Sunday, May 3, 2026

The Fifth Sunday of Easter, May 3, 2026

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY
Br. Daniel Hansknecht, OHC

The Fifth Sunday of Easter, May 3, 2026


In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen

Hello, happy Sunday! This morning, I want to tackle some big questions: “Why do we believe?” and, separately, “Why are we Christians?”.

Let’s start with belief. In our Gospel lesson today, Jesus mentions belief six times and, as far as I can tell, means it five different ways. With the help of some online dictionaries, let’s run through them. Right off the bat, we have our religious meaning: to have faith in the existence of something. “Believe in God”. Next we have a relational definition: to have confidence in a person’s abilities, character, or potential. “Believe also in me.” Thirdly, there’s surprise or annoyance: “I can’t believe it!”. “How can you say, ‘Show us the Father’? Do you not believe that I am in the Father and the Father is in me?” Fourth: to trust that something is true or that somebody is telling the truth. “Believe me that I am in the Father and the Father is in me; but if you do not, then believe me because of the works themselves.” And lastly, we have the belief of a dreamer: to think something is possible, in the absence of certainty. “Very truly, I tell you, the one who believes in me will also do the works that I do…”

If there’s one throughline between all of these, it is that the possibility of doubt is necessary for belief. God might not be real. The person you trust might lie to you or not live up to their potential. Maybe you’re surprised or annoyed, but you can believe that it happened. Perhaps, some of your dreams fall through. Belief, trust, and faith are all conceptually built on the mystery of an unknown future; staking our hopes on a singular vision that we wish to manifest – amidst countless alternative endings.

It’s a shame we can’t know the future. Where are we going? How do we get there? Why isn’t it all laid out for us? Imagine what it would do for all our anxiety – our troubled hearts, as it were – if it was! But, when addressing the worries of his disciples, Jesus doesn’t eliminate all their doubts. He asks first for their faith, then he offers his plans for the future. Before, they were focused on the negative possibility of Jesus’s absence. Now, he directs them to focus on the positive vision of taking them unto himself in his Father’s house. And when they ask for more guidance, he tells them that he is the way, the truth, and the life, with everything tying back to God.

History shows that they really took to this reassurance. For years after Jesus’s death, resurrection, and ascension, the disciples and others who came to believe in Christ were known simply as followers of “The Way”. They wouldn’t be called Christians until a decade later, when persecution in Jerusalem, sparked by St. Stephen’s death, scattered them abroad to Antioch and elsewhere.

Again though, Jesus leaves room for a certain amount of uncertainty when he calls himself the Way. He could have just as easily called himself “The Road”, or “The Path”, or “The Well-marked Trail”, but he doesn’t. He calls himself “The Way”. While a road is paved and clear cut, a way is more ambiguous. It implies that you know where you are and where your destination is, but not necessarily the specific route to get there. Imagine climbing a tall hill with a clear view. From there, you can see not only where you are going, but also the major landmarks that will act as signposts after you descend. Even though you now know the way, you might still get muddled or lost before finally arriving.

A famous example of this is Moses leading the people of Isreal out of Egypt and to the Promised Land. Ahem, it could definitely be said that their journey was not a simple one. Near the end, however, Moses ascends Mt. Nebo and sees their destination: the land promised to them by God. And, if you turn the words about, “The Promised Land” becomes “The Land of Promise”: a hope for their people’s future after years of troubled hearts and tested faith.

So, let’s go back to the first of my opening questions: “Why do we believe?”. Of all the definitions we named for belief, the one which resonates with me the most is the last one, which seeks to make possible our dreams and imaginations. So, let me rephrase this question as: “Why do we dream?”.

In “Man of La Mancha”, the character Don Quixote sings a song entitled "The Impossible Dream”. That song concludes with the following lyrics:

“And I know, if I’ll only be true to this glorious quest, that my heart will lie peaceful and calm, when I’m laid to my rest. And the world will be better for this: that one man, scorned and covered with scars, still strove with his last ounce of courage to reach the unreachable star!”

We dream because we see the absolute potential that tomorrow might bring. In a world where nightmares seem to abound at every turn, we dream in order to take back a bit of control and choose for ourselves a future worth striving for. Although the Way may be long and winding, or like Moses we might not get there within our lifetime, we keep walking forward for the peace and calm that awaits us in our Father’s house.

Despite the affectations of my wording, however, neither dreaming nor believing are by any means exclusively Christian qualities – far from it! So, why are we Christian?

The most obvious characteristic of Christianity that differentiates it from other religions, or alternatives like atheism, agnosticism, and humanism is the man himself: the person of Jesus Christ. His identity in our faith, as both human and divine, is the very embodiment of the impossible dream; someone who reached the unreachable star. Despite bearing all the foibles of humanity, both his own and those of society, he was a living example of God’s grace and salvation manifested here on Earth. And in his very existence, we can take heart and gain courage as we seek the same, both in ourselves and in our society.

As Jesus himself puts it, “the one who believes in me will also do the works that I do and, in fact, will do greater works than these”. Jesus not only believed that we could do it – we could also live as sons and daughters of God – he believed that we would reach even greater heights than he did. Because he pioneered a Way for us to follow, and is even now interceding on our behalf, we are poised to walk even further along his path and realize dreams even more audacious than claiming to be God’s son: “Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as in heaven.”

This line from the Lord’s Prayer is easy to gloss over, because we say it so often. But, when we say it together today, I ask that you say it with intention. For it is the fervent wish of our paragon, our Lord; a grand dream still waiting to come true. May we continue to follow the Way and have the courage to keep reaching for that unreachable star. Amen.


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