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Showing posts with label grace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grace. Show all posts

Sunday, February 7, 2016

Luke 5: 1-11 Fishers of Men

For today's readings http://usccb.org/bible/readings/020716.cfm

My apologies dear friends for my tardy blog.  I ask prayers for a dear friend who died this morning.  Her name is Grace.  Most of my day was spent making telephone calls to those I was to contact when she died.

In today's Gospel we read about how Simon Peter and the others were called to be fishers of men.  As experienced fishermen they knew their business.  Yet Jesus was calling them to something more.  In my youth I read Siddhartha by Herman Hess.  I cannot forget his use of the water to illustrate spiritual growth.  Being in the deep, that wide unknown, alone with God, what a difficult thing to describe.  This is where Apostles were led by Jesus, our Lord calling to them.  How much spiritual wisdom and teaching is imparted to them, and yet we hear it in simplified terms as they will be fishers of men, and will catch more than their nets will hold.  We are likewise taught by our teachers, in a great line extending to these Apostles to also be fishers of men.  My the children being taught yesterday this could come in many ways: being there for others, celebrating birthdays, blessings family and friends, encouraging each other especially in faith.  Basically we do this through living a Christian life.

(Photo from private collection.  All rights reserved)


Thursday, February 4, 2016

Mark 6:7-13 Called to the Journey Through Humility

For today's readings (http://www.usccb.org/bible/readings/020416.cfm)

In today’s Gospel Jesus sends the disciples out two by two with instructions to take nothing with them except a walking stick and the authority over unclean spirits.  It was a faith walk.  We have all been on them to some degree.  Where they were welcomed, they could stay.  Where they were not welcomed, they should move on and “shake the dirt from their feet” meaning they should leave everything, even ill sentiments behind.  They went and preached repentance, drove out demons, anointed, and cured the sick.

Jesus is the eternal Word of God that came and lived among us.  He is the fullness of God’s Revelation to us.  Our faith is the free affirmative response to God’s calling to us.   Grace is God’s life in us.  God’s love for us, as through the Son, is limitless.  Living our faith, like the disciples do when he calls them on their journey, is saying “yes” to Jesus’s call to bring the reign of God.  This reign of God is His saving love fully manifest in the world.  We this transmitted to those who have faith, to the disciples, to us. Miracles are only one sign of this love, and we hear about them a little today as the disciples share the reign of God through their call for repentance and to receive God’s love.  It is an affirmation too that although God is everywhere, although temporarily limited in His human form, we are likewise called to share in His work.   By professing God, by sharing the teachings of Christ, the disciples were publicly professing their faith.  We are called to do that too.  This is one of the reasons that we state our creed, our beliefs at mass.  The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, “Whoever says ‘I believe’ says, “I pledge myself to what we believe.” (CCC 185) 

In the first reading today we meet David and Solomon.  Solomon receives the kingdom to rule and keep.  They are our examples of men of faith.  Both, like us are sinners.  The difference is that David, as many bad things as he did, repented of his sins and asked God forgiveness.  He received the gift of humility.  We do not see that with Solomon.  So which do we use as our example today when we hear the call to follow the Word of God?  Are we ready to go with as little as the disciples, except for our great faith?

Thursday, January 28, 2016

Mark 4:21-25 Invisible Becomes Visible

(From my reflections)

In my childhood church there were large stained glass windows lining the walls of our vaulted church ceiling.  As students we were encouraged by our school principal to attend daily mass since the church was right next door.  I remember the early morning sunlight streaming through the images of saints down to all of us sitting in the pews.  I used to sit and wonder about the saints pictured in the glass like St. Vincent de Paul holding a child and helping the poor, St. John Vianney preaching to the children, St. Claire distributing food to the poor.  I only knew them from what they did in the images.  Some I didn’t even know their names.  They taught me what it was to be a saint.  In reflection a saint is a person whom God’s light shines through.  Today’s reading reminds me of that.  Our God has given us his light and there is no way to hide that.  Jesus asks us, “Is a lamp brought in to be placed under a bushel basket or under a bed, and not to be placed on a lampstand?”  The light shines through us in what we do, how we treat others, and in what we say.

Imagine that God’s love is so great.  In today's Gospel we are told, “The measure with which you measure will be measured out to you, and still more will be given to you.”  There is a universal understanding of the idea, “The more you give the more you will receive.”  It is the law of cause and effect.  We begin to learn this when we are young.  When a child shares with their sibling, aren’t they often rewarded to encourage them to share?  It continues throughout life.  Children usually expect the material, it is easily understood and tangible.  As we mature, we begin to understand that the teaching is applied to those things that we cannot see, they apply to the spiritual realm.  How many of us when we were younger did good things because we thought it would help us get to heaven some day?  In that hope of trading good deeds for a chance at heaven, there is still a part of us that remains selfish.  It is as if we are holding our love ransom.  But Jesus calls us deeper into a more intimate relationship, and calls us to be vessels of heavenly light that we may bear the Light before all nations.  God’s grace is so abundant in these who love Him that His light shines through us.  We are to be placed on a lampstand where the life of grace shines forth from within us. 

To paraphrase St. Thomas Aquinas tells us, Christ in the present gives us the gift of grace reserving for immeasurable glory in the life to come.  We read in John (10:10) “I have come, so that they may have life,” this is the present life of grace.  We are a just people who lives from faith, which allows us to live in God's grace more deeply, so that we may also receive as His children a life of glory in the future through love. “We know that we are transferred from death to life, because we love our brothers and sisters, so let us live through good works.” (1John 3:14)

We are called to be like the saints in the stained glass windows, allowing God’s light to shine through us in our thoughts, words, and deeds.  For, “Light produces every kind of goodness and righteousness and truth. (St. Paul to the Ephesians 5:9)

Saturday, January 23, 2016

Mark 3:20-21 What does it mean to be out of one's mind?

What does it mean to be out of one's mind?  Does it mean that we mourn when our enemy dies, as David did at Saul's death?  Does it mean that we show compassion to those in need?  Does it mean that we give even the shirt off our back? 

In today's Gospel the crowds had again gathered around Jesus just as they do around Pope Francis today because they want to touch holiness, to be healed, to have their hope renewed.  We are all like that.  We want to be in God's presence.  God calls us to his presence so that we might be in communion with him.  Jesus will not turn away those in need for he has such great love and compassion. 

His family thinks that he is out of his mind.  But aren't all things possible in God?  And so, if one must be crazy, why not be a fool for God?  Why not love as he loved?  Why not enact his spiritual and corporal works to grow that love?  Our Good Shepherd is teaching us and leading us in this path, for this is the path to eternal life.  In this path we give up our will, what we think we ought to do, and are drawn out of our comfort zones, and perhaps others will think we are also out of our minds. 

St. Ignatius of Loyola has a prayer, let us join with him today:

Take, Lord, and receive all my liberty,
my memory, my understanding
and my entire will,
All I have and call my own.

You have given all to me.
To you, Lord, I return it.

Everything is yours; do with it what you will.
Give me only your love and your grace.
That is enough for me.