“I came from the Father and have come into the world; now I am leaving the world and going back to the Father.” What kind of magnificent love is it that inspired and propelled God to send His Son, Jesus Christ, to be born in a filthy manger, live a poor life, then be crucified for our sins? Perhaps a line from today’s Gospel helps us answer this profound question: “For the Father himself loves you, because you have loved me and have come to believe that I came from God.”
As we are surrounded by the great Feasts of the Ascension and Pentecost, we are called to respond with enthusiastic joy to the awareness that is brought to the one who understands this gift and cannot help but be changed forever. My life must be different because of what happened for me and to the world. Death has been defeated, and a place in Heaven is waiting for me forever. This, too, is underscored by the opening lines of today’s Responsorial Psalm: “All you peoples, clap your hands; shout to God with cries of gladness. For the LORD, the Most High, the awesome, is the great king over all the earth.” Let us move forward into this week with new resolve and new hope. Darkness cannot and will not extinguish what we have been given.
“I don’t think of all the misery, but of the beauty that still remains.” Anne Frank