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As Jesus prepares his closest friends for the profound grief of his Passion and Death, He gives them a great promise and the way to abide in that promise. They could not have known precisely what He meant, or what that would look like, but they held onto His words hoping that the fullness could unfold in them.

Jesus, Love Incarnate, loves His friends, and they love Him. How will they express this love when they can no longer see Him with their bodily eyes? He tells them they must continue to obey His teaching. “If you love me, you will keep my commandments.” We abide in the promise of Christ by humbly obeying the law of Love and following the will of God, by living out and imitating His self-giving love in our own lives.

But the promise is much more profound than just this “loving-by-obedience.” The promise is that if we love Him and keep His commandment of love, Jesus will not leave us to our own devices, ideas, resources, or strength. He – the One Who lives – will come to us. He will come to us not only to be among us as one of us, but to be truly with us, to be IN us. The One Who is IN the Father will be IN us, and we will be IN Him.

Those who love Christ truly will be truly loved by His Father. And the Son, Who loves what the Father loves, will love us, and reveal Himself to us. He is clear about this: “I am in my Father and you are in me and I in you.” This is not a mental conundrum or play on words, but the verbal expression of an infinite mystery: that God’s delight is to dwell in us, that our souls are alive in God, that we live and move and have our being in Christ, that our bodies are truly temples of the Most High, that our Baptism incorporates us into the very mystery of the Love of the Trinity. These are among the last words spoken by Jesus to his friends, straight from his Heart, before it is pierced and poured out. It is a summary of His whole desire, and a call to embrace the Promise.

While this is so familiar to us that we can forget how profound and mystifying it truly is, the Apostles would have to wait for the coming of the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, to plumb the mystery and bring it to the world. Then they understood that this supernatural intimacy can only be given by the Spirit  proceeding from the love of the Father and the Son. As we prepare for Pentecost, let us pray that we will be open to this working of the Spirit in our souls, and enter fully into the Promise of Christ.

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Mientras Jesús prepara a sus amigos más cercanos para el profundo dolor de su Pasión y Muerte, les da una gran promesa y el camino para permanecer en ella. No podían saber con precisión lo que quería decir, ni cómo se manifestaría, pero se aferraron a sus palabras con la esperanza de que su plenitud se revelara en ellos.

Jesús, el Amor Encarnado, ama a sus amigos, y ellos lo aman a Él. ¿Cómo expresarán este amor cuando ya no puedan verlo con sus ojos físicos? Les dice que deben seguir obedeciendo sus enseñanzas. “Si me aman, cumplirán mis mandamientos”. Permanecemos en la promesa de Cristo obedeciendo humildemente la ley del Amor y siguiendo la voluntad de Dios, viviendo e imitando su amor abnegado en nuestras propias vidas.

Pero la promesa es mucho más profunda que simplemente “amar mediante la obediencia”. La promesa es que si lo amamos y guardamos su mandamiento del amor, Jesús no nos dejará sobrevivir según nuestra suerte, a nuestras propias ideas, recursos o fuerzas. Él, el que vive, vendrá a nosotros. Vendrá a nosotros no solo para estar entre nosotros como uno más, sino para estar verdaderamente con nosotros, para estar EN nosotros. El que está EN el Padre estará EN nosotros, y nosotros estaremos EN Él.

Quienes aman verdaderamente a Cristo serán verdaderamente amados por su Padre. Y el Hijo, que ama lo que el Padre ama, nos amará y se revelará a nosotros. Él es claro al respecto: “yo estoy en mi Padre, ustedes en mí y yo en ustedes”. Esto no es un enigma mental ni un juego de palabras, sino la expresión verbal de un misterio infinito: que el deleite de Dios es habitar en nosotros, que nuestras almas están vivas en Dios, que vivimos, nos movemos y existimos en Cristo, que nuestros cuerpos son verdaderamente templos del Altísimo, que nuestro Bautismo nos incorpora al misterio mismo del Amor de la Trinidad. Estas son algunas de las últimas palabras que Jesús les dijo a sus amigos, directamente desde su Corazón, antes de que fuera traspasado y derramado. Es un resumen de todo su deseo y una invitación a abrazar la promesa. 

Aunque esto nos resulta tan familiar que podemos olvidar lo profundo y misterioso que es en realidad, los Apóstoles tuvieron que esperar la venida del Paráclito, el Espíritu Santo, para comprender este misterio y anunciarlo al mundo. Entonces comprendieron que esta intimidad sobrenatural sólo puede ser otorgada por el Espíritu que procede del amor del Padre y del Hijo. Al prepararnos para Pentecostés, oremos para que estemos abiertos a la acción del Espíritu en nuestras almas y participemos plenamente de la promesa de Cristo.

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Kathryn Mulderink, MA, is married to Robert, Station Manager for Holy Family Radio. Together they have seven children (including Father Rob), and eleven grandchildren. She is President of the local community of Secular Discalced Carmelites and has published five books and many articles. Over the last 30 years, she has worked as a teacher, headmistress, catechist, Pastoral Associate, and DRE, and as a writer and voice talent for Catholic Radio. Currently, she serves the Church by writing and speaking, and by collaborating with various parishes and to lead others to encounter Christ and engage their faith. Her website is www.KathrynTherese.com

Feature Image Credit: Stock Art, art.diocesan.com/stock-photo/the-holy-trinity-framed–design-25178/

The views and opinions expressed in the Inspiration Daily blog are solely those of the original authors and contributors. These views and opinions do not necessarily represent those of Diocesan, the Diocesan staff, or other contributors to this blog.

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