Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity (2021)

Medieval cats, Illuminated Manuscript, Morgan Library (S M.81 f. 46v), New York

In 1939 the poet T. S. Elliot wrote a book of poems called the Old Possums Book of Practical Cats. His poems were taken word for word and transformed by Andrew Lloyd Weber into a musical play which first appeared in London, then became a hit in New York, where it ran for nineteen years.  You are probably familiar with the musical:  Cats. In his poems, T.S. Elliot says that all cats have three names. The first name is the name that the people the cat lives with give it. You will notice I did not say the people who own the cat.  No one ever owns a cat, they just find a way to live with the cat the best they can. Anyway, the guests in the cat’s home give the cat a name Like Fluffy or Bitsy or Garfield.  According to T.S. Elliott, the cat has a name that other cats know. The cat might be called by the others, Mephistopholes, the magical cat, etc. But, Elliott says, the cat also has a third name. This is a secret name that reflects all that the cat really is. In the poetry, the cat spends all his life contemplating his real name before God. T. S. Elliott was not writing about cats. He was writing about people. In some ways we all can be thought of as having three names. There is the formal name we receive from our parents.  There is the name our friends use. And then, there is that special name which we receive from God that reflects who we really are. For example, I have a formal name, Fr. Agustin Estrada.  My second name is the one my friends call me, Fader.  I have another name, a third name, that I do not thoroughly know.  That is the name that states who I am in my relationship with God. I received this name from God at my baptism. It expresses my deepest intimacy with God.  This name states in a simple voice the unique reflection of God I was created to bring to the world. I was given this name at my baptism.  I don’t thoroughly know this name. I will have to spend the rest of my life coming to a deeper and deeper knowledge of who I am before God.  I will have to spend the rest of my life learning what my name is.  You also have three names.  The first is your formal name.  The second is the one that those who know you use.  The third is the name that proclaims to the world your unique relationship with God. On Trinity Sunday we consider the name of God, Father Son and Spirit. This is more than a theological dogma about God.  It is also a doctrine about us. It is an expression of who we are.  We are baptized in the name of God. The goal of our lives is to find the particular, unique expression of God’s love that we have been empowered to make present in the world.  The goal of our lives is to reveal our most profound name. All who are baptized in the name of the Trinity are called to the Father in Christ though the Holy Spirit. We are called to the Father.  The journey of our lives is a journey to God.  This journey may follow the paths of marriage and parenthood, as many of you have taken.  This journey may follow the path of the committed single Christian.  The path might be that of religious life or holy orders.  All journeys derive their meaning from their final destination.  The journey of our lives is full of minor chores and major events. Even our routine chores derive their meaning from their final destination.  Changing your baby’s diaper, telling your child for the hundredth time to clean up his or her room, putting up with your spouse’s moods, giving up going out with your friends so you can spend some extra time as a big brother or big sister, going to work and all that entails, going to school and completing all its tasks, all take their meaning as part of our journey to the Father. We are called to the Father in Christ.  Jesus Christ is the Word of God Become Flesh.  Our Christmas celebration is a celebration of His Presence not just among us but as one of us.  He teaches us who the Father is and how we can best serve Him.  Jesus teaches us with His life what love really is.  Love, true love, is sacrificial, even to death on a cross.  When we journey to the Father through Jesus, we are united to the Tremendous Lover in His eternal sacrifice of himself to the Father.  The greatest steps we take in our journey to God are the steps we take away from our own selfishness.  Christian is our name and our claim. We seek God not through the loss of personality like so many cults, or through attaining a clear state of consciousness like Scientology, or even through a loss of all thoughts. We don’t look for God in some sort of inner energy.   We seek God through sacrificial love.  We are called to the Father through Jesus Christ, the Tremendous Lover. We are called to the Father through the Son in the Holy Spirit.  We are given the power and the grace to love as God loves so others might experience the presence of God working in us.  We are the vehicles of the Holy Spirit.  Our journey to God is not merely a matter of our individual relationship with God.  We journey to God so that others might join us in the journey that gives meaning to life.  We journey to God so others can see Him in us and also be led to His presence. The intimate name we have received is the name that best reflects our unique sharing in the Blessed Trinity.  Baptized in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, we are called to allow our lives to have meaning by being faithful to our name.  A hundred years from now, a thousand years from now, ten thousand years from now, our participation in all the petty wants and desires and ambitions the world has decreed are the marks of a successful person will be forgotten.  No one will recall if we owned a Rolls and a yacht, or a Hyundai and a canoe.  But a hundred years from now, a thousand years from now, ten thousand years from now, the world will still enjoy the impact of our lives if we have illuminated the world with our own unique reflection of God.  The world will be a better place if we make the journey, approaching the Father through the Son with the power of the Holy Spirit • AE


Fr. Agustin’s Schedule for the Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity of 2021

Fr. Agustin will be out of town. Parishes communities will continue in their regular mass schedule. Fr. Agustin will resume this regular schedule on Tuesday June 1, 2021.


Solemnidad de la Santísima Trinidad (2021)

F. Caro, La Santísima Trinidad (s. XVII), óleo sobre tela, Museo Nacional del Prado (Madrid)

… en el nombre del Padre y del Hijo y del Espíritu Santo.

¿Es necesario creer en la Trinidad, ¿se puede?, ¿sirve para algo?, ¿no es una construcción intelectual innecesaria?, ¿cambia en algo nuestra fe en Dios y nuestra vida cristiana si no creemos en el Dios trinitario? Hace dos siglos Kant escribía estas palabras: «Desde el punto de vista práctico, la doctrina de la Trinidad es perfectamente inútil». Nada más lejos de la realidad. La fe en la Trinidad cambia no sólo nuestra manera de mirar a Dios sino también nuestra manera de entender la vida. Confesar la Trinidad de Dios es creer que Dios es un misterio de comunión y de amor. Dios no es un ser frío, cerrado e impenetrable, inmóvil e indiferente. Dios es un foco de amor insondable. Su intimidad misteriosa es sólo amor y comunicación. Consecuencia: en el fondo último de la realidad dando sentido y existencia a todo no hay sino Amor. Todo lo existente viene del Amor. El Padre es Amor originario, la fuente de todo amor. Él empieza el amor: «Sólo él empieza a amar sin motivos, es más, es él quien desde siempre ha empezado a amar»[1]. El Padre ama desde siempre y para siempre, sin ser obligado ni motivado desde fuera. Es el «eterno Amante». Ama y seguirá amando siempre. Nunca retirará su amor y fidelidad. De él sólo brota amor. Consecuencia: creados a su imagen, estamos hechos para amar. Sólo amando acertamos a vivir plenamente. El ser del Hijo consiste en recibir el amor del Padre. Él es el «Amado eternamente» antes de la creación del mundo. El Hijo es el Amor que acoge, la respuesta eterna al amor del Padre. El misterio de Dios consiste pues en dar y en recibir amor. En Dios, dejarse amar no es menos que amar. ¡Recibir amor es también divino! Consecuencia: creados a imagen de Dios, estamos hechos no sólo para amar sino para ser amados. El Espíritu Santo es la comunión del Padre y del Hijo. Él es el Amor eterno entre el Padre amante y el Hijo amado, el que revela que el amor divino no es cerrazón o posesión celosa del Padre ni acaparamiento egoísta del Hijo. El amor verdadero es siempre apertura, don, comunicación hasta sus criaturas. «El amor de Dios ha sido derramado en nuestros corazones por el Espíritu Santo que nos ha sido dado»[2]. Consecuencia: creados a imagen de ese Dios, estamos hechos para amarnos mutuamente sin acaparar y sin encerrarnos en amores ficticios y egoístas • AE


[1] E. Jüngel

[2] Rom 5, 5

Solemnity of Pentecost (2021)

Little by little we are learning to live without interiority. We no longer need to be in touch with the best that is within us. It is enough for us to live entertained. We are content to function without a soul and feed only on bread. We do not want to expose ourselves to seek the truth Come Holy Spirit and free us from the inner emptiness!

We already know how to live without roots and without goals. It is enough for us to allow ourselves to be programmed from the outside. We move and shake incessantly, but we do not know what we want or where we are going. We are getting better informed, but we feel more lost than ever. Come Holy Spirit and free us from disorientation!

We are hardly interested in the great questions of existence. We are not worried about running out of light to face life. We have become more skeptical but also more fragile and insecure. We want to be smart and lucid. Why can’t we find calm and peace? Why does sadness visit us so much? Come Holy Spirit and free us from the darkness within!

We want to live longer, live better, live longer, but live what? We want to feel good, feel better, but feel what? We seek to enjoy life intensely, to get the most out of it, but we are not content with just having fun. We do what we want. There are hardly any prohibitions or forbidden areas. Why do we want something different? Come Holy Spirit and teach us to live!

We want to be free and independent, and we find ourselves more and more alone. We need to live and we lock ourselves in our little world, sometimes so boring. We need to feel loved and we do not know how to create lively and friendly contacts. We call sex «love» and pleasure «happiness», but who will quench our thirst? Come Holy Spirit and teach us to love!

In our life there is no longer room for God. His presence has been repressed or atrophied within us. Full of noises inside, we can no longer hear his voice. Poured into a thousand desires and sensations, we fail to perceive his closeness. We know how to talk to everyone except him. We have learned to live with our backs to the Mystery Come Holy Spirit and teach us to believe!

Believers and non-believers, little believers and bad believers, this is how we pilgrimage on this path of life. Today, the great feast of the Holy Spirit, Jesus tells us all what one day he said to his disciples, exhaling his breath on them: «Receive the Holy Spirit.» That Spirit who sustains our poor lives and encourages our weak faith can penetrate us in ways known only to him. That we know how to be open, receptive, in love • AE


Fr. Agustin’s Schedule for the Solemnity of Pentecost of 2021

Saturday, May 22, 2021

3.00 p.m. Sacrament of Baptism for Magdalene Hoover @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles

4.30 p.m. Sacrament of Reconciliation @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles

5. 30 p.m. Mass @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles

Sunday, May 23, 2021

9.00 a.m. Mass @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles

11.00 a.m. Mass @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles

5. 30 p.m. Mass @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles


Solemnidad de Pentecostes (2021)

Ven Espíritu Santo. Despierta nuestra fe débil, pequeña y vacilante. Enséñanos a vivir confiando en el amor insondable de Dios nuestro Padre a todos sus hijos e hijas, estén dentro o fuera de tu Iglesia. Si se apaga esta fe en nuestros corazones, pronto morirá también en nuestras comunidades e iglesias.

Ven Espíritu Santo. Haz que Jesús ocupe el centro de tu Iglesia. Que nada ni nadie lo suplante ni oscurezca. No vivas entre nosotros sin atraernos hacia su Evangelio y sin convertirnos a su seguimiento. Que no huyamos de su Palabra, ni nos desviemos de su mandato del amor. Que no se pierda en el mundo su memoria.

Ven Espíritu Santo. Abre nuestros oídos para escuchar tus llamadas, las que nos llegan hoy, desde los interrogantes, sufrimientos, conflictos y contradicciones de los hombres y mujeres de nuestros días. Haznos vivir abiertos a tu poder para engendrar la fe nueva que necesita esta sociedad nueva. Que, en tu Iglesia, vivamos más atentos a lo que nace que a lo que muere, con el corazón sostenido por la esperanza y no minado por la nostalgia.

Ven Espíritu Santo y purifica el corazón de tu Iglesia. Pon verdad entre nosotros. Enséñanos a reconocer nuestros pecados y limitaciones. Recuérdanos que somos como todos: frágiles, mediocres y pecadores. Libéranos de nuestra arrogancia y falsa seguridad. Haz que aprendamos a caminar entre los hombres con más verdad y humildad.

Ven Espíritu Santo. Enséñanos a mirar de manera nueva la vida, el mundo y, sobre todo, a las personas. Que aprendamos a mirar como Jesús miraba a los que sufren, los que lloran, los que caen, los que viven solos y olvidados. Si cambia nuestra mirada, cambiará también el corazón y el rostro de tu Iglesia. Los discípulos de Jesús irradiaremos mejor su cercanía, su comprensión y solidaridad hacia los más necesitados. Nos pareceremos más a nuestro Maestro y Señor.

Ven Espíritu Santo. Haz de nosotros una Iglesia de puertas abiertas, corazón compasivo y esperanza contagiosa. Que nada ni nadie nos distraiga o desvíe del proyecto de Jesús: hacer un mundo más justo y digno, más amable y dichoso, abriendo caminos al reino de Dios • AE


The Solemnity of the Ascension of the Lord (2021)

Wherever you go, I will follow,

Wherever you live is my home.

Though days be of blessing or sorrow,

Though house be of canvas or stone,

Though Eden be lost to the past,

Though mountains before us so vast,

You won’t be alone, I have promised

Wherever you go, I am here.

Whatever you dream, I am with you,

When stars call your name in the night.

Though shadows and mist cloud the future,

Together we bear their light.

And now together we stand

With only a promise in hand.

But lead where you dream: I will follow.

To dream with you is my delight.

And if you should fall, you will find me,

When no other friend can you claim,

If foes beat you down or betray you,

And if others desert you in shame.

If home and dreams aren’t enough,

And if you will run away from my love,

I’ll raise you from where you have fallen.

Faithful to you is my name.

And when you will die, I will be there

To sing you to sleep with a psalm,

I’ll sooth you with tales of our journey,

Your fears and your doubts I will calm.

We’ll live when this life done

Forever in mem’ry as one.

And we will be buried together,

To waken and to greet a new dawn.

Wherever you go, I will follow.

Behold! The horizon shines clear.

The possible gleams like a city:

Together we’ve nothing to fear.

So speak with words bold and true

The message my heart speaks to you.

You won’t be alone, I have promised.

Wherever you go, I am here •

Covenant Hymn by Melinda Kirigin-Voss.

El Greco, Saint John the Evangelist (1609), oil on canvas, Museo Nacional del Prado (Spain)

In some of the rural communities of our countries, ministers and their congregations take this passage literally.  As a test of faith some will plunge their hands into a box of rattlesnakes, pull one out and hold it in front of the congregation. Some will survive. Some will die from the poison. Now these simple rural communities view the survivors as positive examples of the faith of the entire community[1].  They view those who are bit by the snakes or who die from the poison as examples of the weakness of the community’s faith. They are incorrect in interpreting Jesus’ words literally. He doesn’t want us to challenge him to heal us, nor does he want us to put ourselves in unnecessary peril.  But they are correct in recognizing that faith in Jesus gives them the ability to conquer the evils of the world. And their communities are right when they credit success to the Lord and see failure as a result of their lack of faith. Allow me to say something brief about literal interpretations of the Bible. This form of fundamentalism demands that every word, every statement be believed exactly as it is written and read.  For example, the fundamentalists would say that the world was created some 40,000 years ago because that is the date they best determine from Genesis. If you show them a fossil they would say that it is fake. They get so bogged down in the details that they miss the point of the message: God is the Creator. So, what was the message that Jesus was giving when he mentioned the signs of those who believed?  The message was that they could fight and conquer evil in its worst forms. Jesus used snakes to represent the devil. His followers, those who believe in him, can take on and beat off the devil.  He used poison to represent the evil of the world, not just a poisonous potion, but the poison that is hatred, the poison that is materialism, prejudice, the drug culture, the sex culture, polarization, seeing all who disagree with us as enemies, and on and on.  Jesus said that his followers would be able to take on the poison of the world and defeat it. Then he ascended into heaven. Peter and the apostles didn’t grieve that he was gone. Mary Magdalene and the girls didn’t resume their crying.  No, they were too busy! Instead they got to work and proclaimed the wonders and the beauties of Jesus’s life. The devil went after them and all who followed them in full battle array.  He convinced others to torture them and expel them from their communities and friends.  He talked some into killing them, but the devil didn’t win.  He couldn’t stop the work of the Kingdom of God.  They beat off the snake.  All the evil of the world went to war against Jesus’ followers. The poisons that destroy the soul, that destroy life attacked them. The Christians didn’t go into hiding. They took on the poison of the world and found a life free of evil, a life of meaning, the Christian life. Jesus ascends to heaven and then says to us: «Get to work.  Fight off the snake, the devil.  Fight off poisons of the world.  You can win these victories.  You can win them because I really haven’t left you.  I am with you.  My spirit, the Holy Spirit, strengthens you». We all have poisons that we have to fight off in our lives.  We all have our own demons.  Some are of our own making.  Some are imposed upon us by others or by situations beyond our control.  One person wages a continual battle against alcohol.  Another against drugs.  One is fighting to be in Christian relationships with others. One must deal with the fact that her family is not what it should be.   Another is suffering the terror of abuse. All of us are fighting selfishness.  These and so many other demons and poisons of the world attack us, but they can’t beat us down.  We will win against the evil of the world because we have the greatest weapon there ever was. We possess Jesus Christ! Jesus ascends into heaven and assumes his place as Lord of heaven and earth. When Jesus ascended into heaven, his followers went on offense. They didn’t cower in a room, afraid of what the enemies of God’s kingdom would do to them.  Instead, they took the battle to the devil. They preached everywhere.  That’s what we are all called to do. We are called to take the battle to the enemy.  We are called to combat moral evil wherever it exists, within us and around us.  We are called give people the Gospel, the good News.  The Good News is this: there is a much better life than the one the world paints as ideal. There is a life where every action has meaning.  There is a life of fulfillment. This life is the life of the Lord.  That’s the Good News.  Life is infinitely better when it is lived united to Jesus Christ.   Snakes will attack for sure. But we, the people of the Ascended Lord will beat it all off. How?  Well, the gospel explains how in its last words: « while the Lord worked with them and confirmed the word through accompanying signs»[2]. We don’t wage this war alone. We fight with the might of the Lord Jesus Christ.  And with him on our side, how can we possibly lose? • AE


[1] “Snake handling”, also called “serpent handling”, is a religious rite observed in a small number of isolated churches, mostly in the United States, usually characterized as rural and part of the Holiness movement. The practice began in the early 20th century in Appalachia and plays only a small part in the church service. Participants are Holiness, Pentecostals, Charismatics, or other evangelicals. George Went Hensley (1880–1955) is often credited with introducing snake handling practices into the Church of God Holiness, an association of autonomous Christian Methodist congregations, founding the Dolly Pond Church of God in Birchwood, Tennessee, around 1910.

[2] Cf Mk 16:15-20


Fr. Agustin’s Schedule for the Solemnity of the Ascension of the Lord (2021)

Saturday, May 15, 2021

4.30 p.m. Sacrament of Reconciliation @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles

5. 30 p.m. Mass @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles

Sunday May 16, 2021

10.30 a.m. Mass @ Our Lady of Grace

12.00 p.m. Mass @ Our Lady of Grace

5. 30 p.m. Mass @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles


Solemnidad de la Ascención del Señor (2021)

A. de Lanchares, La Ascención de Jesús (ca. 1620), óleo sobre tela Museo Nacional del Prado (Madrid)

Es tan poca la atención que le ponemos a la Ascensión de Cristo, que su hondo significado nos pasa casi desapercibido. La Ascensión nos ofrece la clave para entender la dinámica del cristianismo después de la marcha del Señor Cristo y la pedagogía para vivir la fe de manera responsable y adulta. Para entender el significado de la Ascensión, hemos de recordar el diálogo entre Jesús y sus discípulos: «Yo me voy al Padre y vosotros estáis tristes… Sin embargo, os conviene que yo me vaya para que recibáis el Espíritu Santo»[1]. La tristeza y preocupación de los discípulos tiene una explicación. Desean seguridad: tener siempre junto a ellos a Cristo para que les resuelva los problemas o, al menos, les indique el camino seguro para encontrar la solución. Es la tentación de vivir la fe de manera protegida, infantil e irresponsable. La respuesta de Jesús cobra particular importancia en estos tiempos en que parece crecer en ciertos sectores de la Iglesia la tentación del inmovilismo, el miedo a la creatividad, la nostalgia por reproducir un determinado cristianismo, esa regresión al seno materno. La pedagogía de Cristo consiste en ausentarse para que pueda crecer la libertad de sus seguidores. Sólo les dejará la impronta de su Espíritu. Así hace el buen papá y el buen maestro: han de retirarse en un determinado momento y dejar sólo su inspiración para no ahogar la creatividad, sino permitir el crecimiento responsable y adulto. Siempre es tentador vivir de manera infantil la religión, sin mediación alguna de la propia conciencia, buscando en la letra del evangelio soluciones prefabricadas para nuestros tiempos o pretendiendo que la autoridad religiosa nos dicte sin ambigüedad y con precisión absoluta la doctrina que hemos de creer y las normas morales que hemos de cumplir. Este fideísmo infantil que raya en el fundamentalismo, y en el que la persona no ejercita su propia libertad, engendra, tarde o temprano, ateísmo pues llega un momento en el que el hombre, para ser responsable y adulto, siente la necesidad de eliminar al Dios de esa religión. Hoy celebramos la Ascensión del Señor, un momento estupendo para recordar que vivimos el tiempo del Espíritu, tiempo de creatividad y crecimiento responsable, ya que el Espíritu no nos da nunca recetas concretas para los problemas, pero cuando lo acogemos, nos hace capaces de ir buscando caminos nuevos al evangelio de Cristo • AE


[1] Cf Jn 16, 7


Sacrament of Confession (Updated 5.8.2021)

Fellow parishioners and friends: these are the days and times that at this point I can offer you all to celebrate the Sacrament of Confession:

Monday from 5.00 p.m. to 5.30 p.m. @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles (Chapel)

Tuesday from 6.00 a.m. to 6.50 a.m. @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles (Chapel)

Tuesday from 4.30 p.m. to 5.30 p.m. @ Our Lady of Grace (Confessional)

Wednesday from 6.00 a.m. to 6.50 a.m. @ Our Lady of Grace ( see me at the Chapel)

Wednesday, from 4.00 p.m. to 5.30 p.m. @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles (Confessional)

Thursday from 6.00 a.m. to 6.55 a.m. @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles (Chapel)

Friday from 5.00 p.m to 5.30 p.m. at @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles (Confessional)

Saturday at St. Peter Prince of the Apostles from 4.00 p.m. to 5.30 p.m. (Confessional)

(Sunday, sometimes beetween masses I could be available to hear confessions)

If none of these spots works for you, email me (agusestrada@gmail.com); we can arrange a

convenient time for you • Fr. AE


Sixth Sunday of Easter (Cycle B)

Chanel Dope Soup by Annie Naranian.

Our society perpetuates the great lie that love can be won through an elixir. The elixir may be becoming a professional who makes a great deal of money. Money is supposed to guarantee that happiness can be bought. Or the elixir might be that having the perfect body will attract lasting love. But the beautiful bodies of the young become the bodies of the middle aged.  Commercials try to convince us that the right perfume or cologne will do the job. That’s as close to an ancient elixir as you can come.  But a good job never won anyone love, and a beautiful body may attract another person but it isn’t going to win his or her love.  And a Chanel No. % is not going to be a love magnet. Today’s second reading from the First Letter of John, and our gospel reading is from John 15 both speak about love, Christian love. Christian love is not forced on a person. It isn’t due to an elixir, nor does it come merely from physical attraction, or any other attraction for that matter. Love, true love, lasting love, only results from the Love of Christ.  And that love becomes a magnet.  If a person loves the Lord, that love itself will attract other people who are seeking the Lord.  Perhaps it will attract a person who is looking for someone to make a life with, certainly it will attract many others who are looking for the meaning to life. St. Teresa of Calcutta. Her work among the poorest of the poor spread throughout the world.  Her religious order, the Missionaries of Charity, became the fastest growing religious order in the Church.  Why were so many people attracted to Mother Teresa? Certainly, they felt called to join her in making the gospel a reality: «…when I was hungry you gave me food to eat, when I was thirsty you gave me drink, etc.»[1]. But there was even more than this that attracted people to Mother Teresa.  They were drawn by Jesus’ love within her.  And like a magnet, that love flowed through her into them.  And then they attracted others to Christ. The love of Christ flowed through her into them.  It still does. We have been attracted by the dynamism, the magnetism of Jesus Christ.  We know that saying that we love Him is not enough.  We have to live His Love.  In the Gospel Jesus uses this phrase: “Remain in my love.”  He tells us that we remain in His Love if we keep His commandments. But Jesus doesn’t give a whole list of commandments like Moses did when he came down from Mt. Sinai.  Jesus just gives one commandment: Love one another. That is all that really matters, if we love each other, truly, in the sacrificial love of the Lord, everything else falls into place. St. Augustine put it this way: «Once and for all, a short rule is laid down for you: Love and do what you will.  If you keep silence, do it out of love. If you cry out, do it out of love. If you refrain from punishing, do it out of love. Let the root of love be within you. From such a root, nothing but good can come»[2]. So, we are concerned about this or that member of the family.  Maybe he or she is in a bad relationship, or behaving badly.  If we strike out at them, let them feel our wrath for the people they are hurting, we will accomplish nothing.  But if instead we allow the magnetism within us to be evident in our concern for them, and we seek the ways that we can we best expose them to the love of Christ, eventually, over time, Christ will prevail.  The Easter message is that Jesus is the Victor. Christ wins.  He always wins. Another example: we are invited to join an activity which is immoral; and we decline respectfully, but lovingly.  A close friend asks us to join him or her.  And we say, “I have to tell you what is happening inside of me.  I just can’t reconcile going there and doing that with the deep love for God I feel within me.  It just is not me.  It is not my style.”  And we leave it at that, then the person we are speaking to might eventually, someday, also say, “I want that deep love of God in my life.” Jesus Christ is the Elixir of Love. He is the potion that brings happiness.  Let us pray today for the courage to love His Presence so much that His Love will flow through us and attract others to love as He Loves • AE


[1] Cf Matthew 25 [2] From St. Augustine’s sermon on 1 John 7


Fr. Agustin’s Schedule for the Sixth Sunday of Easter 2021

Saturday, May 8, 2021

11.00 a.m. First Communion Mass @ Our Lady of Grace

4.30 p.m. Sacrament of Reconciliation @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles

5. 30 p.m. Mass @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles

Sunday, May 9, 2021

9.00 a.m. Mass @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles

11.00 a.m. Mass @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles

5. 30 p.m. Mass @ St. Peter Prince of the Apostles


VI Domingo de Pascua (Ciclo B)


Autor anónimo, Cristo devolviendo la vista a un ciego, oro y tempera sobre papel, Salterio de Rutland (f 29v), British Library.

En el evangelio que la liturgia nos presenta este domingo, el sexto del tiempo de Pascua, Jesús se está despidiendo de sus discípulos[1]. Los ha querido apasionadamente. Los ha amado con el mismo amor con que lo ha amado el Padre. Ahora los tiene que dejar. Conoce su egoísmo y sabe que les cuesta quererse. Los ve discutiendo entre sí por obtener los primeros puestos. ¿Qué será de ellos? Las palabras de Jesús adquieren un tono solemne. Han de quedar bien grabadas en todos: «Éste es mi mandato: que os améis unos a otros como yo os he amado». Jesús no quiere que su estilo de amar se pierda entre los suyos. Si un día lo olvidan, nadie los podrá reconocer como discípulos suyos. De Jesús quedó un recuerdo imborrable. Las primeras generaciones resumían así su vida: «Pasó por todas partes haciendo el bien». Era bueno encontrarse con él. Buscaba siempre el bien de las personas. Ayudaba a vivir. Su vida fue una Buena Noticia. Se podía descubrir en él la cercanía buena de Dios. Jesús tiene un estilo de amar inconfundible. Es muy sensible al sufrimiento de la gente, a su dolor, a sus desgracias. No puede pasar de largo ante quien está sufriendo. Al entrar un día en la pequeña aldea de Naín, se encuentra con un entierro: una viuda se dirige a dar tierra a su hijo único. A Jesús le sale desde dentro su amor hacia aquella desconocida: «Mujer, no llores»[2]. Quien ama como Jesús, vive aliviando el sufrimiento y secando lágrimas. Los evangelios recuerdan en diversas ocasiones cómo Jesús captaba con su mirada el sufrimiento de la gente. Los miraba y se conmovía: los veía sufriendo, o abatidos o como ovejas sin pastor[3]. Rápidamente, se ponía a curar a los más enfermos o a alimentarlos con sus palabras. Quien ama como Jesús, aprende a mirar los rostros de las personas con compasión. Es admirable la disponibilidad de Jesús para hacer el bien. No piensa en sí mismo. Está atento a cualquier llamada, dispuesto siempre a hacer lo que pueda. A un ciego que le pide ayuda en el camino, lo acoge con estas palabras: «¿Qué quieres que haga por ti?»[4]. Con esta actitud anda por la vida quien ama como Jesús. Jesús sabe estar junto a los más desvalidos. No hace falta que se lo pidan. Hace lo que puede por curar sus dolencias, liberar sus conciencias o contagiar confianza en Dios. Pero no puede resolver todos los problemas de aquellas gentes. Entonces se dedica a tener gestos de bondad para con todos: abraza a los niños de la calle porque no quiere que nadie se sienta huérfano; bendice a los enfermos porque no quiere que se sientan olvidados por Dios; acaricia la piel de los leprosos porque no quiere que se vean excluidos[5]. Así son los gestos de quien ama como Jesús • AE


[1] Cfr. Jn 15, 9- [2] Lc 7, 11-17 [3] Cf Mt 9, 36. [4] Lc 18, 41-43 [5] Ídem 5, 12-16.