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Liturgical day
: Sunday 3rd (C) of Easter |
Today's Gospel (Jn 21:1-19): Jesus revealed himself again to the
disciples by the Lake of Tiberias. He appeared to them in this way.
Simon Peter, Thomas who was called the Twin, Nathanael of Cana in
Galilee, the sons of Zebedee and two other disciples were together;
and Simon Peter said to them, «I'm going fishing». They
replied, «We will come with you» and they went out and
got into the boat. But they caught nothing that night.
When
day had already broken, Jesus was standing on the shore, but the
disciples did not know that it was Jesus. Jesus called them,
«Children, have you anything to eat?». They answered,
«Nothing». Then he said to them, «Throw the net on
the right side of the boat and you will find some». When they
had lowered the net, they were not able to pull it in because of the
great number of fish. Then the disciple Jesus loved said to Peter,
«It's the Lord!». At these words, «It's the Lord»,
Simon Peter put on his clothes, for he was stripped for work, and
jumped into the water. The other disciples came in the boat dragging
the net full of fish; they were not far from land, about a hundred
meters.
When
they landed, they saw a charcoal fire with fish on it, and some
bread. Jesus said to them, «Bring some of the fish you've just
caught». So Simon Peter climbed into the boat and pulled the
net to shore. It was full of big fish —one hundred and
fifty-three— but, in spite of this, the net was not torn. Jesus
said to them, «Come and have breakfast», and not one of
the disciples dared ask him, «Who are you?» for they knew
it was the Lord. Jesus then came and took the bread and gave it to
them, and He did the same with the fish.This was the third time that
Jesus revealed himself to his disciples after rising from the dead.
After
they had finished breakfast, Jesus said to Simon Peter, «Simon,
son of John, do you love me more than these?». He answered,
«Yes, Lord, you know that I love you». And Jesus said,
«Feed my lambs». A second time Jesus said to him, «Simon,
son of John, do you love me?». And Peter answered, «Yes,
Lord, you know that I love you». Jesus said to him, «Look
after my sheep». And a third time He said to him, «Simon,
son of John, do you love me?», Peter was saddened because Jesus
asked him a third time, «Do you love me?» and he said,
«Lord, you know everything; you know that I love you».
Jesus then said, «Feed my sheep. Truly, I say to you, when you
were young you put on your belt and walked where you liked. But when
you grow old, you will stretch out your hands and another will put a
belt around you and lead you where you do not wish to go».
Jesus said this to make known the kind of death by which Peter was to
glorify God. And he added, «Follow me».
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Commentary: Fr. Jaume González i Padrós (Barcelona,
Catalonia)
«Jesus
said to them, ‘Come and have breakfast’»
Today,
3rd Sunday of Easter, we contemplate another apparition of Christ
Resurrected, this time after evangelist Joan's most impressive
chapter twenty first, all of it full of sacramental references,
totally alive for the Christian community of that first generation,
the same one that collected the evangelical testimony of the very
Apostles.
After
the Easter events, the Apostles seemed to go back to their usual
chores, as if they had forgotten the Master had transformed them into
“fishers of men”. A mistake the Evangelist willingly
admits when he says that —despite having tried their best—
«they caught nothing that night» (Jn 21:3). It was
the disciples' night. All the same, the appearance, at dawn, of the
Lord completely overturned everything. Simon Peter, that had
previously taken the responsibility for the unprofitable fishing, now
pulls the net completely full: one hundred and fifty three fishes is
the outcome, a figure which is the addition of the numeric values of
Simon (76) and of ikhthys (=fish, 77). Quite significant!
And, when, under the
glorified Lord's protective gaze and with his authority, the Apostles
exert, with Peter's primacy —explicit in the triple avowal of
his love for the Lord— their own evangelizing mission, the
miracle happens: “they fish men”. If out of their living
environment, fish die, human beings also die if nobody brings them
out of the darkness and of the asphyxia of an existence away from God
and surrounded by absurdity, and take them to the light, the air and
the warmth of life. Of Christ's life that He, himself, nourishes from
the beach of his Glory, splendid figure of the Church sacramental
life and, primarily, of the Eucharist. It is in the Eucharist the
Lord gives us personally the bread and, with it, He also gives
himself to us, as the presence of the fish suggests; fish, which for
the first Christian community, was a symbol of Christ and, therefore
a Christian symbol, too.
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