A Lectio Divina Approach to the Sunday & Weekday Liturgy
BREAKING THE BREAD OF THE WORD (Series 21, n. 28)
Trinity Sunday – Week 9 in Ordinary Time: June 4-10, 2023
(The pastoral tool BREAKING THE BREAD OF THE WORD: A LECTIO DIVINA APPROACH TO THE SUNDAY & WEEKDAY LITURGY includes a prayerful study of the Sunday liturgy from various perspectives. For the Lectio Divina on the liturgy of the past week: May 28 – June 3, 2023 please go to ARCHIVES Series 21 and click on “Pentecost – Week 8 Ordinary”.
Below is a LECTIO DIVINA APPROACH TO THE SUNDAY - WEEKDAY LITURGY:
June 4-10, 2023.)
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June 4, 2023: THE MOST HOLY TRINITY
“JESUS SAVIOR: In Him the Blessed Trinity Is Revealed”
BIBLE READINGS
Ex 34:4b-6, 8-9 // 2 Cor 13:11-13 // Jn 3:16-18
I. BIBLICO-LITURGICAL REFLECTIONS: A Pastoral Tool for the LECTIO
A. Gospel Reading (Jn 3:16-18): “God sent his Son that the world might be saved through him.”
In 1983 when I presented my thesis proposal to the Pontifical Liturgical Institute where I was enrolled in Rome for my licentiate degree, my Moderator objected that my object of study was too vast and wisely suggested that I delimit the topic. In the proposed outline that I submitted to him, he noticed an item that he found interesting. Taking heed of his wise counsel, I then set myself to the task of investigating “The Trinitarian Aspect of the Biblical Readings of the Sundays of Lent, Year A, in the Vatican II Lectionary”. I did not have any problem with the liturgical hermeneutics of the biblical texts. What was formidable and daunting, however, was to delineate how these biblical readings could be used to prepare baptismal candidates for their immersion into the life of the Trinity.
Every evening after I had finished my work in the sacristy, I would sit in front of the tabernacle asking for light and guidance. The Eucharistic Master heeded my prayer. One afternoon, Sr. Mary Salome, who was also enrolled in the Liturgical Institute, kindly showed me an entry on the Trinity in a voluminous theological dictionary stacked in our community library. She rightly guessed that it might be useful for my work. When I read the article, I was astounded at the remarkable insight presented by the author. He asserted that the Paschal Mystery is the basis of Trinitarian revelation. According to him, from the experience of the Paschal Mystery, the Church had come to a profound understanding that the one God, in his most intimate nature, is Trinitarian: as a loving Creator Father, the source of redemption; as the obedient Son who accomplished the Father’s saving plan by his death on the cross; and as the Spirit of love, proceeding from the Father and the Son, who witnesses to our being God’s children and enables us to call him, “Abba, Father”.
That insight became the key to my thesis on how the biblical readings of the Sundays of Lent, Year A, could prepare candidates for baptism, called by St. Isidore of Seville the “sacrament of the Trinity”. Once I had approached the Lenten readings from the Paschal-Trinitarian perspective, my thesis went smoothly and it was successfully completed in a short time.
Aelred Rosser corroborates the insight that the Paschal Mystery of Christ is the basis of Trinitarian revelation: “God’s self-revelation as a trinity of persons came very gradually through the centuries. God has not changed, of course, but our limited understanding of God’s nature has continually developed thanks to God’s grace. The revelation came most fully, we Christians believe, in Jesus, in whose life and death we glimpse enough to know that God is all-good, all-loving and has shown us how to be creatures worthy of our Creator.”
The authors of the Days of the Lord, vol. 2, underline the dynamic aspect of today’s feast: “The liturgy, like the New Testament, like all the Greek and Latin Fathers before Augustine, has a very concrete and dynamic conception of the three Persons of the Trinity: everything comes from the Father and returns to him through the Son in the Spirit. Celebrated on the Sunday after Pentecost, it is a great doxology to the Father who raised his Son and brought him into the glory where he reigns with the Holy Spirit he has sent to us. When the sequence of the Sundays in Ordinary Time is about to begin again, this feast sheds light on the face and true nature of Jesus, the Son of God, who, by his teaching and his acts, reveals the Father and leads humankind to himself in the Spirit.”
In our celebration of the feast of the Most Holy Trinity, we are invited to a greater response to the incredible love shown to us by God as Father, Son and Holy Spirit. The Augustinian friar, Francis McGowan, exhorts us to pay the triune God the homage of a loving heart: “We owe the Blessed Trinity the homage of grateful love … What happiness was breathed into our souls! The Father adopted each one of us as his child, the Son embraced us as his brother, and the Holy Spirit chose us for his temple. Could the triune God have done more for us? … Yes, we have abundant reason to be thankful to the Holy Trinity for its love and mercy toward us; we have forcible reason to love and honor the ever-blessed Three to offer them the best homage and sincerest worship of our lowly hearts.”
B. First Reading (Ex 34:4b-6, 8-9): “The Lord, the Lord, a merciful and gracious God.”
The Old Testament reading (Ex 34:4b-6, 8-9) enables us to glean the exquisite quality of God the Father, who is full of forgiving love and benevolence. The Lord God is merciful and gracious; slow to anger and rich in kindness and fidelity. He reveals his inmost self by his actions in the world and by his deeds in favor of mankind. He is the all powerful Savior of those who trust in him and walk in his ways. In the fullness of time the depth of his merciful love is fully revealed in the paschal mystery of his Son Jesus Christ. The evangelist John affirms: “God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him might not perish but might have eternal life” (Jn 3:16). The glorified Son sends from the Father the Holy Spirit, the font of unity and fellowship of believers.
I was a teenager when I went with my cousin Virgie for vacation in a small fishing village by the Pacific Ocean in the Philippines. After breakfast, we walked to the beach and spent the whole day swimming, walking on the sand, resting under the shade of the upturned fishing boats, and snacking on boiled bananas and fried “camotes” (sweet potatoes). As we celebrate today the feast of the Blessed Trinity, the leisurely experience of being immersed in the waters comes back vividly. I did not try to fathom the immensity of the ocean. I simply allowed the ocean to envelop me. In the process I experienced its benevolent movements and had a glimpse of its unfathomable riches. The saving mystery of the One and Triune God is not something that could be fathomed or conquered by the human mind. We experience its beauty and grace by humbly surrendering to infinity and by immersing ourselves into the mystery.
Immersed into the life of the Blessed Trinity, we – the baptized Christian believers – experience the ineffable goodness of God and are called to mirror in our lives the divine benevolence. As the human image of the Blessed Trinity, we are called to mirror in our lives the benevolent workings of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. By our efforts to awaken and cherish new life, to fashion and mold the environment, to preserve the integrity of creation, to promote the culture of life and beauty, etc., we participate in the Father’s work of creation, generation, and maintenance. By our human works of healing, reconciling, serving, promoting the cause of justice and right, etc., we reflect the divine Son’s own work of reconciliation and redemption. By pursuing the wisdom of heart and good inspiration, by responding to the call of holiness, by promoting community-communion, etc. we give witness to the animating movement of the Holy Spirit. The functions of the three persons of the Blessed Trinity intertwine, influence and complement each other.
C. Second Reading (2 Cor 13:11-13): “The grace of Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit.”
“The grace of Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit” (2 Cor 13:13). Saint Paul’s conclusion to his second letter to the Corinthians is a masterpiece. It would be difficult to find a better expression of what the Trinity is than Paul’s concluding blessing that summarizes the characteristics of the one and triune God: the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.
The biblical scholar Eugene Maly comments: “In his valedictory blessing, Paul gathers together the characteristics of the God who revealed himself in history. The characteristics are really those of the one God, and so of all three Persons. But in a way they are seen in our world view as appropriated by the three in a distinctive manner. To God the Father belongs love, the principle of all he wills and does. The result of this love for us is the gift - the grace - that is the Father’s Son, Jesus Christ. That love and grace, through the power of the Spirit, brings us together in fellowship and union. This is the feast of God we celebrate, the feast of love and grace and fellowship. They are Holy Trinity.”
The following daughter’s personal account of her dad, written on the occasion of Father’s Day, is very charming and insightful. It could also give us a glimpse of the fathering, generating and nurturing quality of God the Father and of the one-triune God (cf. Lisa Krieger, “Thanks for Shaping Me” in San Jose Mercury News, June 20, 2010, p. B1, B5).
Dear Dad: It was 35 years ago on a sleet-gray December when I was making my first big solo road trip, on a long and rural drive home from college. My VW was aged and packed full with suitcases and a dog. I was tired. It was dusk. Snow started to fall. And then the car died. I don’t remember how I found a payphone to call you, or where I spent the next long hours waiting. All I remember is that you drove 150 miles to get me, arriving with a hug, a credit card and this lesson: It’s OK, you said. We’ll fix it. You can try again. I’m proud of you.
Much is said of the legacies left by mothers’ wedding dresses, recipes, photo albums and heirloom furniture. But you, like fathers everywhere, gave me something less tangible but just as important: resiliency. It’s OK – you can do it, you said. Try harder. You’re just as good as they are. Get up, get going. Try again. When I suffered a broken heart, Mom was ready with Kleenex; you were ready with a tennis game. When I almost flunked chemistry, you didn’t doubt my intelligence – just my study habits. When I headed overseas, with only a backpack, Mom pleaded with me to be safe. You said, “Send me a postcard!”
Through you, I learned how to navigate the real world. You showed me how to file a tax return. Pay bills on time. Fix a flat. Pour a drink. Invest intelligently. Buy a house. Travel the world. You led by example. A quiet man, you didn’t talk much about the importance of research – but I recall how you undressed in the basement because your clothes smelled so strongly of the lab. Then you went to night school to earn an MBA; I still remember the hasty Swanson dinners. You endured a long commute so I had a green yard and a strong school system.
Accountability was important; you lent me money to buy the VW, then created a ledger where we recorded each monthly repayment. So was planning; my friends always seemed to have lots of fancy clothes and spare cash, but we saved up for adventurous family trips. I remember skiing together in Switzerland, in dense fog, when we both stopped at the edge of a precipice to catch our breath and laugh. Then we discovered we were standing atop a snow-covered chalet roof, mere inches from an 8-foot fall.
Patiently, you showed me how you built a Heathkit radio. You saved me souvenirs from astronaut John Glenn’s historic tickertape parade. You parked your car in the driveway, so I could raise an opossum in the garage. One night, we set up a tripod to photograph the stars; then we developed the film in mom’s laundry sink. Like magic, they emerged as white streaks across an inky sky.
Give things a try, you said. Take your time, but take a chance. It’s OK to make a mistake. If something doesn’t work out, try it a different way. And always: I’m proud of you. You sent me out into the world, not with fragile self-esteem, but real skills. Most male animals contribute nothing to their progeny’s welfare, beyond a big dose of DNA. Some father-free species, such as fish, must spawn millions of offspring to ensure the survival of just one or two. “Breeding like bunnies” is essential for rabbits, because males flee, post-coitally, with not even a thanks. But through parental investment, our species flourishes.
Nor is it a surprise that fatherless neighborhoods turn feral, careless and violent. Maybe mothers are hesitant to confront a sullen 6-foot-tall 16 year old son about a truancy report. A good dad steps up to fill the gap between potential and performance – by taking away the PlayStation and sending him back to school.
Dad, at 87, your days of rescue and advice are long gone. You can’t drive anymore. You don’t remember that cold December night, or even our conversation this morning. But you were right: Things are OK. I took my chances, learned the lessons and passed them on to my daughter. Now it’s my turn to be proud, and so grateful.
Happy Father’s Day! Yours always, Lisa
II. POINTS FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE HEART: A Pastoral Tool for the MEDITATIO
1. What is our personal response to this magnanimous, compassionate and gracious divine act: “God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him might not perish but might have eternal life” (Jn 3:16)?
2. How do we open our hearts to receive the following Trinitarian benediction: “The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with all of you” (2 Cor 13:13)?
3. Is our life a Trinitarian doxology, “Glory to the Father, and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit”? How?
III. PRAYING WITH THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the ORATIO
O divine Trinity, Father, Son and Holy Spirit,
we adore you, we thank you and we love you.
We open our hearts anew
to your benediction of love, grace and fellowship.
O heavenly Father, bless us and keep us.
O Jesus Christ, our Lord and Redeemer,
let your face shine upon us.
O Holy Spirit, font of holiness and the Easter gift,
grant us your peace.
O blessed Trinity,
consecrate us to yourself so that we may be
a “Glory be to the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit”,
now and forever.
Amen.
IV. INTERIORIZATION OF THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the CONTEMPLATIO
The following is the bread of the living Word that will nourish us throughout the day. Please memorize it.
“The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with all of you.” (2 Cor 13:13)
V. TOWARDS LIFE TRANSFORMATION: A Pastoral Tool for the ACTIO
Pray that all Christians may give glory to the triune God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit by replicating the creative and compassionate love of God in their lives. Today, make the sign of the cross and pray the “Glory Be” with greater solemnity and devotion.
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June 5, 2023: MONDAY – SAINT BONIFACE, Bishop, Martyr
“JESUS SAVIOR: He Is the Beloved Son Finally Sent … He Is the Path of Righteousness”
BIBLE READINGS
Tb 1:3; 2:1a-8 // Mk 12:1-12
I. BIBLICO-LITURGICAL REFLECTIONS: A Pastoral Tool for the LECTIO
A. Gospel Reading (Mk 12:1-12): “They seized the beloved son, killed him, and threw him out of the vineyard.”
Today’s Gospel (Mk 12:1-12) presents the drama of man’s wickedness and God’s faithful and patient love. A “parable of contention”, it is directed against the smugness, vanity and self-seeking of the religious leaders of Israel. They have failed in their mission as stewards. They have persecuted and even killed those whom the Lord sent them. As a last resort, God sent not only his servants the prophets, but his own Son. But the wicked tenants seized his “beloved son” and put him to death, throwing his body “out of the vineyard”. The “beloved son” finally sent is Jesus, put to death outside the walls of Jerusalem. Cardinal Jean Danielou remarks: “God’s patience has been strained to its farthest limit in this tragedy of Christ, the Lord of the vineyard’s son, rejected by the tenants, crucified, treated by his own people as a stranger and an outcast. But from the lowest depths arises a sudden hope. He will let out the vineyard to other vinedressers, who will pay him his due when the season comes.” In this parable of the wicked tenants, we see God’s first covenant with his Chosen People Israel being transferred to all peoples of faith. As a result of the sacrificial death of the Son, peoples of all nations become tenants-producers in God’s vineyard.
We are called to be a productive part of the Lord’s vineyard. As workers in his harvest, we need to be responsible, dutiful and faithful. We need to overcome human tendencies to mediocrity, indifference and sloth in our service of God’s kingdom. The following story by Papa Mike McGarvin (cf. Poverello News, November 2011, p. 1-2) gives insight into some of the foibles and counterproductive attitudes that we need to overcome in our daily life.
Several years ago, just before Thanksgiving, someone donated a turkey to us that was over fifty pounds. It was an absolute monster, the biggest gobbler I’d ever seen. I figured that meat from that bird would take care of several families on Thanksgiving Day. We made a big deal about it; we thanked the donor, of course, but we also mentioned the turkey to some of the news outlets that make their way down here on the holidays, and at least one station took some footage and showed the prize turkey on the air.
We were curious to discover just how much meat this big boy would provide, so it was with great anticipation that it was prepared and placed in the oven. Later that day, I went to our chef to ask how it came out. He looked at me and sighed. “Well … the boys burned it.” “Whaddaya mean they burned it?” I asked stunned in disbelief. “They just … burned it up. Nothing salvageable. I guess they weren’t paying attention.”
This wasn’t the first time that our drug program cooks had done something like this. I remember one time when lettuce prices were sky-high, and we received several crates of lettuce as a donation. I was elated, because it meant plenty for salads and hamburger trimmings at a time we couldn’t afford to buy this produce item. Our program cook at the time was a man who claimed to be a professional chef. I walked through the kitchen, and saw him happily washing the lettuce – in scalding water. By the time I caught him, he had washed over three-quarters of the supply, rendering it wilted and useless.
B. First Reading (Tb 1:3; 2:1a-8): “Tobit walked on the paths of truth and righteousness.”
This week’s Old Testament reading is taken from the Book of Tobit, originally written in Hebrew or Aramaic. It is a religious story that tells of miraculous help to God’s faithful people and teaches Jewish piety and morality. The author depicts the faithfulness of Tobit, a Jewish exile in Nineveh. He is an honest man who tries to do what is right in the sight of God. He is marked with virtues, foremost of which is charity. Tobit is a model of the exiled Israel who expresses his faith by serving the needs of others. He feeds the hungry, clothes the naked and buries the dead, a charitable act that once put him to flight and in danger of death during the time of King Sennacherib. Returning to Nineveh during the time of King Esarhaddon, Tobit is not daunted. He continues to exercise his charitable works.
Today’s reading (Tb 1:3; 2:1a-8) tells us that on a Pentecost festival Tobit sends out his son Tobiah to find a poor kinsman with whom he could share a fine dinner. The son finds, instead, a murdered man in the market place. Tobit springs to his feet, leaves his dinner untouched and retrieves the dead body so that he might bury him after sunset. The neighbors mock his folly. He has been hunted down once for burying the dead and now he is doing it all over again. Tobit is a sterling example of how to be imbued with charity as a principle of daily life, and not merely as an occasional diversion. He is likewise a figure of Jesus Christ, the faithful one, who walks on the path of truth and righteousness. Tobit’s selfless compassion also inspires us to commit ourselves to corporal works of mercy for the needy.
The reverence for the dead that the Jewish faithful Tobit showed can be verified in other cultures. Here is an example in the Japanese culture (cf. Arthur Gordon, Memoirs of a Geisha, New York: Vintage Contemporaries, 1997, p. 102-104).
And then Auntie interrupted my thoughts. “Chiyo, I’m going to read you something from a man named Tanaka Ichiro”, she said in a voice that was strangely heavy and slow. I don’t think I breathed at all while she spread the paper out on the table.
Dear Chiyo:
Two seasons have passed since you left Yoroido, and soon the trees will give birth to new generation of blossoms. Flowers that grow where old ones withered serve to remind us that death will one day come to us all.
As one who was once an orphaned child himself, this humble person is sorry to inform you of the terrible burden you must bear. Six weeks after you left for your new life in Kyoto, the suffering of your honored mother came to its end, and only a few weeks afterward your honored father departed this world as well. This humble person is deeply sorry for your loss and hopes you will rest assured that the remains of both your honored parents are enshrined in the village cemetery. Services were conducted for them at the Hoko-ji Temple in Senzuru, and in addition the women in Yoroido have chanted sutras. This humble person feels confident that both your honored parents have found their places in paradise. (…)
Most sincerely yours,
Tanaka Ichiro
Long before Auntie had finished reading this letter, the tears had begun to flow out of me just like water from a pot that boils over. (…) When I was finally able to speak, I asked Auntie if she would set up the tablets someplace where I wouldn’t see them, and pray on my behalf – for it would give me too much pain to do it. But she refused, and told me I should be ashamed even to consider turning my back on my own ancestors. She helped me set the tablets up on a shelf near the base of the stairwell, where I could pray before them every morning. “Never forget them, “Chiyo-chan”, she said. “They’re all that’s left of your childhood.”
II. POINTS FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE HEART: A Pastoral Tool for the MEDITATIO
1. How do we carry out our task as “tenant farmers” in God’s vineyard? Do we try to overcome counterproductive tendencies and attitudes such as irresponsibility, indifference, incompetence, sloth, etc.?
2. Like Tobit and Jesus Christ, do we endeavor to walk in the paths of truth and righteousness, and do we show our fidelity to God by our compassionate acts of charity to the needy?
III. PRAYING WITH THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the ORATIO
Lord Jesus,
you call us to be the new “tenant farmers”
in the Lord’s vineyard.
Give us the grace
to work with personal dedication and loving responsibility
so as to produce a rich spiritual harvest.
Bless all our toils and labors
for the coming of God’s kingdom.
We love and serve you, now and forever.
Amen.
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Almighty God,
we thank you for your faithful and merciful love.
Let us be imbued by your own mercy and faithfulness.
Help us to share our table with the hungry,
to defend the oppressed,
to give tithes generously,
to assist the poor,
and to bury the dead and show them due respect.
You care for us and guide us in your ways.
Help us radiate your saving love to all.
We adore and serve you.
We give you glory and praise, now and forever.
Amen.
IV. INTERIORIZATION OF THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the CONTEMPLATIO
The following is the bread of the living Word that will nourish us throughout the day. Please memorize it.
“He had one other to send, a beloved son.” (Mk 12:6) //“I, Tobit, have walked all the days of my life on the paths of truth and righteousness.” (Tb 1:3)
V. TOWARDS LIFE TRANSFORMATION: A Pastoral Tool for the ACTIO
Today carry out your daily tasks with a greater spirit of love and personal dedication and with deeper awareness that we are called to be fruitful “tenant farmers” in the Lord’s vineyard. // When you attend a funeral service, be deeply aware that you are carrying out a corporal work of mercy.
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June 6, 2023: TUESDAY – WEEKDAY (9); SAINT NORBERT, Bishop, Martyr
“JESUS SAVIOR: He Calls us Repay to Caesar What Belongs to Caesar and to God What Belongs to God … He Is the Light of Our Eyes”
BIBLE READINGS
Tb 2:9-14 // Mk 12:13-17
I. BIBLICO-LITURGICAL REFLECTIONS: A Pastoral Tool for the LECTIO
A. Gospel Reading (Mk 12:13-17): “Repay to Caesar what belongs to Caesar and to God what belongs to God.”
Today’s Gospel (Mk 12:13-17) presents an insidious trap concocted by some Pharisees and Herodians against Jesus. Recognizing their hypocrisy and evil intent, Jesus eludes the trap by asking them to bring him a denarius. When they hand him the Roman coin, he asks them, “Whose image and inscription is this?” They reply “Caesar’s”. Jesus then confounds them with a masterly retort: “Repay to Caesar what belongs to Caesar and to God what belongs to God”.
The great preacher, Fulton Sheen, comments on today’s Gospel episode: “Our Lord took no sides, because the basic question was not God or Caesar, but God and Caesar. That coin used in their daily marketing showed they were no longer independent from a political point of view. In that lower sphere of life, the debt to the government should be discharged … Once again he was saying that his kingdom was not of this world; that submission to him is not inconsistent with submission to secular powers; that political freedom is not the only freedom. To the Pharisees who hated Caesar came the command: Give unto Caesar; to the Herodians who had forgotten God in their love of Caesar came the basic principle: Give unto God. Had the people rendered to God his due, they would not now be in their present state of having to render too much to Caesar. He had come primarily to restore the rights of God. As he told them before, if they sought first the kingdom of God and his justice, all these things such as political freedom would be added unto them.”
Today we are reminded of our primary duty to render to God his rights as well as our obligation to render our due to the civil society. Jesus challenges us to be observant in paying our debts to God and to fulfill our duties to one another and to a larger society. I am a Filipino citizen, but because of the particular work that I do – spiritual ministry – I am not a wage earner. I do not pay income tax since I practically do not have any income. But I know the importance of paying taxes to the Philippine government. Taxes are needed to fund its community services and public works. Hence, I contribute my “little” to the civil society by paying my resident’s tax, travel tax, etc. not grudgingly but joyfully, and above all, by conducting myself in a manner that befits a citizen of our beloved nation.
B. First Reading (Tb 2:9-14): “I was deprived of eyesight.”
The reading (Tb 2:9-14) portrays Tobit as a very unfortunate victim of an accident. On the very night he performs a corporal work of mercy for the dead, misfortune comes to him. Droppings from birds nesting above settle on his uncovered eyes while he is resting in the courtyard and would cause him later on to be totally blind. It seems incomprehensible how God could allow a charitable man like him, who feeds the hungry and buries the dead, to suffer senselessly. Tobit’s reward for righteousness seems to be suffering rather than blessing. His affliction is exacerbated by his scrupulosity. He wrongfully accuses his wife Anna of stealing the young goat that was given to her by her customers as a bonus. His wife’s retort cuts deep into the heart of the matter: “Your true character is finally showing itself!” In the heat of anger, Anna calls into question her husband’s charitable deeds and virtuous acts. Tobit is deeply chastised and heart-broken and would pray to God for death.
Tobit’s affliction will turn eventually into an occasion for blessing. In the life of Tobit, of Jesus Christ and his disciples, good could spring forth from suffering. This can be gleaned from the following testimony (cf. Julie Evans, “Out of the Dark” in Saturday Evening Post, Sep/Oct 2012, p. 24-26).
Virginia Jacko was going blind. She knew it, but not everyone else did. Since the mid-1990s, her vision had been steadily deteriorating. Though capable of seeing people and objects in front of her, she might not recognize a person standing at her side. Finally, in 1998, then in her 50s, Virginia was diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa, an irreversible disease affecting about 1 in 4,000 people in the United States. The disease attacks the cells controlling the night vision, eventually leading to blindness. (…)
She needed to learn to live as a blind person if she was going to succeed in a sighted person’s world. (…) One of her three children, Julie, urged her to check out the Miami Lighthouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired. Virginia and Bob owned a condominium in Miami, so she would have a place to stay. Once there, Virginia immersed herself in the world of the blind, honing skills she once took for granted, such as baking oatmeal cookies and sewing buttons on clothes. She soaked up everything she could learn about computer programs for the blind, including programs that convert text to speech. After a three-month program, Virginia felt a renewed sense of confidence. “I learned that a blind person can do anything a sighted person does. They just have to learn to do things differently”, she says.
At the end of her medical leave, Virginia was at a crossroads. She could return to her job at Purdue and continue to advise the president and provost on financial affairs. Or she could continue her efforts to regain mobility by enrolling in a one-month, 24/7 intensive training program with a guide dog. She chose the latter.
By then, not only was Virginia completely blind but for the first time in her life, she was stepping into the future without a clear career path. Yet she was at peace with her decision. “I had changed. Walking out the doors of Miami Lighthouse as a graduate of the program, I realized that my passion was helping the blind”, she says.
Virginia’s husband Bob spent three months with her in Miami while she completed the program but, as a tenured professor, he had to return to Purdue for the new school year. Virginia would stay in Miami with her new guide dog Tracker, immersing herself in work at the Miami Lighthouse. She began as a volunteer, but such was her financial experience – and drive – that she soon became treasurer and a member of the board. (…)
In early 2005, the president and CEO of Miami Lighthouse left unexpectedly for personal reasons. The chairman asked Virginia to serve as president and CEO on an interim basis until a permanent replacement could be found. Following a nationwide search, the board selected Virginia, making her the first blind president and CEO in Miami Lighthouse’s 81-year-history. Virginia wasted no time in growing the organization. (…)
Virginia’s disability has never slowed her down. “Virginia is such a determined person. Having a deep faith, supportive family, and positive, can-do attitude are at the core of her success”, says Doug Eadie, co-author of Virginia’s autobiography, The Blind Visionary.
“I am so blessed”, Virginia says today. Her blindness, she feels, was a gift that allowed her to find a new mission and purpose in life. “We transform people’s lives at Miami Lighthouse every day. I lost my vision and I found my passion.”
II. POINTS FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE HEART: A Pastoral Tool for the MEDITATIO
1. Do I render to God his rights as well as my duty of service to humanity? Am I animated with love and zeal as I carry out my obligation to God and neighbors?
2. When we are totally grief-stricken, what is our attitude and course of action? Do we rely on ourselves or do we allow God to achieve his compassionate plan in our life?
III. PRAYING WITH THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the ORATIO
O loving Jesus,
you came into the world to uphold the divine majesty
and to promote the total integrity of the human person.
Help us to be totally dedicated to God
and fully involved
in the pursuit of justice and peace in today’s world,
in giving preferential care for the weak and vulnerable,
and in promoting the good of individuals and the society.
Bless our endeavors
to “repay to Caesar what belongs to Caesar
and to God what belongs to God”.
Make us channels of your peace and healing love.
We love you and serve you;
we glorify you and give you praise, now and forever.
Amen.
***
My God,
at times and many times, we are lost.
Our grief overwhelms us.
Please do not let us lose hope.
Give us light and show us the way.
Let our hurts be turned to good
and our pain into healing.
Let the heart of the just trust in the Lord
and grant salvation to your servants, now and forever.
Amen.
IV. INTERIORIZATION OF THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the CONTEMPLATIO
The following is the bread of the living Word that will nourish us throughout the day. Please memorize it.
“Repay to Caesar what belongs to Caesar and to God what belongs to God.” (Mk 12:17) // “I was deprived of my eyesight.” (Tb 2:10)
V. TOWARDS LIFE TRANSFORMATION: A Pastoral Tool for the ACTIO
Participate actively, consciously and fruitfully in the Sunday worship and be honest and responsible in paying your dues to the State. // Help the blind to perceive God’s beauty in the beloved creation and his goodness in every human person.
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June 7, 2023: WEDNESDAY – WEEKDAY (9)
“JESUS SAVIOR: He Calls Us to Faith in the Living God … He Is Our Intercessor”
BIBLE READINGS
Tb 3:1-11a, 16-17a // Mk 12:18-27
I. BIBLICO-LITURGICAL REFLECTIONS: A Pastoral Tool for the LECTIO
A. Gospel Reading (Mk 12:18-27): “He is not God of the dead but of the living.”
This story is told by one of our Italian Sisters. Her father died of a massive stroke. Her mom was crying heartily at the funeral. She tried to console her with the thought of the final reunion in heaven. Her mom wailed: “But Jesus said in the Gospel that in the next life we will be like angels … no more matrimony. In heaven, I will no longer be your dad’s wife!” Of course, the widow’s fear of losing her husband in heaven is unfounded. True love never ends and nuptial love is perfected in heaven.
Today’s Gospel passage (Mk 12:18-27) introduces us to the Sadducees, a group of religious leaders who deny the existence of resurrected life. They are bent on engaging Jesus in a reduced-to-absurdity argument against bodily resurrection. The Divine Master’s first rebuttal to the scheming Sadducees also uses a reduced-to-absurdity tactic. He argues that in the next existence, which has no place for death, the issue of marriage is irrelevant. Jesus refutes the basic premise of the Sadducees that the life of the age to come is a continuation of this life and therefore needs human propagation lest it die out. The second rebuttal of Jesus is derived from the Torah. Since the Sadducees hold only to the Law of Moses, Jesus utilizes it to bolster his argument about the resurrection. The opponents of the resurrection have quoted the Torah to justify their case, but Jesus also quotes the Torah (Ex 3:6) to prove that death does not end human existence. When God says: “I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob” this implies that the patriarchs are living.
The main object of human existence is to live for God and God’s glory. It is through the resurrection of the Son of God that we are brought to true and eternal life. Our belief in our resurrection is based on our faith in the resurrected Christ. Harold Buetow remarks: “Christian belief in immortality is unique and special. The Gospel of Jesus Christ is the Good News of fullness of life in this age, and of the resurrection in the age to come … Someone has compared death to standing on the seashore. A ship spreads her white sails to the morning breeze and starts for the open sea. She fades on the horizon, and someone says, ‘She’s gone.’ Just at the moment when someone says, ‘She’s gone’, other voices who are watching her coming on another shore happily shout, ‘Here she comes’. Or to use another metaphor, what the caterpillar calls ‘the end’, the butterfly calls the ‘beginning’.”
B. First Reading (Tb 3:1-11a, 16-17a): “The prayer of these two petitioners was heard in the glorious presence of Almighty God.”
The reading (Tb 3:1-11a, 16-17a) is a powerful assurance that God is in control and he hears our prayer. The author presents us with parallel lives that are interconnected in the divine plan. Both Tobit and Sarah, driven by despair, wish to die and be released from suffering. With regards to Tobit, it seems ironic that the more he tries to live a good and holy life, the more he suffers. He becomes blind through a bird droppings accident. Moreover, his commitment to integrity leads to a quarrel with his wife, who understandably reacts with a verbal attack. To Tobit’s contention that she stole the goat that was given to her as a bonus, Anna counters by impeaching his moral integrity: “Now I see what you are really like.” Tobit is deeply humiliated. Choking back tears he prays that he would rather die than live in misery and face such cruel insults.
In the distant city of Ecbatana in Media, Sarah, the daughter of Tobit’s relative Raguel, is likewise overwhelmed with tribulations. She is afflicted by a demon, who desires her. Wanting her for himself, the demon keeps killing off her intended bridegrooms. Asmodeus, which means “demon of wrath”, kills each of her seven husbands before the marriage could be consummated. An abusive servant taunts her with the accusation that it is she who kills them. She is so depressed that she intends to hang herself. Sarah reconsiders, however, for the love of her father and instead raises her arms to God in prayer.
Tobit and Sarah, both victims of senseless and cruel situations, turn to God in prayer. Faith impels them to cast themselves upon God’s mercy and seek his saving will. Tobit’s plea for oblivion is accompanied by the words: “Now treat me as you please.” Sarah’s prayer for death is likewise accompanied with openness to divine grace: “But if it is not your will to take my life, at least show mercy to me.” God hears their prayers and sends his angel Raphael to help them. The name Raphael, which means “God heals”, aptly describes the angel’s role to be the instrument of healing for these two faithful ones who have opted to put their trust in God. Tobit will be able to see and Sarah will be liberated from demonic oppression. She will be espoused to Tobit’s son, Tobiah.
The story of Tobit and Sarah illustrates that God vindicates our faith and that suicide is a false solution to human misfortune. The experience of Tobit and Sarah has great relevance for the “suicide crisis” in today’s world. The following article published in an Irish Catholic newspaper gives insight into the modern society’s “self-destruction” phenomenon (cf. “Flaws in Effort to Tackle Suicide Crisis” in Alive! May 2013, p.7).
Paul Kelly of Console notes some of the trends in society that contribute to the terrible crisis of youth suicide. He points out the need for “sensitive criticism of the act”, and warns against “unintentionally legitimizing” it. The national media RTE in particular, have already done immense harm in this regard, pushing for the acceptance of voluntary mercy killing and assisted suicide. This is part of their wider, socially destructive, amoral agenda – the idea that each person is simply an individual and should have maximum “autonomy” or freedom.
Mr. Kelly stresses the need to teach children and young people how to cope with big disappointments in life. But how is this to be done?
We are talking here about suffering, how to cope with it and above all, how to make sense of it. For Christians it is the issue of the Cross. Again, inability to cope with failure may be an even bigger issue for adults – they often have less hope for the future, indeed, less future.
Kelly is right to link this problem with the desire for happiness. He speaks of “young people who cannot cope with the fact that they will not get what they want.” But the issue of happiness goes much deeper than getting what we want or being liked by others. This is the deepest yearning in every heart, yet our society seems to be utterly incapable of dealing with it in a serious way. It’s like we’re afraid of something.
Kelly briefly says that young people need to be told that suicide is “innately wrong” and never the “correct solution” to their problems. Despite first impressions, however, this appears to be simply a pragmatic rather than a moral statement.
And here we come to the most serious and undermining flaw in attempts to tackle the crisis – the refusal or inability to consider the religious and moral dimensions. But, whether we like it or not, these are fundamental in dealing with the issue of suicide. We need to face it.
II. POINTS FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE HEART: A Pastoral Tool for the MEDITATIO
1. What is our concept of death and dying? Is this concept illumined by faith in the living God, in whom all are alive?
2. Do the tribulations and trials of daily life overwhelm us? Do we ever despair and lose hope? In our painful experiences do we trust in God and have recourse to his saving help?
III. PRAYING WITH THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the ORATIO
Loving Father,
you are the God of the living, not of the dead.
In Jesus, your Son and our Savior,
we live and move.
We love you and your only begotten Son
for he is the way to eternal life.
We believe that death
is a door to infinite beauty and wondrous glory.
We proclaim in the great assembly
and in our life of service to the poor and needy
that you are indeed the font of life.
May the Risen Christ whom we celebrate in every Eucharist
bring about more and more
our daily resurrection and transformation.
In our work for justice and truth in today’s wounded world,
may we always give glory and praise to the triumph of life.
You live and reign, forever and ever.
Amen.
***
God of mercy,
when trials and misfortunes overwhelm us,
be with us and help us to cling to you.
Strengthen us by the power of the Holy Spirit.
Please join the sacrifice of our being
to that of Jesus, our infinite Savior,
that we may be touched by your healing hand
and experience your saving power.
Blessed are you, O Lord, merciful God.
And blessed is your holy and honorable name.
Blessed are you in all your works forever and ever!
Amen.
IV. INTERIORIZATION OF THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the CONTEMPLATIO
The following is the bread of the living Word that will nourish us throughout the day. Please memorize it.
“He is not God of the dead but of the living.” (Mk 12:27) // “The prayer of these two suppliants was heard in the glorious presence of Almighty God.” (Tb 3:16)
V. TOWARDS LIFE TRANSFORMATION: A Pastoral Tool for the ACTIO
Pray for widows/widowers who have lost their partners and are grieving for them. Pray for the grace of a happy death and a deeper experience of trust in Jesus’ almighty Father, the God of the living. Unite the struggles and challenges of your daily life into the great Christian paschal mystery of dying that leads to eternal life. // By your word and example, by your testimony of trust in divine mercy, enable the despairing to turn to God in prayer and supplication. If it is possible, join a support group assisting the family members and friends of suicide victims.
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June 8, 2013: THURSDAY – WEEKDAY (9)
“JESUS SAVIOR: He Calls Us to Love God and Neighbor … He Is the Bridegroom of the Church”
BIBLE READINGS
Tb 6:10-11; 7:1bcde, 9-17; 8:4-9a // Mk 12:28-34
I. BIBLICO-LITURGICAL REFLECTIONS: A Pastoral Tool for the LECTIO
A. Gospel Reading (Mk 12:28-34): “There is no commandment greater than these.”
The social ills of our time that cry out for healing challenge us to incarnate the love command presented in today’s Gospel reading: (Mk 12:28-34): “Love the Lord your God with all your heart … Love your neighbor as yourself.” Jesus Christ’s assertion of the primordial importance of the twofold love-command can be understood in the light of the Old Testament reading (Dt 6:2-6), which underlines the obligation of the people of Israel to love God wholeheartedly. But Jesus imbues the “love of God” command with a new meaning by adding “You shall love your neighbor as yourself”, from the Book of Leviticus (19:8).
Harold Buetow explains: “What is new is that Jesus went further: For him there’s an extremely intimate bond between love of neighbor and love of God. In Christian charity, people and God are not merely side by side; they are inseparably one. That idea was new. Another facet of newness was that Jesus gave a completely new interpretation of neighbor. In the time of Leviticus it meant Hebrews only. By the time of Jesus, it included resident aliens as well. For Jesus, the word has the widest meaning possible: It includes every member of the human race: He died for all of us. This was a much greater depth and breadth than ever before imagined.”
The true meaning of love of God and neighbor is crystallized in the very life and person of Jesus, especially in his self-gift and sacrificial love on the cross. Because God, in his Son Jesus has loved us so much, we too are empowered to love. The commandment to love God and neighbor flows from the love that the Lord has for us. In accepting God’s love, it is possible to love God and neighbor in a wholehearted way.
The life of Mother Teresa of Calcutta exemplifies what love of God and neighbor means in our world today (cf. Mother Teresa: Her Essential Wisdom, New York: Barnes and Noble, 2006, p. 20-23). The following thoughts from her are very insightful.
Sometime back, a high government official said, “You are doing social work and we also are doing the same. But we are doing it for something and you are doing it for somebody.” To do our work, we have to be in love with God.
***
Charity begins today. Today somebody is suffering; today somebody is in the street; today somebody is hungry. Our work is for today; yesterday has gone; tomorrow has not yet come. We have only today to make Jesus known, loved, served, fed, clothed, sheltered. Do not wait for tomorrow. Tomorrow we will not have them if we do not feed them today.
***
I ask you one thing: do not tire of giving, but do not give your leftovers. Give until it hurts, until you feel the pain.
***
The sisters care for forty-nine thousand lepers. They are among the most unwanted, unloved, and neglected people. The other day one of our sisters was washing a leper covered with sores. A Muslim holy man was present, standing close to her. He said, “All these years I have believed that Jesus Christ is a prophet. Today I believe that Jesus Christ is God since he has been able to give such joy to this sister, so that she can do her work with so much love.
B. First Reading (Tb 6:10-11; 7bcde, 9-17; 8:4-9a): “Call down your mercy on me and her and allow us to live together to a happy old age.”
The reading (Tb 6:10-11; 7:1bcde, 9-17; 8:4-9a) narrates the wedding of Tobit and Sarah and the prayer of deliverance that the newlywed couple offers on the night of their honeymoon. This prayer is preceded by a ritual of incense burning. Together with the incense, and in accordance with the suggestion of the angel Raphael, Tobiah burns the liver and the heart of the fish that they have caught during their journey to Media. The intolerable stench drives the demon away to Egypt. That the demon flees to distant Egypt implies total defeat for the jealous demon that has tormented the bride Sarah. The angel Raphael, God’s minister of healing, immobilizes Asmodeus, the agent of death. Sarah’s total deliverance occurs through prayer and ritual. Tobiah’s wedding prayer is not just to invoke divine protection, but also to invoke God’s blessings upon him and his bride. The newlyweds have entered into a nuptial and covenant love relationship with one another. Tobiah’s prayer considers marriage as a gift of God. He also makes reference to Adam and Eve who were created for each other as mutual help and support and from whom the human race descended. Tobiah asks God that he and Sarah may be like them and may live together to a happy old age and be blessed with children. Sarah joins Tobiah in the “Amen” and the marriage is consummated. God looks kindly on their wedding prayer and blesses them.
The marriage of Tobiah and Sarah is an image of the relationship between God and his chosen people Israel and also prefigures the love relationship between Christ Spouse and his Bride the Church. Indeed, in his life-giving sacrifice on the cross, Jesus Christ shows us the meaning of nuptial love and covenant. The beauty and the joy of a marriage blessed by God can be gleaned from the following stories (cf. Wilda Worth, “The Honeymoon Cottage” in Country, February/March 2012, p. 50 // Cathy Myers, “Plumber’s Helper” in Country, April/May 2010, p. 66).
During the housing shortage of World War II, two brothers in Muenster, Texas, converted their backyard chicken coop into a rental home. Newlyweds rented the little house, which became known as the Honeymoon Cottage, until they could find and afford larger homes.
In January 1954, I moved into the Honeymoon Cottage with Gene after my college graduation and our wedding. The cottage was the only furnished lodging available, and the monthly rent was just $30 including utilities. (…)
I had a lot of time on my hands during our first months in the cottage, so I turned my attention to creating a home. I learned to keep house, cook and garden. Using the Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook, I experimented with recipes and became a better-than-expected cook. Even when Gene complained that his clothes were getting too tight, I tempted him with fresh-baked bread, pies and cakes, and I secretly enjoyed watching him struggle with passing up dessert.
I planted a garden behind the house in spring. After stretching and straightening the wire fence into an upright position to keep out neighborhood dogs and kids, I dug, prepared the ground and planted tomatoes, bell peppers, beans, corn, cucumbers, potatoes, squash and pumpkins. On hot afternoons, I spread a blanket beside the garden to sunbathe, read and admire my growing garden.
As a first home, the Honeymoon Cottage was truly unique and original. And though it’s no longer a rental, the cottage still stands as an unlikely tribute to the hopes, dreams and determination of small-town America.
***
When my husband set out to repair a leak under our kitchen sink and asked me to help, it promised to be an interesting experience. (…) “Did you find the leak?” I finally asked. “’Bout got it finished now”, he said. “Dispose of the water while I finish removing the broken drain line. Then we’ll put it all back together.” Great! I was getting tired of holding the light, and it was almost time to cook supper. “Will do”, I said, pleased to be useful. I propped the light up against the cabinet and reached for the bucket. It was almost full, and I had to balance carefully to keep from spilling it
My husband continued to work, pulling in air through his teeth to whistle a tune. Imagine his surprise when he got a face full of water. Yes, I had poured the water down the broken sink. “Oops, sorry.” I held my breath.
My husband laughed and shook his head as I handed him a towel. He wasn’t angry or upset, or even surprised. He’s learned over the years to expect the unexpected. And now he had a good story to share with family and friends for years to come.
II. POINTS FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE HEART: A Pastoral Tool for the MEDITATIO
1. What is our response to Jesus’ great command: “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart … You shall love your neighbor as yourself”? How do we try to put this twofold command into practice? Are we capable of wholehearted love and service? If not, what do we do to improve our capacity for loving and giving?
2. Do we see marriage as a gift of God and a vital element in salvation history? What do we do to promote the sanctity and integrity of marriage and family life in the world today?
III. PRAYING WITH THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the ORATIO
Lord Jesus,
you loved the Lord your God with all your heart
and loved your neighbor as yourself.
In the Eucharist you are present to us
as the One who loved his own “to the end”.
O Divine Eucharist,
flame of Christ’s love that burns on the altar of the world,
make the Church comforted by you,
even more caring in wiping away the tears of suffering
and in sustaining the efforts of all who yearn for justice and peace.
Let your love triumph,
now and forever.
Amen.
***
God our Father,
you created man and woman
to love each other
in the bond of marriage.
Bless and strengthen husband and wife.
May their marriage become an increasingly more perfect sign
of the union between Christ and his Church.
We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God,
forever and ever.
Amen.
IV. INTERIORIZATION OF THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the CONTEMPLATIO
The following is the bread of the living Word that will nourish us throughout the day. Please memorize it.
“You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart … You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” (Mk 12:30-31) //“Allow us to live together to a happy old age.” (Tb 8:7)
V. TOWARDS LIFE TRANSFORMATION: A Pastoral Tool for the ACTIO
Pray that Jesus’ twofold love-command may truly impact and shape our daily lives. Let the words of Jesus and his Eucharistic sacrifice challenge you to love and embrace the poor and vulnerable in today’s fragmented and wounded world. // By word and example, by catechesis and social action, promote the sanctity and integrity of Christian marriage in today’s society.
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June 9, 2023: FRIDAY – WEEKDAY (9); SAINT EPHREM, Deacon, Doctor of the Church
“JESUS SAVIOR: He Is the Son of David and His Lord … He Is Our Healing and Salvation”
BIBLE READINGS
Tb 11:5-17 // Mk 12:35-37
I. BIBLICO-LITURGICAL REFLECTIONS: A Pastoral Tool for the LECTIO
A. Gospel Reading (Mk 12:35-37): “How do the scribes claim that the Christ is the son of David.”
We hear in the Gospel (Mk 12:35-37) that after being interrogated by his opponents on such issues as paying taxes to Caesar, on the doctrine of the resurrection, and on the greatest commandment, it is Jesus now who poses a question: how can the Messiah be a son of David, if David himself acknowledges him as his Lord? No one in the crowd answers. Jesus himself doesn’t answer his own question about in what sense the Messiah could be David’s descendant. The purpose of raising the question is didactic. Jesus wants to underline that the title “son of David”, with which he was acclaimed by the welcoming crowd in his triumphant entry to Jerusalem, is not adequate to describe his nature as Messiah. Christ Messiah, on account of his exalted, transcendent origin, is more than just a “son of David”. Although a descendant of David, Jesus the Messiah is the Son of God. His divine character surpasses the nobility and regality of his ancestor David. By his paschal mystery of passion, death, and glorification, Jesus Savior proves that he is indeed the son of David and wields lordship over David and all his ancestors. Indeed, the glorified Jesus is Lord of the peoples of the earth and all creation.
I read a charming story about Pope John XXIII. After he became Pope, his relatives from Bergamo came to have an audience with him. A bunch of rural, humble folks, they were timid and overwhelmed to be received by the Supreme Pontiff. The good, jolly old Pope extended his arms to the intimidated group and coaxed them warmly, “Come; it is only me!” I fancy that King David is likewise overwhelmed by the glory of his illustrious progeny, Jesus – son of Mary and Joseph. But on the day of resurrection, the Risen Lord invites and assures his ancestor David, “Come; it is only me!”
B. First Reading (Tb 11:5-17): “God himself scourged me and behold, I now see my son Tobiah!”
The reading (Tb 11:5-17) is a joyful account of the homecoming of Tobit’s beloved son Tobiah and the healing of the blind, long-suffering Tobit. Upon the instructions of the angel Raphael, Tobiah smears the fish gall into the eyes of Tobit and removes his father’s cataracts. Tobit’s joy is unbounded in seeing his son and embraces him whom he calls “the light of my eyes”. The prayer of gratitude that comes forth from Tobit’s lips manifests the extraordinary faith of this God-fearing man. He avows the mysterious working of the God who has scourged him with affliction and who now grants him mercy, grace and salvation. The bitter gall has provided the cure. But a deeper healing occurs. Tobit’s “eyes of faith” have been opened through suffering and his obedient stance to the divine saving will. God has turned his affliction into joy and Tobit is filled with praise and thanksgiving. Together with the daughter-in-law Sarah who, like Tobit, has experienced the torments of suffering and the joy of salvation, Tobit and his family have cause for celebration.
Tobit’s experience of spiritual healing, that is, the healing of “the eyes of faith” – which may or may not include physical healing – is replicated in the following personal testimony (cf. Marilyn Morgan King in Daily Guideposts 2010, p. 93)
During a routine eye exam three years ago, Dr. Bode noted that my right eye had the beginnings of macular degeneration. (…)
Now I have the beginning to this incurable disease. My left eye was still clear, but the doctor said macular degeneration usually starts in one eye and then moves to the other. The diagnosis meant that, if I lived long enough, I would eventually lose the sight of both eyes. I will be blind! I could hardly let the thought in.
Then one evening an idea came to me during my silent prayer time: I couldn’t know how much time I had left to see, but with God’s grace I could use my eyes to gather and savor as much beauty as I could while I could. I couldn’t take a camera with me into blindness, but I could “breathe in” images of beauty and light to carry with me, if the path should become dark before I reached home.
“O Holy One, lead me into the path of beauty while I see, and I will trust Your perfect vision to lead me safely home.”
II. POINTS FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE HEART: A Pastoral Tool for the MEDITATIO
1. Do we acknowledge that Jesus is the Son of David and his Lord and that he wields lordship over us all?
2. Do we trust in the mysterious loving plan of God who could allow us to experience joy and salvation through the rough road of affliction?
III. PRAYING WITH THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the ORATIO
Lord Jesus,
by the Holy Spirit,
you are incarnate of the Virgin Mary and became man.
You are a descendant of David.
The holy carpenter Joseph of Nazareth,
of the royal line of David,
is the foster father who cared for you.
We bless and thank you for being our Savior.
By the paschal events of your death and rising
and through the power of the Holy Spirit,
it has been revealed to us
that you are not simply the Messiah.
You are the “Son of God”
and not merely the “son of David”.
You are exalted above all.
You transcend the nature of a mere liberator.
You are God – our one Lord Jesus Christ!
We believe in you.
We submit to you our entire being
- our mind, heart and will.
We thank you for your gift of eternal life.
We love you and serve you, now and forever.
Amen.
***
Merciful Father,
you are infinite Wisdom and Love.
In trials and afflictions,
help us to see with “the eyes” of faith.
Let us experience the joy of your presence.
You live and reign, forever and ever.
Amen.
IV. INTERIORIZATION OF THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the CONTEMPLATIO
The following is the bread of the living Word that will nourish us throughout the week. Please memorize it.
“The Lord said to my Lord, ‘Sit at my right hand.’” (Mk 12:36) // “It was he who scourged me and it was he who had mercy on me. (Tb 11:15)
V. TOWARDS LIFE TRANSFORMATION: A Pastoral Tool for the ACTIO
Meditate on the Nicene Creed and savor the beauty of the goodness of God who sent his only Son into the world to redeem us. In your daily life, endeavor to mirror the dignity and humility of the Son of God who became man to save us. // Relish the beauty of creation around you and the beauty of life within you.
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June 10, 2023: SATURDAY – WEEKDAY (9); BVM ON SATURDAY
“JESUS SAVIOR: He Calls Us to a Total Self-Giving … The Angels Minister to Him”
BIBLE READINGS
Tb 12:1, 5-15, 20 // Mk 12:38-44
I. BIBLICO-LITURGICAL REFLECTIONS: A Pastoral Tool for the LECTIO
A. Gospel Reading (Mk 12:38-44): “This poor widow has given more than all others.”
Today’s Gospel (Mk 12:38-44) is a lesson in wholehearted giving. Jesus contrasts the sterling quality of an extremely generous widow with the greediness of scribes who “devour the houses of widows”. Observing the devout act of the poor widow who puts two small coins into the temple’s treasury, Jesus calls the disciples’ attention and teaches them the difference between complete and incomplete giving. The rich honor God with a portion of their wealth, but the poor woman gives from her very livelihood. As a consequence of her self-emptying, she entrusts herself wholly to God. The widow’s offering evokes the total gift that Jesus would make of himself on the cross. The Son of God is the ultimate self-giving Lord. He offers his life “once and for all” in order to redeem us. In union with him, our lives become capable of total self-giving. Together with Jesus, the “poor one” (anawim), we become a gift to God.
The generous stance of the Gospel’s poor widow is replicated by the beggar in the following story narrated by Mother Teresa (cf. Mother Teresa: Her Essential Wisdom, New York: Barnes and Noble, 2006, p. 21).
A beggar one day came up to me and said, “Mother Teresa, everybody gives you things for the poor. I also want to give you something. But today, I am only able to get ten pence. I want to give that to you.” I said to myself. “If I take it he might have to go to bed without eating. If I don’t take it, I will hurt him.” So I took it. And I’ve never seen so much joy on anybody’s face who has given his money or food, as I saw on that man’s face. He was happy that he too could give something. This is the joy of loving.
B. First Reading (Tb 12:1, 5-15, 20): “So now praise God. Behold, I am about to ascend to him who sent me.”
The reading (Tb 12:1, 5-15, 20) delineates the role of the angel Raphael in carrying out God’s providential design in the life of Tobit, Tobiah and their kin. True to their noble character, Tobit and Tobiah try to offer a generous compensation to Azarias for having made possible the incredibly successful outcome of Tobiah’s journey to Media. Azarias does not accept the offer, but responds with a divine revelation. He reveals himself as the angel Raphael, “one of the seven angels who stand in the glorious presence of the Lord, ready to serve him”. He is the one sent by God to guide and protect them, to instruct and test them, and to mediate their prayers. He is the one who brought the prayers of Tobit and Sarah into the divine presence. It is he who lifted up Tobit’s generous deeds to God. It is he who tested and confirmed their faith. The angel Raphael, whose name means “God heals”, has been sent by God to heal Tobit and to liberate Sarah from demonic affliction. As a ministering angel, Raphael exhorts Tobit and Tobiah to praise God and to give witness concerning God’s goodness to them. He also declares the benefits of caring for the poor. He reiterates the need to do good and to avoid evil. His mission accomplished, the angel Raphael ascends to the one who sent him and vanishes from their sight.
Tobit, Tobiah and Sarah have experienced the awesome action of the angel Raphael in their lives. With regards to Jesus Christ, the angels are at his bidding and minister to his needs. Likewise for us, the angels continue to be agents of God’s saving will. The following story gives us further insight (cf. James Pruitt, “The Voice of an Angel” in Chicken Soup for the Christian Soul, ed. Jack Canfield, et. al. Deerfield Beach: Health Communications, Inc., 1997, p. 377-374).
Among the U.S. Marines who fought against the Japanese in World War II was 21-year-old Corporal William Devers, who considered himself an agnostic. No amount of arguing, Bible-quoting or coercion by his fellow Marines or chaplain could sway him. During the company’s first major encounter with the Japanese, a number of the unit were killed and the chaplain was wounded. In great pain, the chaplain called to Devers, “My … left pocket … take it … please … Last night I had a dream. In the dream an angel appeared and told me that I had to make you take the Bible. Take it, son … please.” Devers shoved the Bible into his shirt pocket to satisfy the wounded man.
Twenty minutes later, Corporal Devers’ squad stumbled right into a Japanese patrol, and before he knew what had happened he was on the ground, his mind fading into the darkness, certain he was dying. When he came to, he felt a ripple of pain shoot through his chest, but there was no blood.
The bullet had torn into the Bible he carried in his pocket, ending its journey at the book of Psalms, which read: “A thousand shall fall at thy side; and ten thousand at thy right hand; but it shall not come nigh thee.”
II. POINTS FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE HEART: A Pastoral Tool for the MEDITATIO
1. How do we react to situations of vulnerability, insecurity and poverty? Do we take the stance of the generous widow? Do we allow ourselves to be configured into the self-giving Lord Jesus, the true Anawim – the ultimate Poor One of Yahweh?
2. Do we believe in the existence of angels and in God’s compassionate love in sending them into our lives? Are we sensitive to the promptings of our guardian angel?
III. PRAYING WITH THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the ORATIO
O Lord Jesus,
you are the anawim - the poor one of Yahweh.
You praised the self-giving widow at the temple treasury.
Her self-gift anticipates your self-sacrifice
on the wood of the cross.
Fill our hearts with your love
so that we too may be a total gift offered to God
and for the good of others.
Your life in us is our greatest treasure.
We are happy and content to possess you
and to be possessed by you.
We love you and serve you, now and forever.
Amen.
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(From the Prayers of the Pauline Family)
All you angels of the Lord,
you are called to pay noble homage,
give praise and incessantly bless the august Trinity,
to make reparation for our negligence.
You are true lovers of God and of souls,
and you continue to sing “Glory to God in the highest
and peace on earth to men of good will”.
We beseech you on behalf of humanity
that all may know the one true God,
his Son whom he sent,
and the Church, the pillar of truth.
Pray that the name of God may be held sacred,
the kingdom of Jesus Christ may come,
and his will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
Extend your protection
over civil authorities, working people and those who suffer.
Obtain blessings and salvation
for all those who seek truth, justice and peace.
Amen.
IV. INTERIORIZATION OF THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the CONTEMPLATIO
The following is the bread of the living Word that will nourish us throughout the day. Please memorize it.
“This poor widow put in more than all the others … She, from her poverty, has contributed all she had.” (Mk 12:43) //“I am Raphael, one of the seven angels who enter and serve before the Glory of the Lord.” (Tb 12:15)
V. TOWARDS LIFE TRANSFORMATION: A Pastoral Tool for the ACTIO
Pray that the spirit of total giving may animate our life of Christian discipleship and service. Pray also that the unjust structures that lead to destitution and greater abuse of the poor and needy in today’s society may be rectified. Strive to offer the gifts you have received from the Lord for good at the service of the community. // Be sensitive to the presence of the angels in our life and allow yourself to be “touched by an angel”. By your kindness and loving service to the poor and the needy, let them experience being “touched by an angel”.
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Prepared by Sr. Mary Margaret Tapang PDDM
PIAE DISCIPULAE DIVINI MAGISTRI
SISTER DISCIPLES OF THE DIVINE MASTER
60 Sunset Ave., Staten Island, NY 10314
Tel. (718) 494-8597 // (718) 761-2323
Website: WWW.PDDM.US