Lord Jesus, open the Scriptures to
us;
make our hearts burn while you speak to us.
My dear brothers and sisters in Christ, these words from the Gospel acclamation rephrase the words of the disciples at Emmaus that we just heard proclaimed in the Gospel:
Were not our hearts burning within
us
while he spoke to us on the way and opened the Scriptures to us?
These words, dear brothers and sisters, permit us to reflect on how to read the scriptures.
Ever since the Vatican Council II, Catholics have been encouraged to engage with the scriptures more actively. This is a good initiative, but we should be careful to not become like the Protestants, who with their cry of “Sola Scriptura” tend to read the scriptures literally, not relying on any other aid. If we adopt this principle, there is a danger that we will not be reading scripture correctly, because the reason to read the scriptures is to get to know Our Lord Jesus Christ more intimately. Indeed, we should allow Him to open up the scriptures for us, so that our hearts will burn while He speaks to us.
And how do we allow Him to open up the scriptures for us? By recognizing His presence in the scriptures, especially in the Old Testament! My dear brothers and sisters, what we need to recognize is that the Old Testament is not simply the history of Israel before Jesus came. On the contrary, the Old Testament has been preserved because it is composed of prophecies about Our Lord, as we learn in the first reading today, where St. Peter demonstrates how Psalm 16 is not about King David, but about Our Lord. The Old Testament is composed of prophecies, yes, but it is also about Our Lord acting silently in the history of Israel, even prior to His incarnation.
Take, for example, the pillar of fire, and the pillar of cloud that accompanied the Israelites as they fled Egypt – this was the Son accompanying His people in the wilderness.
The fourth of the O antiphons of Advent acclaims Christ as:
O Key of David,
opening the gates of God’s eternal Kingdom:
come and free the prisoners of darkness!
Jesus is to be the key through which we understand the Old Testament, and the Old Testament is to be the context through which we read the New. Once understood correctly, the scriptures open up not just our minds, but our hearts too!
For example, at the Paschal vigil this year, while lighting the new fire, because the kindling and wood had been well prepared, we soon had a pillar of fire before us, and my mind was taken to that first Passover, when the pillar of fire led the Israelites through the desert. Some years earlier, as a deacon, I had the privilege of carrying the freshly lit Paschal candle through a darkened church, and received the powerful sensation of the pillar of fire that had cut through the darkness of the Egypt and led Israel through the waters of the Red Sea. And finally, when taking the Blessed Sacrament back to the tabernacle, and have to – in the unusual arrangement within the Sé of Goa – pass through the people who bow in adoration, I think of the pillar of cloud that dwelt with the people of Israel as they sojourned in the desert and pray:
You are in our midst, O Lord, and we bear your name. (Jer 14: 9 NCB)
But the Old Testament does not merely provide us with a deeper sense of Our Lord’s personality; it is also the framework within which we can understand the New Testament. This past Tuesday, we read from the Acts of the Apostles that there was no needy person among them, because:
those who owned property or houses
would sell them,
bring the proceeds of the sale,
and put them at the feet of the Apostles,
and they were distributed to each according to need.
If we recognize that the young Church, described in the Acts of the Apostles, is the new Israel, following Christ, the pillar of light that destroyed death and darkness, then we realise instantly that this verse from Acts is teaching us how Israel rescued from Egypt ought to have behaved. When gifted with the manna they were assured they would keep receiving, some still chose to take more than their need (Ex 16: 15-20). The New Israel, however, purified by the Lord, and empowered by the Spirit, thought not of tomorrow, but placed all their trust in the Lord. In this way, we see how the New Testament, is a fulfillment of all the prophecies in the Old.
In this Easter season and beyond, so that Our Lord will be the key that opens our hearts and our minds to the scriptures, let us pray every day of our lives:
Lord Jesus, open the Scriptures to
us;
make our hearts burn while you speak to us.
(A version of this homily was first preached to the faithful in Concanim at the Cathedral parish of St. Catherine of Alexandria, Old Goa.)



