Today’s reading from Acts continues the theme from last week’s reflection here about unlocked doors. St. Luke’s description here is quite vivid. As I read it, I find myself picturing the scene in that Philippian prison two-thousand years ago. I can almost see Paul and Silas there, singing hymns at night. I imagine the scene of the jail shaking and the doors flying open. I almost cringe as I read the words about the soldier, as the picture of a uniformed man unsheathing his sword in despair, comes before my mind’s eye. Thankfully, Paul’s voice catches him in time, and the story takes a positive turn as we learn of the soldier’s subsequent hospitality, care, and conversion. What started in the darkness and uncertainty of that night ends in a bright new day of hope, joy, and new faith. A lot happened within the course of the night! As the days of this beautiful Easter season speed so quickly past us, I pray that our faith, which has been thus renewed, may bear fruit in our lives in the world today. You and I probably won’t convert a soldier or be miraculously released from prison, but I suspect that Our Lord has a mission today for each of us. As we pray for the coming of the Holy Spirit, perhaps one of our intentions might be that He would help us to be open to that mission and attentive to His promptings.
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