Rev.
Fr. Emmanuel Emenike Onyia
DO YOU
REALLY KNOW JESUS? WHAT CAN YOU SAY ABOUT HIM?
As
social beings, we often make friends who we can confide and entrust with our
inner most thoughts and plans. But this friendship does not come automatically.
There is always a moment when one will want to know if his or her friends can
really be trusted, if they truly know and understand who we are and what we
represent?
This
is the situation between Jesus and his disciples in our Gospel passage this
Sunday, when Jesus asked them saying: Who do people say the Son of Man is?’ And
they said, ‘Some say he is John the Baptist, some Elijah, and others Jeremiah
or one of the prophets.’ ‘But you,’ he said ‘who do you say I am?’
Then
Simon Peter spoke up, ‘You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.’ Jesus
replied, ‘Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah! Because it was not flesh and
blood that revealed this to you but my Father in heaven. So I now say to you:
You are Peter and on this rock I will build my Church. And the gates of the
underworld shall not prevail against it.
Here,
we see how Peter expressed his personal conviction about who Jesus is. He did
not have to quote any authority, because his response was a clear and sincere
knowledge of who he professed Jesus to be. Hence, Jesus stressed that Peter's
faith is a gift from the Father when he said: “Blessed are you, Simon son of
Jonah! For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father in
heaven.
This
is because Peter’s gift of faith comes from his
personal response to Jesus. Thus, our faith requires that we give a
personal answer to the question: who is Jesus to me personally? For it is not
enough to quote the teachings and Catechism of the Church about our faith or
the teachings of other theologians and preachers or to respond only from the
head, but from the heart that is convinced of what it believes on.
Today
most people are following Jesus without knowing who Jesus truly represents.
Some people find it very difficult to embrace the teaching of Jesus because
they lack the faith and conviction about his personality, even when Jesus has
revealed himself to us through his great miracles and teachings. The fact is
that, Jesus wants us to develop a divine way of looking at things, he wants us
to know him deep down our soul, so that we can profess our faith with deeper
meaning and conviction.
This
is why he told Simon, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my Church,
and the gates of Hades will not prevail against it. I will give you the keys of
the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven,
and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven." So, the faith given
to Peter by God is the rock on which Jesus built his Church. And this royal
authority is what Jesus entrusted to His Church through St. Peter and his
successors of which our current Pope, Pope Francis is the 265th successor of
St. Peter.
More
so, we can see a clear similarity between Simeon Peter and Eliakim in our first
reading. Eliakim standing as a prefigure of St. Peter, was the royal steward
and the precursor who was appointed as a great Royal Steward of King Hezekiah.
For just as Hezekiah was the king of Judah and the master of Eliakim, so have
the Lord God appointed St. Peter as the new steward to oversee His Church and
His flocks .
Little
wonder St. Paul in our second reading today, tell us how great and immensity
the wisdom and the knowledge of God are, for all that exists comes from him.
Thus, referring to the fullness of truth and the wisdom of God, which he has
revealed to His Church through the Holy Spirit. And the Apostles, having
received the Holy Spirit are to preserve this wisdom and pass it on to their
successors from one generation to another.
Dear
friends, having heard the teachings and works of Jesus in the scriptures and
traditions of the Church, the question remains: Do you really know Jesus? What
can you say about him? Who is Jesus to you? What is your personal experience of
Jesus? How has your knowledge of Jesus help other people to come to faith in
Jesus. Today we are called to really examine our conscience to know where we
are with regards to our faith as Christians.
We are
called today to develop a divine way of understanding the mysteries of God, but
not rejecting them because we do not understand them. We are also called to be
convinced of who we are and the need to truly unite together in God and His
Church entrusted to St. Peter of which the get of underworld shall not prevail
against it. Therefore, let us turn towards God once again with all our hearts
and devote our whole lives in seeking to know Him more and more.
LET US
PRAY: Heavenly Father, you revealed to St. Peter the true identity of Jesus
your son, help us to profess our faith with deeper meaning and conviction. And
as we experience the power of your presence, may we embrace more deeply your
sacred mysteries. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen. Happy Sunday and
remain blessed.
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