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What a relief! No feast today, just a simple feria, albeit in Ascensiontide, those ten special days between the Ascension and Pentecost, when we pray, “Come, Holy Spirit, come.” This week we’ve had a glut of feast days one after the other, so it’s great to relax and get back to a feria.
We continue with John, (Jn 16: 23-28), where Jesus speaks to his disciples of his returning to the Father from whom he came and promising that he will always intercede for his disciples.
“I tell you most solemnly,
anything you ask for from the Father he will grant in my name.
Until now you have not asked for anything in my name.
Ask and you will receive, and so your joy will be complete.”
These are most encouraging words. You will have noticed that all the Church’s liturgical prayers end by saying, “through Christ our Lord,’ or the longer version mentioning both the Holy Spirit and the Father. We ask in the name of Jesus, knowing that Jesus has promised that whatever we ask the Father in his name will be granted. Everything? Certainly, if it accords with the Father’s will. There are also times when the Father gives us more than we have asked for or even something entirely different. He knows best.
Jesus continues by saying,
“I have been telling you all this in metaphors,
the hour is coming when I shall no longer speak to you in metaphors;
but tell you about the Father in plain words.
When that day comes you will ask in my name;
and I do not say that I shall pray to the Father for you,
because the Father himself loves you for loving me
and believing that I came from God.
I came from the Father and have come into the world
and now I leave the world to go to the Father.”
In the Gospels, Jesus does speak a lot in parables and metaphors. Now, he tells his disciples, the time has come for clear speech, “plain words,” as he calls them. He assures them that the Father loves them because they love him and believe that he has come from the Father. That love will be the source of every blessing and heavenly gift. Jesus also invites us, who read and hear his words, to ask the Father through his name for all our needs and to pray with faith and conviction. I am sure that we are also aware of God’s many gifts to us, that we’ve not specifically prayed for. What is sure is that the Father loves us because we love Jesus and have placed all our hope and trust in him.
Fr Paul
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