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Some of the best conversations happen while we’re sitting around the table after a meal. That’s the case in today’s Gospel. Jesus and His disciples have finished the Last Supper. Soon they will go with Him as He heads out to the Garden of Gethsemane to pray, and Jesus knows what will follow. So, He talks to His friends.

He has been journeying with them for three years – teaching, guiding, counseling. Now He knows what’s coming next. He must go ahead of them, and it will look pretty bad at first, so Jesus prepares them for the hard days ahead. In this final discourse to His Apostles before His Passion, Jesus seems to bring it all together, to bottom-line it. Jesus tells them: I am from God — love me, love God; hear me, hear God. Ask God in my name, be heard.

Jesus is sending His disciples, God’s children, into a world seemingly without Him, and He is much like any loving parent sending his children out into the world. He knows it’s time; He’s taught what He can teach. But like that parent, perhaps He wonders: Have they understood? Will they live it? Can they stand up to the pressures that will come?

Better even than that loving parent, though, the Father and the Son understand that the rest these beloved people need to know, they will learn on their own, but not alone. From the Father and the Son will come the Holy Spirit, the Advocate, who will be with them to guide them. 

That night of the Last Supper, Jesus looks into the faces of His Apostles and perhaps His heart aches knowing that some of the lessons to come will be painful. How hard must it have been to get up from the warmth and comfort of that table and step into the night that followed? But Jesus takes those steps as He calls us to take them — with absolute faith and trust in God who loves us completely.

Whether for ourselves or those we love, believe what Jesus taught his Apostles and what He has taught us, to step out in faith. Know Jesus, know God. Seek His wisdom, seek His counsel, pray, trust, persevere. Ask in the name of Jesus, and trust that, no matter how difficult the path that follows, you are heard.

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Algunas de las mejores conversaciones ocurren mientras estamos sentados alrededor de la mesa después de una comida. Ese es el caso en el Evangelio de hoy. Jesús y sus discípulos han terminado la Última Cena. Pronto irán con Él mientras se dirige al Huerto de Getsemaní para orar, y Jesús sabe lo que sucederá después. Así que habla con sus amigos.

Ha estado viajando con ellos durante tres años, enseñando, guiando, aconsejando. Ahora sabe lo que viene. Debe ir delante de ellos, y al principio todo parecerá muy difícil, así que Jesús los prepara para los días difíciles que están por venir. En este discurso final a sus Apóstoles antes de su Pasión, Jesús parece resumirlo todo, ir al grano. Jesús les dice: Yo vengo de Dios; ámenme, amen a Dios; escúchenme, escuchen a Dios. Pidan a Dios en mi nombre, y serán escuchados.

Jesús envía a sus discípulos, los hijos de Dios, a un mundo que parece estar sin Él, y se parece mucho a cualquier padre amoroso que envía a sus hijos al mundo. Sabe que ha llegado el momento; ha enseñado todo lo que podía enseñar. Pero, como ese padre, quizás se pregunta: ¿Lo habrán entendido? ¿Lo vivirán? ¿Podrán soportar las presiones que vendrán?

Sin embargo, mejor aún que ese padre amoroso, el Padre y el Hijo comprenden que el resto de lo que estas personas amadas necesitan saber, lo aprenderán por sí mismas, pero no a solas. Del Padre y del Hijo vendrá el Espíritu Santo, el Paráclito, que estará con ellos para guiarlos.

Esa noche de la Última Cena, Jesús mira los rostros de sus Apóstoles y quizás su corazón se entristece al saber que algunas de las lecciones que vendrán serán dolorosas. ¡Qué difícil debió ser levantarse del calor y la comodidad de esa mesa y adentrarse en la noche que siguió! Pero Jesús da esos pasos, y nos llama a darlos también, con fe y confianza absolutas en Dios, que nos ama completamente.

Ya sea para nosotros o para quienes amamos, crean en lo que Jesús enseñó a sus Apóstoles y lo que nos ha enseñado a nosotros: a dar un paso adelante con fe. Conozcan a Jesús, conozcan a Dios. Busquen su sabiduría, busquen su consejo, oren, confíen, perseveren. Pidan en el nombre de Jesús y confíen en que, por difícil que sea el camino que les espera, serán escuchados.

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Pamela Kavanaugh is a grateful wife, mother, and grandmother who has dedicated her professional life to Catholic education. Though she has done her very best to teach her students well in the subjects of language and religion, she knows that she has learned more than she has taught. She lives, teaches, and writes in southwest suburban Chicago.

Feature Image Credit: Providence Lith. Co.art.diocesan.com/stock-photo/the-last-supper-16261/

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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