
Let Us Proclaim His Divine Mercy
By Bishop Paul S. Loverde
Herald Columnist
(From the issue of 7/20/06)
The following homily was given by Arlington
Bishop Paul S. Loverde on Divine Mercy Sunday, April 23, at St. Bernadette
Church in Springfield.
Our God reveals Himself to us in so many ways and by many
names. Today is an example of this fact, for today God’s other name
is “Divine Mercy.” In his 2001 homily, Pope John Paul II observed:
“Divine Mercy! This is the Easter gift that the Church receives
from the risen Christ and offers to humanity … .” Today, we
do focus on Divine Mercy and on how God’s mercy is made visible
within the Church and in our lives.
Today, the Risen Christ — Divine Mercy Resurrected — shows
us His sacred wounds even as He did for the disciples on that first Easter
night and a week later with Thomas in their midst. “He showed them
his hands and his side … . Then [a week later] he said to Thomas,
‘Put your finger here and see my hands, and bring your hand and
put it into my side and do not be unbelieving, but believe.’”
Christ’s wounds make clear to us how deeply we are loved, so deeply
that He gave His life for our salvation by being nailed to a cross. From
these wounds in His hands and feet and from His side pierced by the soldier’s
lance flow out to us endless streams of Divine Mercy. As Pope John Paul
II put it, “Today the Lord also shows us his glorious wounds and
his heart, an inexhaustible source of light and truth, of love and forgiveness”
(Ibid). Are we opening our hearts to receive the mercy flowing from these
sacred wounds?
The Risen Christ — Divine Mercy Resurrected — gave the passing
on of His mercy to His witnesses, those first disciples then and bishops
and priests now. Recall the Gospel scene just proclaimed in our hearing.
“ … he breathed on them and said to them, ‘Receive the
Holy Spirit. Whose sins you forgive are forgiven them, and whose sins
you retain are retained.” The Sacrament of Divine Mercy —
the Sacrament of Penance — has its origin in this revelation of
Divine Mercy. Again, listen to Pope John Paul II: “Jesus entrusted
to the apostles the gift of ‘forgiving sins,’ a gift that
flows from the wounds in his hands, his feet, and especially from his
pierced side. From there a wave of mercy is poured out over all humanity”
(Ibid). Do we receive God’s mercy on a regular basis through this
sacramental celebration called “Confession”? He waits for
us in the person of the priest in order to free us from our sins and to
restore us to deeper union with Him.
The Risen Christ — Divine Mercy Resurrected — reaches out
to all those who struggle to believe. How clear this is in today’s
Gospel. He called to Himself the doubting Thomas, who had said to his
fellow disciples, “Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands
and put my finger into the nailmarks and put my hand into his side, I
will not believe.” Jesus called Thomas over and invited him to go
from unbelief to faith. “Thomas answered and said to him, ‘My
Lord and my God.’” In our struggles to believe and to accept
God’s will, do we go to the Risen Jesus and allow His mercy to move
us from the darkness of unbelief to the light of deepening faith?
The Risen Christ — Divine Mercy Resurrected — continually
increases the members of His Family, the Church. Again, this year at the
Easter Vigil, both here in this parish and throughout our diocesan Church,
the newly baptized received for the first time God’s own life, divine
grace and the newly received into the full communion of the Catholic Church
gained their full status in His Body the Church. I am delighted that our
neophytes, that is, the newly baptized, and the newly received into full
communion are gathered at this Eucharistic celebration. I look forward
to being with them after Mass as they continue to reflect on their journey
into the Catholic faith and to seek ever-deepening joy in living their
faith. It was and is Divine Mercy that has led them to the joy of the
Easter sacraments.
Yes, the Risen Christ reveals to us today another name for God: “Divine
Mercy.” Understanding more fully His Divine Mercy enables us to
be formed into a living community of believers, like those described in
today’s first reading from the Acts of the Apostles. We must be,
like them, a community of believers, with one heart and mind — the
heart and mind of Jesus. Then, having experienced His Divine Mercy within
ourselves, we must be heralds of Divine Mercy, proclaiming “His
mercy endures forever,” and also instruments of Divine Mercy, offering
to everyone forgiveness and reconciliation, hope, peace and joy.
Yes, God’s other name is “Divine Mercy.” By our daily
witness, let us proclaim His Divine
Copyright (c) 2006 Arlington Catholic
Herald
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