A Lectio Divina Approach to the Sunday & Weekday Liturgy
BREAKING THE BREAD OF THE WORD (Series 22, n.40)
Week 22 in Ordinary Time: September 1-7, 2024
(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: August 25-32, 2024 please go to ARCHIVES Series 21 and click on “Ordinary Week 21”.
Below is a LECTIO DIVINA APPROACH TO THE SUNDAY - WEEKDAY LITURGY: September 1-7, 2024.)
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September 1, 2024: TWENTY-SECOND SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME, YEAR B
WORLD DAY OF PRAYER FOR THE CARE OF CREATION
“JESUS SAVIOR: He Calls Us to Follow God’s Commands”
BIBLICAL READINGS
Dt 4:1-2, 6-8 // Jas 1:17-18, 21b-22, 27 // Mk 7:1-8, 14-15, 21-23
I. BIBLICO-LITURGICAL REFLECTIONS: A Pastoral Tool for the LECTIO
A. Gospel Reading (Mk 7:1-8, 14-15, 21-23): “You disregard God’s commandment but cling to human tradition.”
The Gospel reading (Mk 7:1-8, 14-15, 21-23) reminds me of a very amusing story about the Guru’s cat (cf. Anthony De Mello, The Song of the Bird, New York: Doubleday, 1982, p. 63). A prescription that is contingent on a particularly mischievous cat became codified and ritualized.
When the guru sat down to worship each evening the ashram cat would get in the way and distract the worshippers. So he ordered that the cat be tied during evening worship. After the guru died the cat continued to be tied during evening worship. And when the cat expired, another cat was brought to the ashram so that it could be duly tied during evening worship. Centuries later learned treatises were written by the guru’s scholarly disciples on the liturgical significance of tying up a cat while worship is performed.
The Gospel passage speaks of human traditions and prescriptions that have been codified and made binding for the people of God, for example, ritual washing of the hands, the purification of cups and jugs and kettles and beds, dietary legislations, etc. Last Sunday’s ritornello was Simon Peter’s avowal of faith in Jesus: “Master, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life” (Jn 6:68). Against this backdrop, the unmitigated legalism of the Pharisees and scribes seems pathetic. They have not adhered to Jesus who has “the words of eternal life”, but have chosen instead to bind themselves to human prescriptions that cannot give life nor refresh the soul. In their rejection of Jesus Christ, the Bread of revelation and the wisdom of God, they have disregarded the life-giving divine Word. They have sought salvation in the rigorous observance of what is merely human invention. Therefore, Jesus indicts them vigorously: “Well did Isaiah prophesy about you hypocrites as it is written: ‘This people honors me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me; in vain do they worship me, teaching as doctrines human precepts.’ You disregard God’s commandment but cling to human tradition” (Mk 7:6-7).
Jesus lambasts his opponents for following the letter of man-made laws and not the spirit that animates them. They have lost sight of the Word of God as the true law that refreshes the soul. Indeed, the true meaning of God’s commands is to give life. The sweet yoke of God’s law is meant to focus our attention on the living Word of God, Jesus Christ, the Bread of revelation offered to us by the Father for the life of the world. Jesus, the Wisdom of God and the crystallization of the divine law of love, is the authoritative interpreter of the Law and the fulfillment of the life-giving meaning of God’s commands.
The biblical scholar, Eugene Maly comments: “God has revealed himself in history as a loving, saving God. If we respond to this God and accept his love, we will act properly. When we can say with conviction that no other god has shown himself as our God has to us, then we will follow his statutes and decrees, because we know they are for our good.” The person who loves Christ and is nourished by the Bread of his Word focuses on following the divine will and cannot be defiled from within. The words and deeds of that person, marked by personal dedication and self-giving, evince a life of loving relationship with God, the author of life.
B. First Reading (Dt 4:1-2, 6-8): “You shall not add to what I command you … Keep the commands of the Lord.”
When I was a student at Maryhill School of Theology in the Philippines, a lanky and amiable Dutch professor, a member of the religious congregation Missionaries of the Sacred Heart, taught the courses in Canon Law. He was both a Canon scholar and a moral theologian. His approach was so spirit-filled and refreshing that Canon Law, together with Sacred Scriptures, became my favorite course. Some of my friends could not believe that Canon Law had become a favorite. One of them joked that probably my professor disagreed with Canon Law – that could explain why the course became so interesting. I countered that the approach was what made the course special. The professor, with his quaint Dutch accent, helped his students understand the meaning and the function of the Law in the Church. He discussed various cases with insightful reflections. He introduced us to the principle of epikeia – that in a particular situation a law may not apply. Thus properly understood and interpreted, Canon Law ceases to be burdensome, constricting and legalistic. It becomes a very positive and regenerating element of the life and growth of the Church.
In the first reading (Dt 4:1-2, 6-8), we hear Moses exhorting his people to cherish the statutes and decrees that he was teaching them to observe. The Law that Moses transmits to Israel is part of the love relationship between God and his chosen people. It is meant to promote the wisdom and life of God’s people so that they may reach and take possession of the Promised Land. The Law is an instrument to teach God’s children to walk on the way of life to their privileged destiny as a “great nation that is truly wise and intelligent”. The Law or the Torah serves as directions for living and orients towards the holiness and greatness willed for them by the Lord God.
The liturgical scholar Adrian Nocent remarks: “The commandments and decrees that Moses transmits in God’s name are a sign of the Lord’s love for his people. They bring out the two major aspects of the covenant he is establishing with the Israelites. On the one hand, God chooses this people, leads them, protects them amid the many difficulties they encounter, and constantly proves his fidelity to them. On the other hand, God’s fidelity calls for man’s fidelity to him in return; concretely, man must hear and keep the commandments; he must observe them in their entirety without adding or subtracting anything. This then is how man should respond to the fidelity of God. If he hears and accepts the law, if he meditates on it and observes it, he will contribute to the carrying out of God’s plan of salvation. If and when Israel thus responds, she will show herself to the pagans as a great and wise people. The law is thus not meant as a crushing burden but as a leaven and a source of enthusiasm for Israel, which will find in the law both salvation and greatness.”
Indeed, our life that is an Exodus to the Promised Land necessitates walking in the way of God’s commands. The Word of God, of which the Law is a vital expression, summons us to a greater intimacy with God and to a deeper responsibility for the advent of salvation and the promotion of God’s glory.
C. Second Reading (Jas 1:17-18, 21b-22, 27): “Be doers of the word.”
In the Second Reading (Jas 1:17-18, 21b-22, 27) we are energized by the words of Saint James: “Be doers of the word!” His main concern is to help the Christian community persevere in conversion to God and to make the believers grow in the Gospel life. He underlines the intimate relationship between faith in God and love of neighbor, which characterizes our covenant relationship with God. The great pastor, Saint James, inspires us with his keen sense of the wholeness of Christian life. Indeed, there is an active and inseparable relation between religion and life. For Saint James, there is no fragmentation of faith and works, and there is no such thing as part-time Christians in the Church.
Adrian Nocent comments: “Saint James, the great apostle of Christian action in the world, gives good advice. We ought to welcome the Gospel with a truly teachable spirit: humble enough to learn, able to face the truth even when it hurts, not blinded by prejudice, and sufficiently self-controlled to accept discipline. We should practice true religion. He wants our faith to be not merely an abstract assent, but a practical application in human living. James’ orphans and widows (v. 22) are his shorthand for all the oppressed for whom religion calls us to care.”
It is our joy to present some notes concerning Alberto Hurtado, the remarkable Jesuit priest from Chile who was canonized by Pope Benedict on October 23, 2005, in Rome (cf. Luis Quezada, “I’m Content, Lord! I’m Content!” in The Word Among Us, August 2006, p. 51-56). St. Alberto Hurtado is an excellent example of a disciple who is both a “hearer of the word” and a “doer of the word”.
Alberto Hurtado was born in 1901, in Vina del Mar, a port city in central Chile. By the time he was five, his father had died and his mother had moved to Santiago with her two sons, after selling the family property to pay off debts. Having no home of their own, they lived with different relatives – an experience that acquainted Alberto with the struggles of the homeless and needy. He learned compassion from his mother, too. “It is good to put your hands together to pray, but it is better to open them in order to give”, she used to say. Young Alberto did this by sharing with poor children the coins his uncle gave him. Later, as a student, he devoted Sunday afternoons to helping serve the poor in Santiago’s most blighted areas.
He also prayed. In fact, as he sensed a growing call to be a Jesuit priest, he prayed long and hard that doors would open and that his mother’s financial situation would improve. Eventually, his prayers were answered in the form of a court ordered settlement that ensured his mother a decent income. In 1923, with a law degree in hand, Alberto entered the Society of Jesus. His long years of formation took him to Argentina, Spain, and Louvain, Belgium, where he wrote a doctoral thesis on the art and science of education. Upon being ordained a priest in 1933, he wrote a friend that he felt “completely happy” and wanted only “to live out my ministry with all the fullness of my inner life and my outer activities”.
Once back in Chile, Hurtado lost no time putting his dreams into action. He taught high school and university students, seminarians and lay people. Young people were drawn to him through the retreats he preached and the mission trips he led; it seemed that no matter what activity he was pursuing, he fired young hearts to give themselves to Christ and work for his glory. But in the midst of all these outreaches, Alberto was most concerned for the poor. He worried about the orphans who roamed Santiago’s streets and climbed onto city buses to sing for money, to beg, or to steal purses. While others ignored them, he was keenly aware of the homeless youths who spent nights around bonfires under bridges and in parks. Some, he knew, were addicted to drugs or drink and stole to support their habits; some had done jail time. What he saw broke his heart. “Every poor person, every vagrant, every beggar is Christ himself who is carrying his cross”, he often said. “As such, we ought to love him and care for him.”
In October 1944, a sick, shivering man came to Hurtado looking for a place to stay. He was the very picture of misery. Days later, still shaken by the encounter, Alberto spoke of the man’s distress at a women’s retreat. His heartfelt account of the poverty on Santiago’s streets was like seed falling on good soil. When he spontaneously suggested opening a shelter for the neediest and the street children, the women responded with generous donations of money, jewels, and land. “Christ’s Home”, the Hogar de Cristo, opened its doors the following May. Everyone was welcome, the only requirement being that they have a real need. Alberto was directly involved in the project, recalled Maria Opazo, whose husband often accompanied him when he went out at night looking for children in need. He drove a green truck and drove it fast, slamming on the brakes when he saw a child lying on the ground. Stopping briefly on the bridge over the Mapocho River, he would blow the horn, and the children would come out yelling, “It’s Papa Hurtado!” When the truck was full, he took the children to the Hogar and then started all over again. “This would go on almost every night from 10:00 p.m. to about 3:00 a.m.”, said Mrs. Opazo.
Fr. Hurtado opened more houses, some of them rehabilitation centers and vocational schools that offered people the skills they needed to earn a living. Above all, he wanted everyone served to come to respect “their value as a person and dignity as a citizen, and more so, as child of God.” Today, the Hogar de Cristo and its many affiliates carry on their founder’s vision by caring for thousands of children, teens, and adults throughout Chile. (…)
Alberto was only fifty years old when he experienced the first symptoms of the disease that would cut his life short. A year later, after suffering a stroke, he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. The illness meant a reduction in the amount of work he could accomplish and, ultimately, an early death, but he received the news as a gift from God. Wanting to make the most of his last days, Hurtado kept his door always open. His room became a place of pilgrimage for people of all social conditions. He said farewells, thanked everyone for “such evidence of love and devotion” – and never forgot the poor. In his last letter, written only days before his death on August 18, 1952, Alberto charged his friends to continue his work: “As the needs and miseries of the poor show themselves, find ways to help them as you would help the Master … I confide the poor little ones to your care, in the name of God.”
II. POINTS FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE HEART: A Pastoral Tool for the MEDITATIO
Do we honor God with our lips and not with our hearts? Do we live according to God’s commands? Do we have a proper understanding of the purpose and meaning of law in the Church? Do we continue to cling to Jesus and avow our faith in him: “Master, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life.”
III. PRAYING WITH THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the ORATIO
(Based on Psalm 15 and John 6:68)
Master, to whom shall we go?
You have the words of eternal life.
Lord Jesus,
you incarnate God’s command
and thus give life to our soul.
In you and through you,
we discover that God’s decree is trustworthy.
You are joy for the heart,
wisdom for the simple
and light for the eyes.
God’s law is perfect – refreshing the soul.
It is more desirable than gold,
better than the finest gold.
Lord Jesus,
you are the word made flesh.
You embody the true spirit of God’s love-command
and perfect it.
The words you speak to us are life-giving.
They are sweeter than honey,
even than honey that drips from the comb.
Master, to whom shall we go?
You have the words of eternal life.
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.
“Hear me, all of you, and understand.” (Mk 7:14)
V. TOWARDS LIFE TRANSFORMATION: A Pastoral Tool for the ACTIO
Ask the Lord pardon for the times when we have followed the letter of the law and not the spirit of the law, and for the wounds and injuries caused by our legalistic attitude. Pray for our legislators and those in the law practice that they may be imbued with a Christian outlook of the role of the law in human society and the Church.
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September 2, 2024: MONDAY – WEEKDAY (22)
LABOR DAY (USA)
“JESUS SAVIOR: He Was Rejected in His Own Country … The Apostles Proclaim His as Christ Crucified”
BIBLE READINGS
1 Cor 2:1-5 // Lk 4:16-30
I. BIBLICO-LITURGICAL REFLECTIONS: A Pastoral Tool for the LECTIO
A. Gospel Reading (Lk 4:16-30): “He has sent me to bring glad tidings to the poor. No prophet is accepted in his own native place.”
(Gospel Reflection by Heather Jacobs, Bluff City, TN – U.S.A. // Illustrative Account by Sr. Mary Margaret, pddm)
As I reflected on the Gospel reading, the question kept coming to mind, why did Jesus’ relations and countrymen respond to him the way they did? Even though they saw the miracles and heard His profound wisdom, they still would not accept Him.
As I applied this question to my personal experiences, I realized that oftentimes we do the same thing with our own family members and those whom we have known for a period of time. When we’ve grown up with someone and known them through various stages of their life, we often take that person for granted. There doesn’t seem to be anything out of the ordinary about them. They become another increment of our regular, predictable, everyday life and we can’t imagine that person as anything other than the ideas we’ve formed about them through our limited experiences of that person.
Often, we limit our knowledge, respect, and love for a person to the roles they’ve played in our own lives. For example, when I think about my dad, it’s hard to think of him in any way other than as fulfilling the classic role of the father. He helped raise me with discipline and love, and worked hard to provide for my needs. All this is very important, but I must recognize that there’s more to him than just this, much more. To know him more fully, I have to learn to step outside my own personal experiences of him and try to walk in his shoes. A few years ago, my dad entered the deacon program. Now, each time I go home to visit he seems more and more different from the person I grew up knowing. It can be difficult to readjust and accept change, even when that change is positive.
I think a similar thing happened with Jesus’ relatives and countrymen. They helped raise Him, they fed Him, and played with Him. They helped clean Him and change Him when he got dirty as a young one. They helped teach and instruct Him. Suddenly, this man, who they thought they knew so well, returns and has profound wisdom and is working incredible miracles. They grew up with Him, what’s so special about Him that such a change has occurred? How and why did this change come about? If Jesus was a stranger to them and they didn’t have such preconceived ideas about Him, they probably would have accepted Him.
From this I realize that we need to learn to take a step back and try to view our acquaintances (especially those we know most closely) in a new way, rather than taking them for granted and just settling in our limited perspective of them. Most of all, we need to step back and ask: how is God working in and through this person? What is special and unique about this person? And how can I love and know this person more fully and completely by recognizing who they are as an individual, not just according to the way I’ve chosen to perceive them from my limited experiences of them.
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The rejection that Jesus has experienced from his countrymen continues to be replicated in the life of today’s Christians. The following modern day account, circulated on the Internet, is an example.
This was sent by Father John Pitzer, formerly at Holy Ghost Church and now in New Orleans. Please offer your prayers and share with as many people as possible.
Dear Friends,
Just a few minutes ago I received the following text message on my phone from Sean Malone who leads Crisis Relief International (CRI). We then spoke briefly on the phone and I assured him that we would share this urgent prayer need with all of our contacts.
"We lost the city of Queragosh (Qaraqosh). It fell to ISIS and they are beheading children systematically!!! Oh, dear God, what a world we are living in!!!!!
This is the city we have been smuggling food to. ISIS has pushed back Peshmerga (Kurdish forces) and is within 10 minutes of where our CRI team is working. Thousands more fled into the city of Erbil last night. The UN evacuated it's staff in Erbil. Our team is unmoved and will stay. Prayer cover needed!"
Please pray sincerely for the deliverance of the people of Northern Iraq from the terrible advancement of ISIS and its extreme Islamic goals for mass conversion or death for Christians across this region.
B. First Reading (1 Cor 2:1-5): “I came to you proclaiming Jesus Christ and him crucified.”
In today’s First Reading (1 Cor 2:1-5) Saint Paul personally exemplifies his assertion: “What seems to be God’s foolishness is wiser than human wisdom, and what seems to be God’s weakness is stronger than human strength.” From the perspective of human standards, Paul’s mission to the Corinthians should be a failure: he is plagued with illness, his appearance is not impressive and his personal delivery is weak. But the very existence of the faith community in Corinth is a powerful testimony of the presence of the Spirit and of the power of God at work. The very human limitation of Paul, that is, his lack of convincing rhetoric, manifests more clearly that faith does not rest on human wisdom but on God’s power. Saint Paul does not tantalize the Corinthians with human wisdom and eloquence, but simply proclaims the saving message centered on Jesus Christ and his death on the cross.
The following is a modern day example of Paul’s “God-dependent way” of delivering the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ (cf. “Generations Unite” in Marian Helper, Fall 2007, p. 29-31).
In the opening minutes of the new DVD, Generations Unite in Prayer: The Divine Mercy in Song, you see the prayerful faces of children and hear their eager voices singing the words given by our Lord to St. Faustina: “For the sake of his sorrowful passion, have mercy on us and the whole world.”
The children are not actors. Rather, they are an answer to the prayers of Trish Short. Two years ago, Trish prayed for the people and the resources needed to create a DVD that responds to Christ’s call to St. Faustina. “Encourage souls to say the Chaplet which I have given you”, He says. “Whoever will recite it will receive great mercy at the hour of death” (Diary of St. Faustina, 1541, 687). (…)
With Generations – the winner of a prestigious Telly Award for excellence in cinematography – Trish hopes to convince souls to approach Jesus with trust and to see Him for what He is: the love of our lives. She, for one, can attest to the power of the Chaplet.
One evening in the early 1990s, still suffering from the shame and guilt of having had two abortions, Trish took the advice of a friend. She knelt down by her bed and prayed the Chaplet for the first time. Suddenly, as never before, she felt Christ’s love and mercy break through her hardened heart. She made a good confession and knew she was forgiven. She also knew she had to tell others about the unfathomable mercy. “I once felt that the sins I’ve committed are unforgivable”, says Trish. “But, through the Chaplet, I learned that God’s mercy is a free gift that covers all sin. This is something that really can bring hope to a broken world.”
In particular, Trish’s focus in the DVD is on strengthening families. “I know what families are going through”, she says. “I come from a broken home. When we began this project, I knew the Lord wanted a strong witness of families – especially because fathers are leaving homes in droves, and there are so many problems with teens and drugs and sexual promiscuity.” (…)
Among those featured was Dr. Albert Kraft, a terminally ill Divine Mercy devotee, who sought to do one more thing for Jesus before he died. He was filmed in his bed surrounded by family members singing the Chaplet. He died shortly after the filming. His daughter Susan says his prayers were answered. He wanted to make it to the Divine Mercy Sunday to pray to Jesus and thank Him because he knew “this film would bring souls to Christ – the lost, the sinners, they would come back to Christ.”
II. POINTS FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE HEART: A Pastoral Tool for the MEDITATIO
1. Do we allow the adage “Familiarity breeds contempt” to take hold of us negatively and thus diminish our positive response to God’s marvelous actions and prophetic voice? Are we open to the positive change that occurs in the people around us? Do we welcome the “surprises” that each new day brings to our life?
2. Like Paul do we experience our human poverty and limitations and do we make it an occasion to let the power of God’s Spirit reveal itself?
III. PRAYING WITH THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the ORATIO
Loving Father,
you sent prophets
to speak your word of mercy to your erring people.
In their ministry of salvation,
they experienced the agony and the ecstasy
that their proclamation entails.
In the fullness of time,
you sent to us your divine Son, the Incarnate Word.
He is the ultimate prophet and message-bearer,
the radical revelation of your saving love.
Jesus was rejected in his own native place.
As Christian disciples,
we, too, are called to proclaim your word today
and thus experience the agony and ecstasy of prophecy.
Give us the grace to be faithful to our vocation.
And let our poverty manifest more fully
the power of the Spirit at work in us.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
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.
“No prophet is accepted in his own native place.” (Lk 4:24) // “May your faith rest not on human wisdom but on the power of God.” (1 Cor2:5)
V. TOWARDS LIFE TRANSFORMATION: A Pastoral Tool for the ACTIO
Pray that Christian disciples may be faithful to their prophetic ministry and be strengthened by the Holy Spirit in their task of witnessing to God’s message of truth, salvation and liberation. Offer a helping hand for modern day prophets who are being ostracized, abused and persecuted. Pray that our poverty and limitations may manifest more clearly the power of God.
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September 3, 2024: TUESDAY – SAINT GREGORY THE GREAT, Pope, Doctor of the Church
“JESUS SAVIOR: His Word Is Confirmed by His Deed … We Are Taught by His Spirit”
BIBLE READINGS
1 Cor 2:10b-16 // Lk 4:31-37
I. BIBLICO-LITURGICAL REFLECTIONS: A Pastoral Tool for the LECTIO
A. Gospel Reading (Lk 4:31-37): “I know who you are – the Holy One of God!”
Today’s Gospel reading (Lk 4:31-37) depicts the early phase of our Lord’s public ministry. Jesus is in the synagogue at Capernaum on a Sabbath, speaking the saving word of God and teaching with authority. The evangelist Luke describes the impact of his ministry on the worshipping assembly: “They were astonished at his teaching because he spoke with authority.” Jesus then manifests the power of God’s saving word by performing a healing sign. He cures a man possessed by an unclean spirit. His word is confirmed by his deed. Both word and action manifest that he is truly the Messiah sent from God.
Cardinal John Henry Newman remarks: “Grace and truth came by Jesus Christ. In him God is fully and truly seen, so that he is absolutely the way, and the truth and the life. All our duties are summed up for us in the message he brings … Christ has brought from his Father for all of us the full and perfect way of life. Thus he brings grace as well as truth, a most surprising miracle of mercy.”
A contemporary Church mission that is dear to me is the Vladivostok Mission: Reviving the Catholic Church in Eastern Russia. A way of collaborating is to send Mass stipends. I sent $20.00 requesting that a Mass be offered for two special intentions. Fr. Myron Effing’s letter of acknowledgment, dated July 31, 2012, contains an update of their mission and shows that their Gospel proclamation follows the way of Jesus, that is, by word and deed.
More good news, Sister Mary Margaret! You remember that our Lesozavodsk parishioner Vladimir needed to fly to Korea for a cancer operation – he came through the operation just fine, but now the extra good news. The two tumors were not cancerous! The doctor said that it was extremely dangerous anyway, and could be fatal if it had burst accidentally. He has returned home. And he says that for the first time in 57 years he feels normal! Most of his life he has lived with fever and a high white cell blood count. He wants to write a personal letter to all those who helped him with the operation. The donations for him from America came to just over $5000. Donations from the Russian side came to $3500. Most of this came from the active work of the parishioners of Visitation Parish in Lesozavodsk. Congratulations to everybody! Thanks be to God!
B. First Reading (1 Cor 1:10b-16): “Natural persons do not accept what pertains to the Spirit of God: spiritual persons, however, can judge everything.”
Today’s first Reading (1 Cor 2:10b-16) gives insight into the meaning of God’s wisdom and its implication for us. Paul does not deny that the Gospel is wisdom, but it is a different kind of wisdom, which the world cannot understand. Just as no one knows the secrets of a man except himself, so only the Spirit of God can discern the mysteries of God. Only God’s Spirit knows all about God. Whoever possesses the Spirit of the Lord thinks as Christ does and judges all things rightly from a supernatural point of view. The truly spiritual person can receive the revelation of God – a revelation summed up in the wisdom of the cross. Whoever does not have the Spirit regards the Christian mystery as sheer nonsense. Paul asserts: “We have the mind of Christ”. This stupendous grace enables the apostles and Christian disciples to respond to the truths taught by the Spirit.
The following modern day anecdote of a missionary gives an idea how human wisdom works (cf. John Geitner, M.M. in “Missioner Tales” in Maryknoll, May/June 2014, p. 8).
Ten months after arriving in Hong Kong and completing some beginner’s lessons in the Cantonese language, I was assigned to teach English and religion at the Maryknoll Fathers’ School in Kowloon Tsai. In its primary and secondary sections there were 1,500 pupils. Most of them were non-Catholic children from the refugee squatter huts in the neighborhood. I lived at St. Peter in Chains Church just across the way. Outside of the church, there was an open veranda where local youngsters liked to play. After classes, I would meet them to practice my faltering Cantonese.
One day, a girl who appeared to be about 12 years old asked me, “Where are your parents?” I told them that they were in the States. She then asked me, “Where are your wife and children?” I replied that as a Catholic priest I was not married and did not have any children. She looked at me quizzically and then asked, “Well, when you die, who will bury you?”
II. POINTS FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE HEART: A Pastoral Tool for the MEDITATIO
1. How do we share in Christ’s prophetic ministry? How do we make the voice of truth resound in the world today? In imitation of Christ, are we ready to support our prophetic proclamation with prophetic action?
2. Are we receptive to the Spirit of Christ who enables us to put on the mind of Christ?
III. PRAYING WITH THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the ORATIO
Lord Jesus,
you are the true prophet.
The words you speak are confirmed
by marvelous signs and healing actions.
We thank you for revealing to us, by word and deed,
the mercy of God.
In you, we have received the vocation to proclaim the Gospel.
Give us the wisdom of the Holy Spirit
that we may fully discern and carry out the divine saving will.
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 day. Please memorize it.
“What is there about his word?” (Lk 4:36) // “But we have the mind of Christ.” (1 Cor 2:16)
V. TOWARDS LIFE TRANSFORMATION: A Pastoral Tool for the ACTIO
Endeavor to bring the word of God and his healing love to a painful predicament and/or an unjust social situation. Resolve to make meditation an important part of your daily life.
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September 4, 2024: WEDNESDAY – WEEKDAY (22)
“JESUS SAVIOR: He Heals, Prays and Proclaims the Gospel … We Are His Co-Workers”
BIBLE READINGS
1 Cor 3:1-9 // Lk 4:38-44
I. BIBLICO-LITURGICAL REFLECTIONS: A Pastoral Tool for the LECTIO
A. Gospel Reading (Lk 4:38-44): “To the other towns also I must proclaim the good news of the Kingdom of God because for this purpose I have been sent.”
Today’s Gospel (Lk 4:38-44) depicts our Lord Jesus as in full swing in his public ministry. The paschal victory of Jesus is prefigured in the healing he carries out on behalf of Simon’s mother-in-law afflicted with a severe fever, the many others suffering with various diseases and those possessed by demons. The healing ministry of Jesus is a sign that the kingdom of wholeness has come. By his mission of healing, he asserts that sickness, suffering, and death do not have the ultimate word.
At daybreak, Jesus left and went to a deserted place. The “dawn” of Jesus is poised in earnest towards greater intimacy with the loving Father and the proclamation of the Gospel. The saving ministry of the healing Lord is sustained by his life of prayer and personal dialogue with the Father. Hence, the restoring touch of Jesus reaches out more extensively and the Good News is carried even farther, propelled by a life of recollection and prayer. Indeed, the ability to make core decisions for God’s kingdom is made possible by his profound communion with the Father in a relationship of prayer. Jesus’ tryst at the dawn of day and his deeds of healing invite us to sustain our own healing ministry by a life of prayer.
The following story of a consecrated religious, Sister Blandina Segale (cf. Margaret and Matthew Bunson, “Woman of the Wild, Wild West” in Our Sunday Visitor, March 25, 2007, p. 12) made me smile. I find her life of total dedication to the service of God’s people very inspiring and interesting. United with the Lord, she heals, prays and proclaims the Gospel.
One of the most intriguing Catholic women serving the people of the United States was Sister Blandina Segale, a Sister of Charity who cared for those who journeyed along the dangerous Santa Fe Trail. In 1872, Sister Blandina was sent alone to Trinidad, Colorado, a Wild West haven for outlaws and renegades. She was 22 at that time. Because she was a Catholic nun bent on aiding the local Native Americans and the poor, Sister Blandina was not welcomed to Trinidad with overwhelming enthusiasm. The residents of Trinidad faced hard lives and did not fancy the sort of concerns that a nun might have. They were not cruel or insulting toward her, but they obviously had little interest in her labors. That changed rather abruptly, however, when her “patron” announced one day that he expected one and all to treat her with respect and courtesy. If any of the good people of Trinidad caused Sister Blandina any problems, he would deal with them personally. Actually, he promised to shoot them down like dogs.
The townspeople knew the “patron” well, and some recalled that he had shot a man for snoring too loudly at a campsite, so he was a man to take seriously when he made a threat. The “patron” of Sister Blandina was William Bonney, known in history as Billy the Kid. She had given nursing care to one of Billy’s companions when he was shot and left for dead in an abandoned hut, and the famous outlaw was repaying her for her merciful care of his friend. He also appreciated her efforts for others. The first time they met, actually, Billy the Kid had come to town to scalp the four doctors who had refused aid to his wounded companion. Sister Blandina talked him out of it.
She had also saved the life of another man soon after arriving in Trinidad. Caught after fatally wounding a companion in a gun battle, the man was about to be dragged from the jail by an angry mob. Sister Blandina hurried to the bedside of the dying victim and talked him into forgiving his attacker. She and the sheriff then walked the murderer through the streets to the victim, who did forgive his assailant and then died. When Sister Blandina announced the deathbed scene to the angry men standing outside in the street, the mob thought it was all a bit peculiar, but they lost their enthusiasm for a hanging and let justice prevail in a courtroom. (…)
Sister Blandina was transferred to Santa Fe in time, where she continued establishing charitable institutions and programs. She labored for 21 years in the American West, becoming famous and respected … In time, Sister Blandina was assigned to Cincinnati, where she continued her labors with her sister, who was also a nun. She died in Cincinnati on February 23, 1941.
B. First Reading (1 Cor 3:1-9): “We are God’s co-workers; you are God’s field, God’s building.”
Today’s First Reading (1 Cor 3:1-9) gives us a glimpse into the fledging Christian community in Corinth and presents Saint Paul’s insight regarding “servants of God”. Paul contends that the jealousy, quarrels and divisions in the Corinthian community are proof of their spiritual immaturity. In light of God’s wisdom, factions, based on the alleged superiority of one minister over another or of one group over another, are absurd. Their false assessment of the apostles needs to be rectified. When one pits Paul against Apollos, this is acting like worldly people. In fact, both Paul and Apollos are simply God’s servants, fulfilling the roles assigned to them for the growth of the community. Each one does the work which the Lord gives him to do: Paul plants the seed; Apollos waters the plant, but it is God who makes the plant grow. With these beautiful farming images, Paul underlines the unity and cooperation that characterize the task of God’s ministers and emphasize the common goals that animate them.
The following modern day account gives insight into Paul’s climactic assertion: “We are God’s co-workers” (cf. Mike McGarvin in Poverello News, January 2014, p. 1-2).
Twenty-three years is a long time to work with someone, and can be viewed as quite an accomplishment. When two stubborn Irishmen work together for twenty-three years without beating each other to a pulp, it’s more like a miracle.
Jim Connell became Poverello’s Executive Director in 1990. Back then, I was still young enough to be a bit of a rebel and a hothead, someone who didn’t particularly like taking directions (my adolescence lasted longer than most).
Anyway, Jim was hired and he brought with him some very outlandish ideas, such as sticking to something called a “budget”. I’d heard this phrase before, but I thought it was a dirty word. So right away, we started clashing: Jim the businessman, me the freewheeling ex-hippie. There was bound to be a collision.
The reason the collision wasn’t fatal was that in spite of Jim’s strong personality, he was smart enough and knew the benefits of compromise. At some point he realized that when it came to me and money, he was dealing with someone who didn’t understand the constraints of limited funds. He started making deals with me.
I was willing to come to the table, because I figured that if he was offering a deal, then that meant I was victorious. Little did I know that his long-term strategy was to lure me into being more responsible. He basically told me that he was giving me a monthly homeless fund, and I could spend it however I saw fit. If I put up someone in a hotel, or brought some kid a new bicycle, he wouldn’t question it; but each month, when my “allowance” was spent, that was it until the next month. I readily agreed to this plan.
Crafty Jim had succeeded in doing something no other Director had been able to do: he forced me to think through how I spent money and use it more wisely; and he did it without fighting me tooth and nail. In fact, I went along with the plan, thinking I had “won”.
On the other hand, Jim was open to learning, and coming from a business background, he had much to absorb about the realities of homelessness. However, learn he did, and after a couple of years of wrangling, he saw more of where I was coming from, and I actually began to see that budgets weren’t necessarily bad things, although I bought a coffee cup that had printed on the side, “Budgets are for wimps.” My intention was to annoy Jim with the cup, but my heart wasn’t in the fight anymore. Jim had used tactical thinking and Irish charm to outflank me and get me surrender. (…)
Jim brought great insights and positive changes to our Resident Program, the efficiency of our food service, the expansion of other services and our financial accounting system. His contributions here have been enormous, and have made things run so much smoother than in the “good old days”.
II. POINTS FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE HEART: A Pastoral Tool for the MEDITATIO
1. Do I witness to the healing power of the Good News? Do I incarnate the healing compassion of our Lord Jesus Christ today? Do I derive strength and meaning for my healing ministry from deep communion with God in prayer?
2. Do we realize that as Christian disciples we are God’s servants for the nurturing of the Church? Do we relate to each other as God’s co-workers?
III. PRAYING WITH THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the ORATIO
Lord Jesus, our healing Lord,
people are hurting more than before.
Hold the sick in your arms.
Comfort them.
Fill their lives with meaning.
Touch their sufferings with your gentle healing hand.
And though we pray for health and healing,
let us find you in the mystery of suffering
and continue to work as God’s co-workers.
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 day. Please memorize it.
“He laid his hands in each of them and cured them.” (Lk 4:40) // “We are God’s co-workers.” (1 Cor 3:9)
V. TOWARDS LIFE TRANSFORMATION: A Pastoral Tool for the ACTIO
Anointing of the sick is understood incompletely by many as “extreme unction” to be administered to a dying person, with the result that the person no longer has control of his/her faculties and so is incapable of receiving it with complete awareness, faith and devotion. As part of your healing ministry as a Christian, encourage a seriously ill person to receive the Anointing at the proper time. Thank the Lord for the gift of God’s co-workers and endeavor to be a true partner in God’s saving work.
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September 5, 2024: THURSDAY – WEEKDAY (22); SAINT TERESA OF CALCUTTA, Virgin (USA)
“JESUS SAVIOR: He Is the Bridegroom-Messiah … He Manifests the Motives of Our Hearts”
BIBLE READINGS
1 Cor 4:1-5 // Lk 5:33-39
I. BIBLICO-LITURGICAL REFLECTIONS: A Pastoral Tool for the LECTIO
A. Gospel Reading (Lk 5:33-39): “When the bridegroom is taken away from them, then they will fast.”
Today’s Gospel (Lk 5:33-39) depicts Jesus as the Bridegroom-Messiah. He invites us to a new relationship that transcends mere legal observance and superficial piety. A loving relationship with the Bridegroom entails a radical transformation and infuses new meaning into such religious practices as fasting, an issue raised by some people when they observed that John’s disciples and the Pharisees fast, while Jesus’ disciples did not. Jesus answers them, “Can you make the wedding guests fast while the bridegroom is with them? But the days will come, and when the bridegroom is taken away from them, they will fast in those days.” The reference to the Bridegroom being taken away is an allusion to the death of Jesus that led to his saving glory.
Indeed, in the new dispensation that resulted from the paschal event of the death and resurrection of Jesus, his disciples would fast, but not in the meaning given to this religious practice by the disciples of John and the Pharisees. Following a new lifestyle based on the radical salvation won for us by Christ’s saving death on the cross, the Christian disciples would also fast, but for the right reason. An erroneous notion of fasting has no place in the messianic kingdom ushered in by Christ. Indeed, the followers of Jesus would exercise various forms of salutary asceticism, in a spirit of receptivity to the coming of the Kingdom. They would carry these out in anticipation of the full joy that is prepared for them by the victorious Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world, in the nuptial banquet in heaven.
The radical newness of our relationship with Christ can be compared to a piece of new cloth which should not be sewn into an old cloak, for it will make the tear even greater. It can also be compared to new wine which should not be poured into an old wineskin for it will cause the skin to break and spill the wine. Indeed, the love-relationship with Christ, the Bridegroom, demands an exhilaratingly new vision and life-style, symbolically portrayed by Luke as “new wine” poured into fresh wineskins.
The Redemptorist John P. Fahey Guerra gives insight into Christian fasting as an opportunity to gauge our cooperation with God’s plan (cf. Ligourian, A Redemptorist Pastoral Publication, February 2012, p. 11).
We have formed attitudes, feelings, and beliefs about the poor and about poverty in our lives that are simply not in accord with our faith in the God of Jesus Christ. Many of these attitudes have become so habitual that they appear “natural” to us, and, as a consequence, we don’t see the need to reflect on them.
Fasting is a spiritual exercise that seeks to break the power these habits of mind and heart have over us. It is not deprivation for deprivation’s sake, but rather a distancing of ourselves from our present worldview so that our faith in God’s view of the world might take hold of us.
Our encounter with the poor family in Mexico was disconcerting to us; it broke the pattern of our comfortable view of the world. It questioned our way of living. It showed us that we were far from where we were called to be. Fasting is a way for us to intentionally bring into question our present way of living.
B. First Reading (1 Cor 4:1-5): “The Lord will manifest the motives of our hearts.”
In today’s First Reading (1 Cor 4:1-15) Saint Paul responds to the judgmental attitude of the Corinthians. The apostles are “servants of Christ” and “stewards of the mysteries of God”, charged with preaching divine revelation and not their own doctrines. What is required of them is trustworthiness, a conscientious devotion to the Master’s interests. The Corinthians have no right to pass judgment on them. Only the Lord, not even Paul himself, can judge the faithfulness of one’s service. Final judgment must wait until the Lord comes. He will expose what is hidden and manifest the intentions of our hearts. And then everyone will receive from God the praise he deserves. Hence, Paul and his companions should not be judged by human standards and certainly, not prematurely. Their “trustworthiness” as apostles is assessed by the Lord and will be brought to light at the Lord’s coming.
The following charming account illustrates how the Lord manifests the hidden thoughts of the heart (cf. Euphrasia Nyaki in “Missioner Tales” in Maryknoll, May/June 2014, p. 8-9).
One day while walking down the street in Joao Pessoa, a northeastern coastal city of Brazil, I saw a man sitting on the sidewalk, who appeared to be homeless and living on the streets. I had a pretty good hunch that he was going to ask me for a handout and knowing that I had nothing to give him that day, I tried to look in the other direction as I approached. When I got near to where he was sitting, I was surprised to hear him call to me.
“Hey, woman! Look at me!” he called out to me, “I’m not going to ask you for anything. I just want to see your beautiful face.”
As I turned to look at him, his face broke out into such a beautiful smile that I could not help but think of Jesus.
II. POINTS FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE HEART: A Pastoral Tool for the MEDITATIO
1. Do we respond to God’s eternal and faithful love incarnated in Christ, the messianic Bridegroom? Do we cherish the radical newness that God’s forgiving and renewing love brings to us through his Son Jesus Christ? Are we ready to share the tenderness of God’s love with the forlorn and abandoned of today’s world?
2. Do we trust in God who manifests the motives of our hearts?
III. PRAYING WITH THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the ORATIO
Lord Jesus,
you are the Bridegroom of the Church,
Renew us in your love
and pour “new wine” to our feasting.
Let us be faithful servants and trustworthy stewards.
Purify the motives of our hearts
that we may render God fitting 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.
“When the bridegroom is taken away from them, then they will fast in those days.” (Lk 5:35) // “The Lord will manifest the motives of our hearts.” (1 Cor 4:5)
V. TOWARDS LIFE TRANSFORMATION: A Pastoral Tool for the ACTIO
Pray for those whose marriage bond has been adulterated and shattered. Offer your contribution to promote the healing of nuptial relationships and the integrity of the sacrament of matrimony. By regular examination of the heart, be attentive as the Lord manifests to you your inner motivations.
*** *** ***
September 6, 2024: FRIDAY – WEEKDAY (22)
“JESUS SAVIOR: He Is the Bridegroom-Messiah … He Manifests the Motives of Our Hearts”
BIBLE READINGS
1 Cor 4:1-5 // Lk 5:33-39
I. BIBLICO-LITURGICAL REFLECTIONS: A Pastoral Tool for the LECTIO
A. Gospel Reading (Lk 5:33-39): “When the bridegroom is taken away from them, then they will fast.”
Today’s Gospel (Lk 5:33-39) depicts Jesus as the Bridegroom-Messiah. He invites us to a new relationship that transcends mere legal observance and superficial piety. A loving relationship with the Bridegroom entails a radical transformation and infuses new meaning into such religious practices as fasting, an issue raised by some people when they observed that John’s disciples and the Pharisees fast, while Jesus’ disciples did not. Jesus answers them, “Can you make the wedding guests fast while the bridegroom is with them? But the days will come, and when the bridegroom is taken away from them, they will fast in those days.” The reference to the Bridegroom being taken away is an allusion to the death of Jesus that led to his saving glory.
Indeed, in the new dispensation that resulted from the paschal event of the death and resurrection of Jesus, his disciples would fast, but not in the meaning given to this religious practice by the disciples of John and the Pharisees. Following a new lifestyle based on the radical salvation won for us by Christ’s saving death on the cross, the Christian disciples would also fast, but for the right reason. An erroneous notion of fasting has no place in the messianic kingdom ushered in by Christ. Indeed, the followers of Jesus would exercise various forms of salutary asceticism, in a spirit of receptivity to the coming of the Kingdom. They would carry these out in anticipation of the full joy that is prepared for them by the victorious Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world, in the nuptial banquet in heaven.
The radical newness of our relationship with Christ can be compared to a piece of new cloth which should not be sewn into an old cloak, for it will make the tear even greater. It can also be compared to new wine which should not be poured into an old wineskin for it will cause the skin to break and spill the wine. Indeed, the love-relationship with Christ, the Bridegroom, demands an exhilaratingly new vision and life-style, symbolically portrayed by Luke as “new wine” poured into fresh wineskins.
The Redemptorist John P. Fahey Guerra gives insight into Christian fasting as an opportunity to gauge our cooperation with God’s plan (cf. Ligourian, A Redemptorist Pastoral Publication, February 2012, p. 11).
We have formed attitudes, feelings, and beliefs about the poor and about poverty in our lives that are simply not in accord with our faith in the God of Jesus Christ. Many of these attitudes have become so habitual that they appear “natural” to us, and, as a consequence, we don’t see the need to reflect on them.
Fasting is a spiritual exercise that seeks to break the power these habits of mind and heart have over us. It is not deprivation for deprivation’s sake, but rather a distancing of ourselves from our present worldview so that our faith in God’s view of the world might take hold of us.
Our encounter with the poor family in Mexico was disconcerting to us; it broke the pattern of our comfortable view of the world. It questioned our way of living. It showed us that we were far from where we were called to be. Fasting is a way for us to intentionally bring into question our present way of living.
B. First Reading (1 Cor 4:1-5): “The Lord will manifest the motives of our hearts.”
In today’s First Reading (1 Cor 4:1-15) Saint Paul responds to the judgmental attitude of the Corinthians. The apostles are “servants of Christ” and “stewards of the mysteries of God”, charged with preaching divine revelation and not their own doctrines. What is required of them is trustworthiness, a conscientious devotion to the Master’s interests. The Corinthians have no right to pass judgment on them. Only the Lord, not even Paul himself, can judge the faithfulness of one’s service. Final judgment must wait until the Lord comes. He will expose what is hidden and manifest the intentions of our hearts. And then everyone will receive from God the praise he deserves. Hence, Paul and his companions should not be judged by human standards and certainly, not prematurely. Their “trustworthiness” as apostles is assessed by the Lord and will be brought to light at the Lord’s coming.
The following charming account illustrates how the Lord manifests the hidden thoughts of the heart (cf. Euphrasia Nyaki in “Missioner Tales” in Maryknoll, May/June 2014, p. 8-9).
One day while walking down the street in Joao Pessoa, a northeastern coastal city of Brazil, I saw a man sitting on the sidewalk, who appeared to be homeless and living on the streets. I had a pretty good hunch that he was going to ask me for a handout and knowing that I had nothing to give him that day, I tried to look in the other direction as I approached. When I got near to where he was sitting, I was surprised to hear him call to me.
“Hey, woman! Look at me!” he called out to me, “I’m not going to ask you for anything. I just want to see your beautiful face.”
As I turned to look at him, his face broke out into such a beautiful smile that I could not help but think of Jesus.
II. POINTS FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE HEART: A Pastoral Tool for the MEDITATIO
1. Do we respond to God’s eternal and faithful love incarnated in Christ, the messianic Bridegroom? Do we cherish the radical newness that God’s forgiving and renewing love brings to us through his Son Jesus Christ? Are we ready to share the tenderness of God’s love with the forlorn and abandoned of today’s world?
2. Do we trust in God who manifests the motives of our hearts?
III. PRAYING WITH THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the ORATIO
Lord Jesus,
you are the Bridegroom of the Church,
Renew us in your love
and pour “new wine” to our feasting.
Let us be faithful servants and trustworthy stewards.
Purify the motives of our hearts
that we may render God fitting 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.
“When the bridegroom is taken away from them, then they will fast in those days.” (Lk 5:35) // “The Lord will manifest the motives of our hearts.” (1 Cor 4:5)
V. TOWARDS LIFE TRANSFORMATION: A Pastoral Tool for the ACTIO
Pray for those whose marriage bond has been adulterated and shattered. Offer your contribution to promote the healing of nuptial relationships and the integrity of the sacrament of matrimony. By regular examination of the heart, be attentive as the Lord manifests to you your inner motivations.
*** *** ***
September 7, 2024: SATURDAY – WEEKDAY (22); BVM ON SATURDAY
“JESUS SAVIOR: He Is the Lord of the Sabbath … His Apostles Experienced the Cost of Discipleship”
BIBLE READINGS
1 Cor 4:6b-15 // Lk 6:1-5
I. BIBLICO-LITURGICAL REFLECTIONS: A Pastoral Tool for the LECTIO
A. Gospel Reading (Lk 6:1-5): “Why are you doing what is unlawful on the Sabbath?”
The Pharisees, the religious experts, become more and more critical of everything Jesus does. In today’s Gospel account, the Pharisees accuse Jesus’ disciples of profaning the Sabbath, the seventh day. According to Jewish tradition, the Sabbath is to be kept holy and as a day of rest since God rested on the seventh day. The biblical scholar Samuel Oyin Abogunrin comments: “In order to make sure no one did any work during the day of rest (Friday evening until Saturday evening), the rabbis later added numerous additional regulations so that scrupulous people could be sure they obeyed the Torah rule properly. In the process they focused on doing the right thing and making sure others did the right thing; as often happens in such cases, some people lost sight of the true meaning of the Sabbath.”
In today’s Gospel reading (Lk 6:1-5), the Pharisees confront the disciples of Jesus for doing what is unlawful on a Sabbath. Eating the grain out of someone’s field in not unlawful, but plucking the grain and rubbing the kernels to remove the husks is tantamount to “plucking” and “winnowing”, farm tasks that break the Sabbath law. Jesus defends his disciples by appealing to sacred scriptures. He asks the Pharisees if what his disciples have done is wrong, what about David: he and his hungry men went into the house of God, took the bread and ate the bread which can be “lawfully” eaten only by priests. In this incident (cf. I Samuel 21:2-7) the disciplinary restriction of the law gives way before human need. Jesus then makes a climactic assertion: “The Son of Man is lord of the Sabbath.” Jesus is the “Son of Man” who ushers in the dawn of salvation even on a Sabbath.
The following story gives a glimpse into the perversion of the Law/religion as well as its true interpretation/meaning (cf. Anthony De Mello, Taking Flight: A Book of Story Meditations, New York: Image Books, 1988, p. 90-92).
Among the Jews, the observance of the Sabbath, the day of the Lord, was originally a thing of joy. But too many Rabbis kept issuing one injunction after another on how exactly it was to be observed, what sort of activity was allowed, until some people felt they could hardly move during the Sabbath for fear that some regulation or other might be transgressed.
The Baal Shem, son of Eliezer, gave much thought to this matter. One night he had a dream. An angel took him up to heaven and showed him two thrones placed above all others. “For whom they are reserved?” he asked. “For you” – was the answer – “if you make use of your intelligence, and for a man whose name and address is now being written down and given to you.”
He was then taken down to the deepest spot in hell and shown two vacant seats. “For whom are these prepared?” he asked. “For you” – the answer came – “if you do not make use of your intelligence and for the man whose name and address are being written down for you.”
In his dream Baal Shem visited the man who was to be his companion in paradise. He found him living among Gentiles, quite ignorant of Jewish customs, and, on the Sabbath, he would give a banquet at which there was a lot of merrymaking, and to which all his Gentile neighbors were invited. When Baal Shem asked him why he held this banquet, the man replied, “I recall that in my childhood my parents taught me that the Sabbath was a day of rest and for rejoicing; so on Saturdays my mother made the most succulent meals at which we sang and danced and made merry. I do the same today.”
Baal Shem attempted to instruct the man in the ways of his religion, for he had been born a Jew but was evidently quite ignorant of all the rabbinical prescriptions. But Baal Shem was struck dumb when he realized that the man’s joy in the Sabbath would be marred if he was made aware of his shortcomings.
Baal Shem, still in his dream, then went to the home of his companion in hell. He found the man to be a strict observer of the Law, always apprehensive lest his conduct should not be correct. The poor man spent each Sabbath day in a scrupulous tension as if he were sitting on hot coals. When Baal Shem attempted to upbraid him for his slavery to the Law, the power of speech was taken from him as he realized that the man would never understand that he could do wrong by fulfilling religious injunctions.
Thanks to this revelation given to him in a form of a dream, the Baal Shem Tov evolved a new system of observance whereby God is worshiped in joy that comes from the heart.
When people are joyful they are always good; whereas when they are good they are seldom joyful.
B. First Reading (1 Cor 4:6b-15): “We go hungry and thirsty and we are poorly clad.”
In today’s reading (1 Cor 4:6b-15) we continue to get insight into the Christian community in Corinth and the role of the apostles. Paul uses his experience and that of Apollos in the discussion of apostolic ministry. With this he hopes to convey his thoughts to the Corinthians more efficaciously. He contrasts the life of the apostles with the Corinthian community. Paul describes at what cost and under what conditions he and his fellow apostles labor for the sake of the Good News: they go hungry and thirsty, clothed in rags, beaten and cursed, worn out with hard work, wandering from place to place, insulted and persecuted. The apostle cries out: “We are no more than this world’s garbage; we are the scum of the earth to this very moment.” This is antithetical to the smugness of the Corinthians, who in forming factions make pretence of spiritual superiority over their fellow Christians. This attitude perplexes Paul who questions them: “Well, then, how can you boast, as if what you have were not a gift?” Paul’s tirade is not meant to make the Corinthians feel ashamed, but to instruct them as his dear children. Indeed, the apostle Paul is their “father” in Christ Jesus through the Gospel.
The following article gives us an idea of what Saint Paul went through in preaching the Gospel to the nations (cf. “The Great Apostle: Introduction” in Concord, ed. Fr. Tom Fogarty, SSP, September 2014, p. 5-6).
Too many, if they know anything about him at all, see St. Paul as an early Christian writer, doubtless of importance to the early Christians but with little to link him to our times. Such a view could not be more wrong, not only because his profound teaching will be relevant in every age until the end of time but because he conveyed that teaching in such a passionate, exuberant and dramatic way in his immortal Letters. Little did he think, as he agonized over those relatively few converts he made personally, that all this heart-breaking work would eventually disappear – with the exception of the Church in Malta. Little did he think he was writing for the Christian ages to come and not just for those few unreliable Christians he made and often wept over.
And what a price he paid! True, conditions two thousand years ago were more difficult for everyone, not just for him. And perhaps most of all travel facilities – or the lack of them. But, let’s take a look.
On his third Missionary Journey, for example, he left Antioch walking north with the temperature in the nineties or higher and made, perhaps, twenty miles daily – not always because the road went uphill. It would thus have taken him ten days of constant walking to reach the gateway to Cilicia, a narrow pass into the Taurus Mountains. That pass, we are told, is 3,500 feet and the peaks of the mountains go as high as ten thousand feet. From that point Paul had still more than 1,000 miles
to go before reaching Troas where for the first time he could find a ship and get a little rest.
How he survived in the meantime is hard to say: perhaps some wild fruit during the day and at night some cheese from a friendly shepherd who might also give him shelter. Tourist he was not, rather a poor pilgrim … but also one on fire with the love of Jesus which in his thirty-plus years of mission never left him.
II. POINTS FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE HEART: A Pastoral Tool for the MEDITATIO
1. What does it mean for us personally that Jesus is the Lord of the Sabbath? How do we keep the Lord’s Day holy?
2. Are we grateful for what the apostle Paul and the other apostles have done for the community of faith?
III. PRAYING WITH THE WORD: A Pastoral Tool for the ORATIO
O Jesus Lord,
you are the Lord of the Sabbath.
Teach us the meaning of compassion
and help us discern the true demands of God’s commands.
We give you praise
for the apostolic work of Saint Paul and his fellow workers.
Help us to toil with them
for the spread of the Gospel.
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 Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath.“ (Lk 6:5) // “I became your father in Christ Jesus through the Gospel.” (1 Cor 4:15)
V. TOWARDS LIFE TRANSFORMATION: A Pastoral Tool for the ACTIO
Make an effort to learn more about Saint Paul and his apostolic travails. Learn to celebrate Sunday as truly the Lord’s Day.
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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