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Reflections on the Weekday Gospels
Provided by the LaSalette Ministries
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Monday |
Tuesday |
Wednesday |
Thursday |
Friday |
Saturday |
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June 2 |
June 3 |
June 4 |
June 5 |
June 6 |
June 7 |
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June 9 |
June 10 |
June 11 |
June 12 |
June 13 |
June 14 |
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June 16 |
June 17 |
June 18 |
June 19 |
June 20 |
June 21 |
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June 23 |
June 24 |
June 25 |
June 26 |
June 27 |
June 28 |
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June 30 |
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June 2 |
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MONDAY OF THE
TENTH WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew
5:1-12
"Be glad and rejoice, for your reward in heaven is great."
We seem always to be in search of the elusive reward, those
achievements that will bring us applause, honor, and
recognition. The reward will tell us that we are better than we
thought we were. When we get our reward we will have finally
attained our rightful place in this world. No matter how hard we
try, how much we achieve, we can never seem to fill that void
within that tells us that something, or Someone, is still
missing. Not only does it fail to satisfy that inner longing,
the reward seems to leave us emptier than ever. Jesus tells us
that only the meek, the oppressed, the poor and the persecuted
find the truly satisfying reward. They are indeed happy in their
discovery that God's love alone can fill the void. The pursuit
of possessions, fame and fortune cannot do so. Heartfelt love of
God and neighbor for their sakes can.
Our Lady of La Salette asks us to take a good look at all our
possessions and those rewards we prize so highly. Compared to
God's love and compassion these possessions of ours will seem
like so much "spoiled wheat and rotted potatoes!" Mary asks us
to give all these away and acknowledge her Son as the source and
summit of our salvation and happiness. Then we will know our
true worth. Then we will realize what real gladness and
rejoicing mean. The kingdom of heaven will be ours, at least in
anticipation.
What is that void that always needs filling in my life? What is
it that fills my life with meaning and purpose?
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June 3 |
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TUESDAY OF THE
TENTH WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 5:13-16
"You are the salt of the earth. You are the light of the
world."
Jesus tells us
what he really thinks of us! The judge of all is plainly calling
us "the salt of the earth" and "the light of the world."
Normally, we would at-tribute such titles to Jesus alone,
praising him as the light that shines in our darkness, or the
living Bread that sustains us. But today Jesus holds us up to
view and asks that we look at ourselves as our God in heaven
sees us - as gifts to be dearly valued and unsparingly shared
with others. "Your light must shine before others, that they may
see your good deeds and glorify your heavenly Father." Imagine
what the world would be like if we lived out the truth of who we
are, the image and likeness of God, and the astonishing fact
that God saw fit to call the entire creation "very good"
(Genesis 1:31).
On the holy
mountain, Mary appears to Melanie and Maximin in a globe of
bright light. She invites them to "come closer" and share in
that brightness. Echoing her Son, she reminds us that we are the
light of the world, and that if we could see ourselves in the
light of God's love for us we would obtain heaven. As she
vanishes into the light, she urges us to relay that message to
all her people, a reaffirmation of what her Son told us long
ago: "You are the light of the world!"
Do you find it easy or difficult to accept
the praise Jesus speaks of you in today's gospel? Are you
sharing God's gifts of" salt" and "light" with others?
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June 4 |
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WEDNESDAY OF THE
TENTH WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 5:17-19
"I have not come
to abolish, but to fulfill."
Jesus affirms
that what he is about is doing the will of his Father. It is not
God's will that the earth should be destroyed, but redeemed. It
is not the will of God that we should be cast out of heaven, but
that we should draw ever closer to our eternal happiness. "For
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. For God did not send his Son into the world to
condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through
him" (John 3:16-17). Jesus fulfills the law by restating the
greatest commandment, the commandment that sums up the entire
law and the prophets: "You shall love the Lord, your God, with
all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind. ...
You shall love your neighbor as yourself" (Matthew 22:37, 39).
The Beautiful
Lady of La Salette asks us to "come near and not be afraid." The
question is why are we so terrified of this good news? What is
it that holds us back from the saving arm of Mary's Son? Maybe
it is that, in order to renew the world of God's creation, we
have to give up the world that we ourselves have created and are
quite complacent in - even if it is filled with false hopes and
empty promises. Maybe we are dulled by our routines, schedules
and duties, so much so that the good news of a better world
interferes with those things that have taken on tremendous
importance to us. Like Jesus, Mary confronts us with a choice:
to stay in our own little world and suffer the consequences, or
be converted, believe in the good news of salvation and
fulfillment, and get a healthy taste of "the real world!"
Are you living in
"the real world"? Can you come nearer to God ... and not be
afraid?
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June 5 |
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THURSDAY OF THE
TENTH WEEK OF THE YEAR Matthew 5:20-26
"Go first and be reconciled with your brother or sister,
and then come and offer your gift."
Mother Teresa
of Calcutta said, "Give until it hurts," and Jesus seems to say
"Forgive until it doesn't hurt anymore!" Forgiveness is a basic
attitude, a calling, a vocation. Reconciliation is not simply a
one-time occurrence. We can-not simply forgive and forget, as
the saying goes. Forgiveness is like a surgeon's scalpel that
reopens old wounds in order to clear out the infections of
anger, bitterness and resentment. At the same time, forgiveness
is a soothing ointment, liberally applied, to cleanse and heal
old or new wounds. Jesus bids us "forgive seventy times seven
times" (Matthew 18:22). Forgive, even though everyone does not
request it. Forgive even though everyone does not deserve it.
This gift, Jesus offers as a key to heaven; our eternal
happiness can begin now if we so choose.
The oldest and
best known title of Our Lady of La Salette is Reconciler of
sinners. In her apparition she assures us that she "prays
without ceasing for us," thereby affirming that forgiveness -
rather than an occasional act of kindness or isolated instance
of bigheartedness - is a lifelong vocation for the Christian.
"And this is from God who reconciled us to himself in Christ,
and has entrusted to us the ministry of reconciliation. ... God
was in Christ not counting our trespasses against us" (2
Corinthians 5:18-19).
Have I ever
been the one to take the first step in bringing about
reconciliation with a friend, a neighbor, a relative? Is there
someone in my life I cannot bring myself to forgive?
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June 6 |
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FRIDAY OF THE TENTH WEEK OF THE YEAR Matthew 5:27-32
"Better to lose
part of your
body than to have it all cast into Gehenna."
Jesus uses
strong language here. The reality of the kingdom of God compels
us to search our innermost impulses and to uproot all those
longings that could hinder its growth within us. Jesus is
applying the greatest commandment, the command that we should
love God, our neighbor and ourselves in such a way that whatever
violates it or could lead to its violation be seen as evil. The
human heart, he well knew, is capable of the basest and the
noblest of instincts and deeds (see John 2:24-25). He condemned
the inner thought even unaccompanied by outward effect. Internal
anger is already murderous, he warned, because once ignited they
can intensify and become murderous. Lustful looks are already
unfaithful because they can inflame passion and lead to
infidelity. The Savior's heart addresses the original goodness
of our hearts. "For where your treasure is, there your heart
will be also" (Matthew 6:21).
Mary at La
Salette makes use of strong language. She speaks in plain terms:
"How long I have suffered for you." "If the harvest is ruined,
it is only on account of yourselves." "A great famine is
coming." "Children under seven will be seized with trembling and
die in the arms of those holding them." The bitter consequences
of our refusal to change our ways and convert are painfully
evident as we take leave of the twentieth century, the most
violent in recorded human history. May the seeds of destruction
and violence never find fertile soil in our hearts.
What dark impulses and reflexes within you
need to be cast off? In what ways is the kingdom of God coming
in your heart and life?
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June 7 |
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SATURDAY OF THE TENTH WEEK OF THE YEAR Matthew 5:33-37
"Say 'Yes'when
you mean 'Yes' and 'No' when you mean `No'.'"
We learn to lie
at a very early age. Although we were taught that "honesty is
the best policy," telling the truth is what usually got us into
the most trouble. Lying offers an easy way of escaping the
truth's harsh consequences and eventually becomes a way of
life. So much so that we become addicted to reflexes that blind
us to the truth. As we well know, this induces a state of
constant denial. What Jesus tells us is what men and women of
wisdom have been telling us for ages: "Be true to yourself."
However painful truth may be, facing it, owning up to it, is
redemptive. The truthful person doesn't have to take oaths or
swear to God or anyone else. Truthful people are taken at their
word. Truth leads to trust and the trustworthy earn valued
respect.
It is the Woman
of the Word, honored as the Seat of Wisdom, who speaks to us
from that stone bench high in the French Alps. Her reassuring
"Don't be afraid" to the children, the angel Gabriel had first
spoken to her. "Be it done to me as you say," she had replied. A
Yes
she ratified all her life until its culmination at the foot of
the cross. She pondered the word constantly and it bore fruit in
the generous soil of her Immaculate Heart. Founded to make her
apparition known to all her people, the La Salette Missionaries
are to preach Mary's message "more so by the example of their
own lives than by their words."
What keeps you from facing the truth? What
keeps you from telling the truth?
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June 9 |
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MONDAY OF THE ELEVENTH WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 5:38-42
"Offer no resistance to injury."
The word "injury" calls up all sorts of mental
images, from a cut on a finger to injuries sustained in a
serious accident. Wouldn't a person want to offer resistance to
injury? Isn't it the normal thing to do? It is the pain and
suffering that come with injuries that people shun. This goes to
the core of our being. Jesus, however, did not shun injury or
suffering. He embraced it for the good of all. The inconvenience
and bother of reaching out and attending to a fellow human being
in need draws us out of ourselves.
Earning a modest living as a farmer in the mountain villages
around La Salette was an ungrateful task. Very hard work with
scant little to show for it. Mary urges these poor people to
return to the practice of their faith, promising them newfound
closeness to God, consolation and hope.
How can the injury we embrace and the suffering associated with
it bring us closer to God? In what way can embracing injury and
its attendant suffering bring us closer to one another?
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June 10 |
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TUESDAY OF THE ELEVENTH WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew
5:43-48
"You must
be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect."
Jesus' call to
"perfection" in today's gospel, we think is almost impossible.
How can we be as perfect as our heavenly Father is perfect? The
command that Jesus gives us is a continuous action. It is
something that we continually work toward. Our human nature is
always in need of conversion and healing. Jesus offers us
healing that can bring us closer and closer to our goal of
perfection. We are not saints, but we strive for the wholeness
that only Jesus can give.
At La Salette
Mary sought to encourage Maximin and Melanie and us to seek
wholeness. Wholeness can only be found in her Son. When we pray
for our enemies, we are working toward that wholeness. Running
in circles is not the answer. Changing the subject is not the
answer. Neither is blaming others. Unless we change our hearts
wholeness will elude us. And how do we change our hearts? By
praying. Prayer changes our hearts.
What
reconciliation needs to be worked toward in my life? What
healing needs to be attempted with estranged family members,
coworkers and friends?
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June 11 |
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WEDNESDAY OF THE ELEVENTH WEEK OF THE YEAR Matthew 6:1-6,
16-18
"For people to
see."
We are very
familiar with our gospel today. As part of its annual
instruction on the proper observance of Lent, the church
proclaims this gospel on Ash Wednesday. Jesus tells us it is not
the exterior action that matters most but the innermost
intention of the person performing the act of fasting,
penitence, or prayer. Our heavenly Father not only sees our
actions but the intentions and motives behind them.
Mary at La
Salette grieved that the people of the day only practiced their
faith to mock religion. Their hearts and souls were not a part
of it. They spoke Jesus' name not in prayer but for swearing
when they were angry or upset. By keeping inward sentiments of
adoration, love and trust out of their worship, it was a
grudging and reluctant service they offered their Maker.
When doing a
good deed for someone, or giving to a charity, or attending
Mass, am I doing so with a truly sincere intention? Am I doing
the action with an ulterior motive in mind, for my own gain?
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June 12 |
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THURSDAY OF THE ELEVENTH WEEK OF THE YEAR Matthew 6:7-15
"This is how you
are to pray."
Jesus' emphasis
is on the quality of prayer rather than its quantity: "Your
Father knows what you need before you ask him." Matthew, in his
gospel, gives us the ideal example of Christian prayer which is
ascribed to the Lord himself and which has always been a
prominent feature of the Christian liturgy. There is probably
no other prayer in the church that has been so often and
extensively commented on, meditated on and written about than
the Lord's Prayer. It contains every type of prayer: praise,
adoration, petition, supplication, confession and forgiveness
of sins. It asks for the strength and the grace to forgive
others. Finally it is a prayer of exorcism, a prayer for
deliverance from the oppression of evil.
Mary at La
Salette told Melanie and Maximin to pray this prayer in
particular. Mary encourages us to pray the words her Son himself
taught his followers, a timely reminder that, first and
foremost, we are his disciples, called to share in his spirit
and carry his mission forward.
When I pray the Lord's Prayer how aware am
I of the various forms of prayer it contains? Am I moved to
forgive as I ask my Father in heaven to forgive me?
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June 13 |
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FRIDAY OF THE ELEVENTH WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 6:19-23
"Where your
treasure is, there your heart is also."
How often we
have heard this phrase! But do we really understand its meaning?
It means keeping material things in their proper place and
spiritual things at the center of our concerns and lives. The
material treasures we store up bring us a fleeting satisfaction
and enjoyment. It is usually in the striving for the material
treasure that we find the most pleasure. Once we have obtained
it, we become bored and seek yet another treasure. Spiritual
treasures, at the center of our lives, serve to anchor us. They
bring us serenity and stability amid the distractions and
annoyances of everyday living.
The
distractions and evils of contemporary society can lead us to
dejection and disheartenment. They can cause us to lose our
inner peace and serenity. Mary encouraged Melanie and Maximin to
become well anchored in prayer, so that the enticements of the
world would not blind them to true values. Prayer and spiritual
realities at the heart of our lives can give us welcome light
and hope.
Have you heard
Our Lady of La Salette's call to cultivate your inner life'? Can
you honestly say that you give spiritual goods the nod over
material goods in your own life?
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June 14 |
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SATURDAY OF THE ELEVENTH WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 6:24-34
"Do not worry
about tomorrow"
The AA
(Alcoholics Anonymous) program is centered on two days of the
week that one should not worry about: yesterday and tomorrow.
One is al-ready over, its hopes and joys, its gains and failures
are gone. Tomorrow is not yet here, neither are the joys or
disappointments it can bring. In today's gospel Jesus gives us
the same message: "Which of you by worrying can add a moment to
your life span'?" Jesus tells us to remain anchored in the
present moment. In the present moment we can seek God's will for
us and endeavor to carry it out. At-tempting to do God's will
for me today should be enough to be concerned about.
"Come near, my
children; don't be afraid." These were the opening words of Mary
at La Salette to Maximin and Melanie. Once these children's fear
and worry had vanished they were able to be present to the
graced moment in their lives. Mary as an ambassador for her Son
urges us to be fully present to the graced moments in our own
lives.
Have I allowed my spiritual anxiety and
fear to be dispelled so I may hear God's word more clearly? What
might God's will for me be this very day?
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June 16 |
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MONDAY OF THE TWELFTH WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 7:1-5
"The measure with which you measure will be used to measure
you."
How often we like to think our way of seeing or doing things is
the right way. Others are wrong. We like to make ourselves
superior to others because this boosts our own ego. In the
Christian way of life things are quite different. The way for us
to avoid judgment, Jesus tells us, is not to judge others. We
find this mandate very difficult because seeing the faults in
our brothers and sisters is easier than seeing them in
ourselves. An unknown author once wrote: "There is so much good
in the worst of us, and so much bad in the best of us, that it
ill behooves any of us, to find fault with the rest of us."
At La Salette Mary, whose entire life was devoted to the person
and mission of Christ, speaks to the two children about
conversion, conversion to the person and mission of her Son.
Those who follow him share their Lord's mind and do his deeds.
They look upon others with understanding and show them
compassion.
What plank in my eye is now obstructing my view of certain other
people? What plank in my eye is blocking my vision of my mission
in Christ?
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June 17 |
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TUESDAY OF THE TWELFTH WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 7:6,
12-14
"Treat others as you would like to be treated."
Often, we have two standards: the way we
like to be treated and the way we treat others. There is usually
a great divergence between the two. Jesus tells his disciples to
be calculating and discerning. What is worthwhile should not be
wasted on lesser opportunities or with the reckless. The road
that leads to perdition is indeed enticing and inviting. It can
easily attract. But it inevitably leads to a dry and arid
wasteland. The road to what is life giving is often difficult
and presents many obstacles. However, when we invest our best
talents and gifts in this effort, the outcome is life giving for
ourselves and for others as well.
Mary chose to
leave a memorial of her visit to La Salette. The spring that
sprang forth following her visit to that privileged site, and
which has not ceased flowing since then, remains a sign and
symbol of all that is life-giving, of all that sustains life.
The life Mary refers to is eternal in her Son. Following him in
faithful discipleship is the road that leads to abundant and
full life.
What gifts and talents has God given me as
special means to eternal life? Am I aware of double standards in
myself as I relate to others?
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June18 |
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WEDNESDAY OF THE TWELFTH WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 7:15-20
"By their fruits you will know them."
Jesus gives us
a warning: "Be vigilant where the behavior and actions of others
are concerned." Again, if we are discerning, we will recognize
the goodness and genuineness of people by their behavior, by
what they do. Jesus used the ordinary experiences familiar to
the people of his day to illustrate his teachings, comparing the
kingdom of God with nature and agricultural realities. A healthy
plant or tree, for example, will yield healthy fruit. The
essence of goodness within the plant or tree manifests itself in
the fruit it bears. Decay, too, is telltale.
So too did Mary
at La Salette graphically call the attention of Melanie and
Maxi-min to spoiled wheat, worm-eaten walnuts and rotted grapes,
reflections in nature of what was happening in their day, in
the lives of the people around them. The evils of today's
society: crime, drugs, murder are as many indicators that the
core of our society is in need of conversion and healing.
What good fruits do you recognize in your life that help in the
building of the Kingdom of God? How much care and prayer do you
bring to the choices and decisions you are called upon to make?
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June 19 |
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THURSDAY OF THE TWELFTH WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 7:21-29
"Only the one who does the will of my Father will enter the
kingdom."
Jesus was the
example par excellence of doing his Father's will. This
he compares to building a foundation on rock rather than on
sand. In the Gospel of Mark Jesus learns that his relatives are
outside asking for him. He sees this as an opportunity to
declare: "Whoever does the will of God is my brother and sister
and mother" (Mark 3:35). The one who hears God's word and acts
on it, Jesus assures us, is mother, sister and brother to him.
Knowing God's will for me and my life is seldom easy. This
requires careful discernment. I pray for the grace and insight
to know the Father's will for me. The answer will often speak to
my heart rather than my ears. I will intuitively know and
recognize the goodness of God's will for me.
In her life on
earth, as her Son testifies, Mary heard the word of God and
always acted on it. In her apparition at La Salette she urges
her people to build their faith lives on the solid foundation of
God's commandments: submission to the Creator, reverence for
God's name, observance of the Lord's Day.
Do I seek Mary's intercession as I discern
God's will for me? Who are the people in my life that
awaken in me a sense of spiritual realities?
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June 20 |
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FRIDAY OF THE TWELFTH WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 8:1-4
"If you will to do so, you can cure me."
Jesus is the divine physician. He does want
to heal us. Like the leper and so many others in the gospel that
Jesus cured, there was one prerequisite: they recognized that
Jesus could do it. They put faith in his power rather than in
their own.They appealed to his compassion and gentleness. Jesus
wants us to be healed of our anger, our pride, our
self-centeredness that often keep us from seeing his will and
that of the Father for us. Trying to let go of these personality
defects allows the healing power of the Lord to enter and
penetrate to the core of our self.
In her exercise of prophetic ministry Mary at La Salette
diagnoses her people's spiritual illness and prescribes a
remedy. Her entire message, through strategic repetition, calls
attention to this medicine: "As for you, you pay no heed. ...
You paid no heed." Our moral condition can be cured, she tells
us, if we resolve to be alert, attentive, vigilant, watchful in
the future. If we learn to pay attention to really important, to
eternally important matters.
Is it a sign of strength or of weakness to seek healing? You say
to the Lord: "If you will to do so, you can cure me" If he
should answer: "Do you will to take the prescribed medicine?"
How would you reply?
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June 21 |
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SATURDAY OF THE TWELFTH WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew
8:5-17
"I assure you, I have never found this much faith in all
Israel."
Jesus came not
only for his own - the house of Israel - but for all people. A
centurion, a Roman pagan interceded with him to cure one of his
servants. The centurion recognized the greatness of Jesus. And
recognizing the authority Jesus had, he did not feel it
necessary that he enter his house - perhaps to spare Jesus the
ritual impurity attached to his entering the house of a Gentile.
He has faith and trust in Jesus' words. This is enough for him.
Jesus responds with high commendation and praise. He has never
seen as much faith in all of Israel. The basis of it all was the
centurion's unwavering trust that Jesus could and would do
this.
We would not be
off the mark to say that Mary shed tears at La Salette over her
people's lack of faith and loss of trust. In the unfolding of
today's gospel story these very traits draw Jesus' commendation
and praise: "It shall be done because you trusted." Our faith
and trust, themselves gifts of God, open the compassion and
power of Christ to us.
Do I believe
that the Lord's word can work powerfully in my personal life? Am
I confident that the Lord will show me his compassion?
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June 23 |
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MONDAY OF THE THIRTEENTH WEEK OF THE
YEAR
Matthew 8:18-22
"Follow me."
Multiple choice test.. On the surface it
would seem easy to follow Jesus. Anyone who counts himself or
herself a true believer would readily and gladly do whatever
Jesus might ask if he came down and spoke his request directly.
But he doesn't do that. Instead he invites us in today's world
to discern among multiple choice actions we must accomplish to
follow him faithfully. For guidance as we make our choices we
look to prayer, our own inner light, and especially the input of
our brothers and sisters in the faith.
The children of La Salette were given a
mission. To make known Mary's message of reconciliation with
her Son. That first day the mission was glowingly clear. Each
day afterward they had to decide over and over again to follow
him Many times they were offered excruciatingly difficult
choices. To betray their calling or face the threat of death or
imprisonment. The first miracle of La Salettewas the apparition
itself. The second was the fidelity with which the children
followed their calling.
Do I understand my own calling with great
clarity? If not, am I reaching out t( others for help in
discerning what it could be
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June 24 |
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TUESDAY OF THE THIRTEENTH
WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 8:23-27
"What sort of man in this?"
The Titanic feeling: The apostles were not
quite out in the middle of the ocean about to be struck by an
iceberg. But for them the situation seemed just as desperate.
Fear gripped their bodies and terrified their souls. Would their
lives be snuffed out by this rampaging power of this freakish
storm? Suddenly Christ, answering their alarmed plea for help
rebuked the winds and the sea. All became calm." What sort of
man is this that even the winds and the sea obey him?" In the
simplest terms: the sort of man who answered those who called
out to him. He does that for us in the midst of the most
terrifying hours of our lives. How could he not? After all did
he not call us his friends (see John 15:15)?
The world that Maximin and Melanie
inherited was one that was being torn by violence at the dawn of
industrialization and in the lingering twilight of the French
Revolution. Society had been torn from its
three-thousand-year-old moorings and an agrarian way of life was
experiencing violent upheavals. Jesus sent his Mother to calm
us, to reassure us, to tell us "not to be afraid, for she had
great news to tell," It was simply that her Son remains deeply
present to suffering humanity. "What sort of man is this?" In
ways that our theology cannot explain he is the one suffers with
us even in eternal glory.
At the darkest hours of my life, how did my
faith in Jesus sustain me? Can I share with another how
frightened I was, how reassuring he was?
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June 25 |
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WEDNESDAY OF THE THIRTEENTH
WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 8:28-34
"They implored him to leave
the neighborhood."
Thanks for the help, Jesus. Now, please
leave. Demons are for real. Jesus, the great prophet, came among
his people to deliver them from the demons that were plaguing
them. And those demons, like demons of all times, kept the
people shackled. In doing his Father's work, Jesus came forward
to purify. to cleanse, to set free. And the latter is well
exemplified in this gospel passage In return for all the good
things that he did, he got the usual prophet's reward. He was,
rather unceremoniously, asked to leave
At La Salette Mary came to speak to us
about the demons of the era. She was the great prophet speaking
in her Son's name, targeting the evils attendant upon a dying,
if not entirely dead, faith in far too many. She invited us to
follow ill her Son's footsteps and in hers too. To be prophets,
denouncing, not only with our words, but especially by our
actions; casting out the evils of addiction, corruption,
materialism, poverty, racism, and violence. Being aware all the
while that like Jesus, and Mary at La Salelle, our reward may be
simply to be asked to leave. Actually, it may even be the true
litmus test of our success. Not a happy thought!
What demon is clicking my own spiritual
growth these days? What prophetic words are welling up in my
heart these days and are waiting to he uttered by me.
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June 26 |
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THURSDAY OF THE THIRTEENTH
WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 9:1-8
"A feeling of awe Came over
the crowd"
They were blown away. That would have blown
us away too. This paralytic was healed not only of his
infirmity, but also, and more importantly, he was healed of his
sins. There was universal applause from the crowd for the
healing .. but for the forgiving some scribes mumbled, calling
this blaspheming. Jesus, effect, was making himself the equal of
God. That was a bit too much to stomach
Our Lady at La Salette talked about
humanity's sins (read: yours and mine). The: arc to be forgiven
if we but ask. That is a miracle in itself, but in addition, she
promised that "rocks and stones will turn into mounds of wheat."
We are cleansed and made whole. And when we get in touch with
the deepest part of ourselves, we are in touch with the hidden
part that touches God and is touched by God. Ii those rare but
gifted moments of great spiritual insight, we cannot hut he in
awe of the wondrous work the Almighty does in us. Those graced
moments suffuse u with the deepest feelings of awe and wonder.
Bow open am I in living my spiritual life
to the graced moments described above Am I still awed by God's
work in me, even to the point of tears at times?
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June 27 |
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FRIDAY OF THE THIRTEENTH WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 9:9-13
'"And indeed I did not come
to call the virtuous, but sinners."
Jesus is out to get us. If ever there were
words in Scripture that are both shocking and comforting, they
are the ones cited above. First of all, one would think that the
virtuous need help and support also. And since they arc doing so
well you would think that they would be Jesus' first target
audience. Who better than he knows that the more dazzling the
virtuous are the better name Christianity will have! Wow, what
a reputation the church could have if Jesus took a different
tack. We would be a true holiness church. Second, doesn't it
make all the more sense that the sinless should be the ones to
interface with Jesus? Why should Jesus' own reputation be soiled
by the people he associates with? But thirdly, it is a great
comfort that he does in fact seek out sinners. Because of it we
can look forward to getting serious help in our straggles toward
goodness, for he says we are number one in his book. How 'bout
that?
At La Salette, very much in her Son's mode,
Our Lady came to seek out sinners. Those who were doing
everything to turn away from the hand of love and friendship
her Son was extending. They were her target audience as well.
She speaks powerfully about her suffering and prays for all who
are far from being virtuous. At one time we thought the church
was exclusively meant for the good and the holy ones. And to
receive Holy Communion was a sure fire sign that we were being
rewarded for good behavior. We now know that the Eucharist is
food and drink for hungry and thirsty wayfarers, for wanderers
who falter along their way.
I I was born before Vatican Council II do I
still automatically think that God will give me a second look
only if he finds holiness in me? Have I completely outgrown my
childhood image of God?
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June 28 |
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SATURDAY OF THE THIRTEENTH WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 9:14-17
"Nor do people put new wine
into old wineskins."
Wine making, anyone? Although precious few
of us know much about wine making, and even less about
wineskins, all of us have a fairly good idea what point Jesus
was making. If we are to make any type of progress on our
spiritual journey we have to understand the interior
transformation that is called for. The new wine of Jesus' love
and forgiveness cannot be poured into the old skin (container)
of our obdurate and hardheaded selves. If our gas tank is
leaking, constantly refilling it will not fix things, The hole
is bound to get bigger. Unless we radically change our focus,
pouring God's love into our self-centered selves will never lead
us to embrace our world.
At La Salette Our Lady invited us to what?
To conversion. As you know, conversion does not simply mean
making minor adjustments. It means a radical shift away from the
way we operated in the past - a 180 degree turn. What does it
take for this to happen? Often times a major setback in our
health, plans, financial fortunes; most often, personal failures
in our most valued relationships. Our hearts are broken. We are
deeply hurt and perhaps even feel abandoned. Since God's ways
are not our ways, a heart broken is a heart opened wider. The
needy of the world can more easily walk in on us. The Living God
can find in them a welcome mat not found there before. Radical
setbacks, paradoxically, can make close encounters with our God
more likely.
Can I consider past heartbreaks in my own
life and recall the feelings of emptiness and abandonment they
brought? Has heartbreak created new skins in me into which God's
love can be poured?
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June 30 |
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MONDAY OF THE FOURTEENTH
WEEK OF THE YEAR
Matthew 9:18-26
"She touched the fringe of
his cloak."
Pay attention. These two miracles offer us
great insight as to Jesus the man. An important religious
official came to see him imploring that Jesus do something
about his daughter. She had just died, yet did the man state his
belief that she was not for all that beyond Jesus' power to
save. Jesus and his disciples immediately were off on this
mission of mercy. Jesus certainly was single-minded, but not so
focused that he could not sense power leaving him as another
touched his cloak in a confident bid for healing. What amazing
presence to people even in times of personal stress!
Mary at La Salette tells us that God has
not lost that desire to be present to us in all the moments of
our lives. Although taken up with the providential guidance and
maintenance of the ongoing miracle of creation - an expanding
universe whose size is beyond calculation, this same God notices
a father and child discussing spoiled wheat in the eorner of a
remote field.
What recurring events in my life stress me
the most? And who are those people I tend to neglect at those
moments?
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