Jesus will speak clearly about the Father? When is that “hour” of which He speaks? First, this “hour” can be understood to be the time after His death, Resurrection and Ascension to Heaven. It is then when the Holy Spirit will come upon them at Pentecost to open their minds to understand all that He has taught with much greater insight and clarity. But in John’s Gospel, the “hour” is also a reference to His death on the Cross. It is His hour of glory, the hour in which the Son of Man saves us through His holy passion. Therefore, this statement of Jesus should be read within the context of Him alluding to His coming passion. Recall that this sermon Jesus gives is part of His “Last Supper Discourse.” It is given immediately prior to Jesus going out to the Garden of Gethsemane to be arrested.
When we consider this “hour” to be the passion and death of Jesus on the Cross, we should be aware of the fact that His act of dying is not only a saving act of redemption, it is also one of the clearest ways in which He speaks about His Father in Heaven. Jesus’ suffering and death does, in fact, reveal the Father to the disciples in ways that His “figures of speech” could not reveal. Jesus’ veiled language was spoken as truth but as truth that could not be fully communicated. However, Jesus’ freely embraced suffering and death does clearly communicate the Father in the most profound way possible. The Cross is pure love, and the Father is pure love. Jesus’ death on the Cross in obedience to the will of the Father reveals to all that the Father loves us so much that He was willing to sacrifice His only begotten Son so that if we but believe in Him, we will inherit eternal life.
The message of the Cross is a true teaching about the love of the Father. It’s a teaching that took place through an act of the most pure and sacrificial love imaginable. The Cross was Jesus speaking “clearly about the Father” insofar as it reveals the depth of the Father’s love for all humanity. If you find this difficult to understand, then you are not alone. The disciples themselves struggled with this. That is why they ultimately needed the Holy Spirit to come upon them to open their minds. We too need the Holy Spirit if the veil is to be lifted and we are to comprehend this most powerful message of God’s infinite love.
Reflect, today, upon Jesus’ burning desire to lift the veil of His teaching and to reveal to you, clearly, the depth of the Father’s love for you. Allow the Holy Spirit to open your mind to this revelation as it is given through the Crucifixion. Pray for that gift. Listen to Jesus tell you He desires to give you this understanding and then await the grace you need to see and understand the very heart of the Father and His divine love for you.
My precious Jesus, Your hour of glory upon the Cross is the clearest and fullest revelation of the Father’s love. On the Cross, You show us all how deeply we are loved by You and Your Father in Heaven. Please do open my mind, dear Lord, to all You wish to reveal to me, so that as I come to know You, I will also come to know Your Father in Heaven. Jesus, I trust in You.
Trong bài đọc thứ Nhất, chúng ta thấy, ông Appôlô là người có học thức và có được cách ăn nói hùng hồn. Hai điều kiệm rất quan trọng cho người đàn ông trong thế giới thời cổ đại. Ông đã được Chúa Thánh thần nung đốt trong niềm tin vào Chúa Giêsu và rao giảng to dân ngoại về Chúa Giêsu Kitô. Mặc dầu thế, sự hiểu biết về Tin Mừng và phép rửa của Chúa Kitô của ông chưa được đầy đủ, và ông đã nhờ sự chỉ bảo của bà Priscilla và ông Aquila để ông có thể hiểu biết vể Chúa hơn. Tài hùng biện hay sự thong minh của một người không nhất thiết là đã hiểu biết tất cả về chan lý và sự thật.
Chúng ta không bao giờ có thể nghĩ rằng chúng ta có tất cả những câu trả lời cho mọi thứ, và chúng ta nên cởi mở vả sẵn sang, khiêm thốn để hõi hỏi nơi những người khác. Điều này cũng sẽ giúp rất nhiều cho chúng ta để chúng ta có thể thừa nhận những sai lầm và sửa sai những ý kiến của chúng ta. Không một ai có thể hiểu biết mọi thứ và có tất cả những câu trả lời cho những thắc mắc của con người.
Trong bữa ăn tối sau cùng, Chúa Giêsu nói với các môn đệ rằng ngày sẽ đến Chúa Giêsu sẽ phải trở về với Chúa Cha, Ngày đó Ngài sẽ ban Chúa Thánh Linh xuông trên những ngưòi theo và Tin vào Ngài. Họ có thể cầu xin Thiên Chúa bất cứ điều gì họ cần một cách trực tiếp trong danh Ngài . Ngài đã kêu gọi họ nên trưởng thành trong tâm linh hơn là phụ thuộc vào người khác như trẻ con hoặc thụ động.
Tất cả chúng ta đã được Chúa Giêsu ban trao cho mỗi người quyền thiêng liêng như Ngài đã ban cho các môn đệ. Nhưng đây không phải là một việc cho không, biếu không, chúng ta phải thực hiện những điều cam kết với Chúa như các môn đệ để trở thành nhựng môn đệ thực sự của Chúa. Chúa Giêsu sẽ rất vui mừng nếu chúng ta tiếp tục công việc mà Ngài đã bắt đầu. Lạy Chúa, xin ban cho chúng con những hồng ân và ơn Chúa Thánh Thần của Ngài để hướng Dẫn chúng con tiếp tục sống và thực thi ý Chúa.
Apollos was educated and eloquent, both of which were very important in the ancient world. He was on fire for his new-found faith in Jesus. But his understanding was incomplete, and it was up to Priscilla and Aquila to set him straight. Eloquence or brilliance are not the same as truth. We should never think we have all the answers, and we should be open to correction from others. It would also help immensely if we could admit when we are wrong and revise our opinions. No one has all the answers.
At the last supper, Jesus told his disciples that the day was coming when they would no longer ask him for anything. At first, it sounded as if he was cutting them off, but that was not the case. He was speaking of their empowerment. Since Jesus was returning to the Father, he was empowering his followers with the Spirit. They would be able to ask God directly in Jesus’ name for whatever they needed. He was calling them to spiritual maturity rather than childish dependence or passivity.
We are offered the same spiritual empowerment that he gave his disciples. But this is not a free pass — we have to make the commitment to be real disciples. Jesus would be delighted if we continued the work that he began and do even greater things than he. Lord, grant me the gift of Your Spirit.
Jesus said to his disciples: “Amen, amen, I say to you, whatever you ask the Father in my name he will give you. Until now you have not asked anything in my name; ask and you will receive, so that your joy may be complete.” John 16:23–24
During Jesus’ Last Supper Discourse, the theme of praying to the Father in Jesus’ name comes up repeatedly. Each time, Jesus reassures His disciples that whatever they ask for in His name, the Father will grant. That’s quite a promise! How do we make this promise a reality?
Today’s Gospel is the third and final time this theme appears. Jesus informs the disciples, “Until now you have not asked anything in my name…” He highlights this to ensure they understand what awaits them: praying in His name will bring about complete joy: “Ask and you will receive, so that your joy may be complete.”
Complete joy is not a fleeting emotion or the satisfaction of earthly desires. It is the deep and abiding happiness that flows from union with God—the fulfillment of our deepest longings. This joy is rooted in the very life of the Trinity, which we begin to share when we enter into a relationship with the Father through Christ. It is a foretaste of the eternal joy of heaven, where our love for God will find its perfection.
Though every rational person desires this joy, we often extinguish it in our hearts by choosing sin. Sin deceives us into believing it will bring happiness, but it ultimately separates us from the source of true joy—God Himself. Jesus instructs us that to receive this joy, we must ask for it in His name. But what does it mean to pray in His name? Jesus provides the answer: “On that day you will ask in my name, and I do not tell you that I will ask the Father for you. For the Father himself loves you, because you have loved me and have come to believe that I came from God” (John 16:26–27).
This oneness with Christ earns us the Father’s love because the Father loves the Son perfectly. As we unite ourselves with Jesus through worship, the Father looks upon us and sees His beloved Son. Worship is not merely one aspect of Christian life; it is central to everything Jesus teaches us. It is the means by which we attain the fullness of joy and participate in the life of the Trinity.
Reflect today on your desire for complete joy and the means to attain it: divine worship. When you pray, do you only ask for favors, seek consolation, or pursue understanding? Or do you move deeper into the heart of prayer by worshiping God with all your heart, mind, soul, and strength? One of the most profound ways to worship Jesus is through Eucharistic adoration. Spending time on our knees before Jesus, praising Him because He is worthy of our praise and is God Almighty, must be the foundation of our prayer. Believe that the Father will grant everything you pray for in the name of His Son. Pray that way through divine worship so that the Father will bestow countless blessings on you and the world through you.
My divine Lord Jesus, I believe that You are God and worship You with all the powers of my soul. I praise You, adore You, and glorify You as my God and my all. Please deepen my worship and transform me by it, so that as I pray, the Father hears Your sacred voice and answers Your every prayer. Jesus, I trust in You.
Opening Prayer: Lord God, I thank you today for introducing me through your Son and Spirit into your own divine life. I do not in any way deserve this great gift and yet you generously offer it to me out of love. I pray that all people may enjoy the gift of divine life.
1. Paul’s Third Missionary Journey: The First Reading follows the end of Paul’s second missionary journey (A.D. 50-52) and narrates the beginning of his third journey (A.D. 53-57). During his second journey, Paul had stayed in Corinth for about a year and a half (Acts 18:11). Paul left Timothy and Silas to care for the Church in Corinth, and departed the city with Aquila and Priscilla, a married Jewish Christian couple who had been deported from Rome by the Emperor Claudius in A.D. 49. The party stopped at Ephesus, and Paul left the couple behind to evangelize there. The city of Ephesus would become the focal point of Paul’s third journey. Paul made his way to Antioch, his home base, and remained there “some time” (Acts 18:23). The First Reading picks up with Paul departing on his third journey and proceeding through Galatia and Phrygia, the area that he had earlier evangelized.
Jesus said to his disciples: “If the world hates you, realize that it hated me first. If you belonged to the world, the world would love its own; but because you do not belong to the world, and I have chosen you out of the world, the world hates you.” John 15:18–19
No one wants to be hated. Yet our Lord makes it very clear that because He has “chosen you out of the world, the world hates you.” He doesn’t say that the world “might” hate you or that you “might” suffer some injustice. He declares that those whom He has chosen out of the world will be hated by the world. This is one of the paradoxes of our faith—living in Christ brings love from Him but hatred and persecution from the world. Yet this hatred is a sign of a deeper reality: We are no longer bound by the fleeting values of this fallen world but are participants in God’s eternal Kingdom, where joy, peace, and true freedom are found.
The “world” in this context is not Creation itself. All that God created is good. The world represents the fallen spiritual order, caught up in sin. Those who “belong to the world” are those who conform to diabolical values, such as seeking power for power’s sake, wealth as a selfish means to fulfillment, or carnal indulgence in an attempt to satiate oneself. Living in accord with the values of the fallen world is foolishness. It leads to a superficial life that cannot ultimately satisfy our deeper spiritual cravings and shares in the envy and hatred of the demons.
Breaking free of worldly attachments is difficult at first because those who have become worldly are blinded by their disordered desires. Sin is a slippery slope: compromising even in small ways to gain acceptance risks losing clarity of purpose and rootedness in Christ. The more people sin, the more miserable they become, and the more miserable they become, the more they seek satisfaction from sin. Only when that cycle is broken does peace begin to take hold and freedom is found. Yet, in the midst of this struggle to detach from worldly illusions, Jesus offers a profound truth: “I have chosen you out of the world.”
To be chosen by Christ is to be set apart for a life of divine purpose and eternal fulfillment. This call draws us into communion with Him, transforming suffering into a path to glory. The disciples’ identity is not self-made but rooted in His choice. This divine election sets them apart for a mission that challenges the temptation to worldly ambitions. Their call to holiness and truth inevitably provokes hostility because it shines a light on the darkness of the world’s sin and draws others to conversion. Yet with this call also comes the promise of eternal joy.
This raises an important question for each of us: Does the world love or hate you? Do you fit in or stand in opposition to worldly values? If we try to gain the world’s love, from those who have embraced worldly ambitions and values, then we will find ourselves compromising to gain acceptance. But if we remain steadfast, even when persecuted, we share in Jesus’ victory and the promise of eternal life.
Jesus tells us this sober truth as a way of preparing us for the inevitable: “Remember the word I spoke to you, ‘No slave is greater than his master.’ If they persecuted me, they will also persecute you” (John 15:20). We must remember His word, His warning, so that if we experience persecution, hatred, or any form of judgment or criticism, we will not become discouraged or fearful. Understanding the consequences of living contrary to worldly values will prepare us for the rejection that our Lord Himself experienced.
1. Paul and Timothy: After the Council of Jerusalem in A.D. 49, Paul and Barnabas, accompanied by Judas and Silas, went to Antioch to deliver the decree of the Council (Acts 15:22-23, 30). Paul and Silas continued on to the churches of Syria and Cilicia and delivered the decisions (dogmata) that had been reached by the apostles and presbyters (priests) who were in Jerusalem (Acts 16:4). “IN the nearby city of Lystra, they were joined by Timothy, ‘the son of a Jewish woman’ (Acts 16:1) who had probably become a disciple during the earlier journey of Paul and Barnabas (see Acts 14:6-7). Although Timothy’s father was a Gentile, he would have been considered a Jew by other Jews on account of his mother, albeit one who was living in violation of the Deuteronomic Law due to his lack of circumcision. Paul therefore circumcised Timothy to avoid giving scandal to other Jews” (Pimentel, Envoy of the Messiah, 5).
“I have told you this in figures of speech. The hour is coming when I will no longer speak to you in figures but I will tell you clearly about the Father.” John 16:25
When is it that Jesus will speak clearly about the Father? When is that “hour” of which He speaks? First, this “hour” can be understood to be the time after His death, Resurrection and Ascension to Heaven. It is then when the Holy Spirit will come upon them at Pentecost to open their minds to understand all that He has taught with much greater insight and clarity. But in John’s Gospel, the “hour” is also a reference to His death on the Cross. It is His hour of glory, the hour in which the Son of Man saves us through His holy passion. Therefore, this statement of Jesus should be read within the context of Him alluding to His coming passion. Recall that this sermon Jesus gives is part of His “Last Supper Discourse.” It is given immediately prior to Jesus going out to the Garden of Gethsemane to be arrested.
When we consider this “hour” to be the passion and death of Jesus on the Cross, we should be aware of the fact that His act of dying is not only a saving act of redemption, it is also one of the clearest ways in which He speaks about His Father in Heaven. Jesus’ suffering and death does, in fact, reveal the Father to the disciples in ways that His “figures of speech” could not reveal. Jesus’ veiled language was spoken as truth but as truth that could not be fully communicated. However, Jesus’ freely embraced suffering and death does clearly communicate the Father in the most profound way possible. The Cross is pure love, and the Father is pure love. Jesus’ death on the Cross in obedience to the will of the Father reveals to all that the Father loves us so much that He was willing to sacrifice His only begotten Son so that if we but believe in Him, we will inherit eternal life.
The message of the Cross is a true teaching about the love of the Father. It’s a teaching that took place through an act of the most pure and sacrificial love imaginable. The Cross was Jesus speaking “clearly about the Father” insofar as it reveals the depth of the Father’s love for all humanity. If you find this difficult to understand, then you are not alone. The disciples themselves struggled with this. That is why they ultimately needed the Holy Spirit to come upon them to open their minds. We too need the Holy Spirit if the veil is to be lifted and we are to comprehend this most powerful message of God’s infinite love.
Reflect, today, upon Jesus’ burning desire to lift the veil of His teaching and to reveal to you, clearly, the depth of the Father’s love for you. Allow the Holy Spirit to open your mind to this revelation as it is given through the Crucifixion. Pray for that gift. Listen to Jesus tell you He desires to give you this understanding and then await the grace you need to see and understand the very heart of the Father and His divine love for you.
My precious Jesus, Your hour of glory upon the Cross is the clearest and fullest revelation of the Father’s love. On the Cross, You show us all how deeply we are loved by You and Your Father in Heaven. Please do open my mind, dear Lord, to all You wish to reveal to me, so that as I come to know You, I will also come to know Your Father in Heaven. Jesus, I trust in You.

