Fifth Sunday of Easter
Likewise, when we speak about the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity, we use a phrase from St. Thomas Aquinas which is exitus-reditus. That certainly sounds much more erudite than beginning-return. But no matter how we say it, we recognize its veracity. Christ came to us from the Father (in the Incarnation at the Annunciation which we celebrated on 25 March) and then returned to the Father (at the Ascension, which we will celebrate in a few short weeks). Christ existed before all time, but the Father sent Him to us, and then Christ returned to the Father. And our Gospel points to the return, as Christ speaks to His Apostles in the Upper Room at the Last Supper. He tells them that He goes to prepare a place for them, “‘so that where I am you also may be.’”
We come to know God the Father through God the Son. St. Philip the Apostle, puts his foot in his mouth as he tells Jesus, “‘Master, show us the Father, and that will be enough for us.’” Probably the other apostles may have thought the same thing, but I’m sure they were glad they didn’t verbalize their desire. Because Christ reiterates for them that He is the revelation of the Father. The unity between Father and Son, even though they are different Divine Persons, is so strong that when one encounters one Divine Person, you encounter the entire Triune God.
But exitus-reditus doesn’t only apply to God the Son. It also applies to us. We, too, though not consubstantial with the Father, come from Him, and our goal is to return to Him. Even with all our advances in science, the gift of new life still comes from the Father. And once our parents conceive us, our goal, our end, is to return to the Father so as to be one with Him in heaven. It’s back to the Baltimore Catechism answer that says it so poetically and succinctly: God made me to know Him, to love Him, and to serve Him in this life so to be with Him in the next.
So this middle time, the time between our exitus, our beginning, and our reditus, our return, determines how our return ends up. To paraphrase Denethor from the movie version of The Return of the King, our experience at our return will depend on the manner of our return. Because, as Christ affirmed in our Gospel, He is the only way to the Father. We cannot return to the place the Father has prepared for us, unless we follow the pattern that the Father set out for us, made visible in Christ. We are, as St. Peter affirmed in our second reading, “‘a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people of his own,’” but our lives have to reflect that chosen status in order to receive the inheritance promised to us at our beginning.
So do we recognize how to live like Christ in our day-to-day lives? Do we give attention to the needs of others, rather than focusing only on ourselves. As soon as the Apostles learned that the Greek-speaking or Hellenist widows lacked in care, they responded, in this case by creating the Sacred Order of the Diaconate, the first deacons. God doesn’t necessarily ask us to create new groups, but to cooperate with those that already exist. We’re familiar with Catholic Charities, the North End Soup Kitchen, the St. Luke NEW Life Center. Do we assist them? Do we donate what we can, be it food, clothing, or other goods? Sometimes I get new “secular” clothes. When I do so, I try to make sure and donate older clothes, if they are in reasonably good condition, to Catholic Charities through the Hope in a Box box that is by the drinking fountain at the Beach Street doors. When was the last time that you looked in your closet for clothes that you no longer wear? Sometimes we have formal wear that we only use once or twice, but are there things that we never use, or don’t need to have, that others could? St. Basil the Great once said in a sermon, “The bread in your cupboard belongs to the hungry; the coat unused in your closet belongs to the one who needs it; the shoes rotting in your closet belong to the one who has no shoes; the money which you hoard up belongs to the poor.” Our attention to those in need makes up part of the way that we show where we want to return to: heaven or hell.
Whether we use the fancy Latin phrase or not, we all came from the Father and will return to judgment by Him, when we will learn our eternal destination: heaven (likely after some time in Purgatory) or hell. If we wish to return to the dwelling place the Father has prepared for us, that Christ promised us in the Gospel, then we have to follow the example of the great exitus-reditus of the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity. We have to follow the Way that He is: the one who gave up His life for our good. It may not be in the red martyrdom of shedding our blood in imitation of Christ’s perfect sacrifice of His Body and Blood, but it may be in the white martyrdom of dying to our own wills and living according to the will of the Father. No matter in which language we say it, living the life of Christ in our day-to-day lives will help us embrace the inheritance Christ won for us, whom the Father has adopted through Holy Baptism as His adopted sons and daughters in the Son of God, Jesus Christ.









