Just a few weeks ago, at the reading of the Passion of Our Lord we encountered the negation, or the denial, of Peter. Three times, Peter denied Our Lord and today, on the third Sunday of Easter we see that Peter, is offered the opportunity to affirm his love for our Lord three times.
Simon, son of John, do you love me
more than these?"
Simon Peter answered him, "Yes, Lord, you know that I love you."
Jesus said to him, "Feed my lambs."
And then to subsequent confessions of his love, Our Lord says to Peter, "Tend my sheep," returning after the final confession to: “Feed my lambs.”
Brothers and sisters, I feel particularly grateful to be able to reflect on these words at my first public mass of thanksgiving because in a way it sets the tone for what my priestly ministry must be: Feeding, and tending to, God’s people. Feeding, must of course, refer to the gift of the Eucharist, the bread of angels and food from heaven, and tending refers clearly to the sacramental care that flows from the Eucharist. St Bede, the patron of the seminary at which I received priestly formation, says “To feed Christ’s sheep is to feed the faith of those who believe in him by exercising proper pastoral care.” Too often in our times, pastoral care is understood to be making the person feel comfortable. Love is mistaken for being cute all the time. But Saint Bede allows us to understand that pastoral care is primarily about feeding the faith to those who believe in Our Lord, and I would add bringing Him to those who do not yet believe.
And in this way, my dear brothers and sisters, the Gospel today can be read in a way that is not limited to freshly ordained priests; on the contrary! If the denial of Peter is a useful location from which to think about our own denials, I would suggest that Peter’s affirmation allows us to contemplate how we can confess our love for Our Lord.
One of the great fruits of the Vatican Council II was that it made us aware of the fact that by virtue of their baptism, the laity too share in the priesthood of Christ (Apostolicam Actuositatem §2). As in the words from the book of Revelation (5:10):
you have made them to be a kingdom
and priests to our God,
and they will reign on earth.
This verse from Revelation makes it very clear, we are here, called to serve our God through worship, and being worship due to a king, must be noble in every way.
This quality, and indeed the scale, of worship is made very clear to us in the second reading today, also from the Book of Revelation.
every creature in heaven and on
earth
and under the earth and in the sea,
everything in the universe
Gives praise to God in the act of celestial worship that John witnesses in his vision. And then, after this act of praise, “the elders fell down and worshiped.”
Too often in our times, my dear brothers and sisters, our worship is casual, and sloppy, if not marked by the vice of sloth. My dear brothers and sisters, we are called to be noble, not just in our worship, but in our every action. Indeed, work and worship exist in a tight relationship with each other. One cannot be noble in worship, if one is not noble in our daily life, and inversely, without nobility in our daily life there will be no nobility in worship.
But our life must begin with worship, and this obligation is made obvious also by today’s Gospel. A question that seems to have exercised, and bothered, several early Christian commentators on the Bible was what were the apostles doing fishing? What were they doing, when they should be out proclaiming the Gospel! And so, dear brothers and sisters, we could consider it telling, that they did not catch any fish on that night expedition. And now listen to the words of Our Lord from the shore:
"Children, have you caught anything to eat?"
Note, the word, children, as if to suggest, you innocents, have you learned nothing? And to their negative response he then replies
"Cast the net over the right
side of the boat
and you will find something."
My dear brothers and sisters, the message that Our Lord intended for the apostles, and for us, should be clear. You are not called to be immersed in the world. Hence forth, spend your lives in nothing but the service of the Church. You have been called to be fishers of men, to proclaim the Gospel to the farthest ends of the earth. And, more importantly, without Him we can do nothing, and more particularly, without worshiping Him, we can do nothing.
Our Lord, in His infinite wisdom follows up this lesson by pointing the apostles in the direction of worship. He gives them bread and fish, echoing not only his miracle of the multiplication of bread and fish, but also of the miracle of the Eucharist. In other words, when lost in the world, return to the Eucharist, and throw yourself down before Him, be fed and then strengthened, proclaim the Gospel.
But let our worship, dear brothers and sisters, be noble. Like the Magi, let us bring our finest gifts to the altar, silks and gold thread, silver and gold, incense and the finest music. Let us wear our finest clothes, genuflect in respect, kneel in worship, and receive communion in a way that acknowledges that it is the most important thing in the world. Let us pursue beauty in our every action, so that this beauty can then be offered to Our Triune God in worship that imitates the worship that is going on in heaven all the time.
(A version of this homily was first preached to the faithful gathered at the parish church of Our Lady of the Rosary, Caranzalem on the occasion of my First Mass of Thanksgiving on the 4th of May 2025.)
(Image reference: “Adoration of the Magi,” Gentile da Fabriano, 1423, The Uffizi Gallery, Florence.)