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Home Authors Credits La Salette

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Jan 2 |
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JANUARY 2 John 1:19-28
John said: 1 am 'the voice
of one crying out in the desert, Make straight the way
of the Lord, as Isaiah the prophet said."
When John the Baptizer comes
proclaiming the Messiah, his role is some thing like a parent's when he or
she introduces the child to a Christian way of life. Like John who prepares
the way for the reception of Jesus and points him out when he arrives,
parents are the ones who will introduce the child to Jesus. John describes
his own identity as "the voice crying out in the desert." This is his
response to the question, "Who are you?" His answer tells us that John's
identity cannot be fully known without Jesus. Christian parents also find
the fullness of their personalities in the living witness they give to their
children about the life and teachings of Jesus. Jesus Christ reveals to us
the truth about ourselves.
The truth about the parental
role and the meaning of one's personal identity in Jesus is once again
portrayed when Our Lady comes to La Salette to herald the Good News. It is
clearly Mary's desire to open up the hearts of the children to receive her
Son. As always in authentic Catholic practice, we rightly think of Mary and
her role in salvation as being inseparable from Jesus himself. And so it is
with Christian parents. The truth about the role of parents in relationship
to their children, even their own identity, is discovered and fully
understood in relationship to Jesus as one who wants their children to know
him.
Who am I? Is my
relationship with Jesus the most important aspect of my personality? What
does it mean to be a father or mother according to the Gospel?
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Jan 3 |
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JANUARY 3 John 1:29-34
"Behold the
Lamb of God, who takes
away the sin of the
world."
This proclamation is full of
meaning, especially because it is the source of the words spoken as the
priest shows the Blessed Sacrament to the assembly during Mass. In saying
this John is pointing to one whom he "did not recognize.' Thus, he knows
that he must point Jesus out to others because his divine Sonship is not
evident from his appearance alone. After the Resurrection, when Jesus
continues to teach the disciples about the mystery of the Holy Eucharist,
the} must learn to recognize him "in the breaking of the bread." In this new
age, the Blessed Sacrament which is offered as the perfect Lamb of Sacrifice
on our altars is the definitive sign of his glorified presence in the world.
It is a living sacrifice because the Spirit of immortality has "remained on
him." The Lamb gives us life by taking away our sins and giving us the same
life of his Spirit.
When Our Lady speaks at La
Salette, the, close association of the themes of the Mass, spoilt wheat, and
the shortage of bread is something to ponder. Was she speaking only
literally of the actual famine that was to come, or was she pointing to
another meaning, one which was not immediately "recognized"? "f you have
wheat it is not good to sow it." This can remind one of the parable of the
seed and sower. Perhaps the deeper, spiritual meaning of Our Lady's words
is that the "seed" of new and eternal life must be cultivated in
properly prepared ground in order for it to reach fruition.
How do I prepare to receive Jesus in the Blessed
Sacrament? Has my response to grace made the "harvest" a fruitful one?
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Jan 4 |
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JANUARY 4 John 1:35-42
“What are
you
looking
for?"
Jesus poses this question to two of John's disciples
when they decide to follow Jesus. In their encounter with Jesus these
disciples are immediately challenged to examine themselves and their motives
for seeking out the Lord. Following Jesus requires more than an outward
conformity to a certain discipline. "It involves holding fast to the very
person of Jesus, partaking of his life and his des-tiny, sharing in his free
and loving obedience to the will of the Father" (Pope John Paul II, The
Splenndor of Truth, no. 19). As the question would
indicate, in the encounter with Jesus a person is encouraged to search more
deeply into his or her own heart to learn to appreciate more profoundly what
we were made for. The author of life, the one who made our hearts, knows
what we long for. He wants us to become aware of it for ourselves.
Submitting to the truth
about life is not a surrender of human freedom. On the contrary, it is a
growth in awareness of what human freedom is. Our Lady knows that sin is
contrary to freedom and leads to a form of slavery that the Lord freed us
from by his strong arm. As Mary emphasizes through her prophetic message,
bondage to sin leads to death. But we are encouraged by the Beautiful Lady
not to be afraid, to trust her Son, to follow him, to partake of his life
and destiny.
What am I looking for? What
is most important in my life? What do my actions, day to day, reveal about
what is most important to me?

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Jan 5 |
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JANUARY 5 John 1:43-51
"How do you know
me?"
Nathanael's question to
Jesus could well he our own. How surprised any of us would be to encounter a
person who "told me everything I have done" (John 4:39). Yet, we know that
the Lord does know us and everything about us. On the Day of Judgment all
our deeds will be recounted, all of our motives brought to light. The Lord
does not want any of us to perish for all eternity. So he seeks us out with
a severe mercy. As Paul puts it, "We are being disciplined so that we may
not be condemned along with the world" (1 Cor. 11:32). The Lord in
his mercy does not abandon us by letting us go our own way, but assists us
now by giving us every opportunity to turn to him and be saved. Sometimes we
experience the consequences of sin now, so that we will not be condemned
later.
This message of mercy comes
through so clearly at La Salette. "f I would not have my Son abandon you, I
am compelled to pray to him without ceasing." Abandonment by the Lord does
not mean punishment while we are still in the world. On the contrary,
abandonment means that God allows us to go our own way, seemingly without
consequence. Romans 1:24-32 is a description of abandonment by God. God
hands people over to their own wishes. Our Lady gives Maximin a clear
example of how well God knows him when she describes the episode with his
father at Coin. The knowledge of everything we have done, coupled with the
great mercy of God is the formula for saving interventions like the
apparition at La Salette.
Have I
properly interpreted the "signs of the times" in my own life? Have I
ignored God's efforts to lead me and save me? Have I responded to God's
mercy by being convened?
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Jan 6 |
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JANUARY 6 Mark 1:7-11
"He will
baptize you with the Holy Spirit
John the Baptizer clearly
distinguishes his baptism of repentance from the sacrament of baptism
initiated by Jesus in the New Covenant. This new baptism comes from one
"more powerful" than John. In John's Gospel, Jesus himself teaches Nicodemus
that we must be reborn from above through water and the Holy Spirit if we
are to inherit the Kingdom. In speaking of baptism, Peter speaks of the
flood at the time of Noah, in which eight persons were saved through water.
He adds, "this prefigured baptism, which saves you now" (I Pet. 3.21). Up to
this day, the church established by Jesus (Matt. 16:18; I Tim. 3:15)
continues to bring the sacrament of baptism to anyone who would be saved by
its power. As Scripture testifies, at this baptism God proclaims "You are my
son. You are my daughter." Through this Baptism we are made capable of doing
the works of the Father.
The Mass in
honor of Our Lady of La Salette includes a reference to the great flood
which prefigures baptism. And this helps us to see the development from the
covenant God made with Noah to the New Covenant established by Jesus. In
Noah's time, God put a rainbow in the skies once the earth had been cleansed
by the flood. But with us, through the waters of baptism the Lord comes to
each of us personally to make us like him, so much so that each of us is
called his son or daughter, and that is what we are" (I John 3:2). The
promise made to Noah was that God would never destroy the earth again by
water. "The promise made to us is eternal life" if we remain in him (1 John
2:25). The same Lord speaks tenderly to us at La Salette through the Blessed
Mother reminding us of the limitless power of grace won by "the pains I have
taken for you"
How well do I understand
what the church teaches about my baptism? Have I sought to develop fully the
spiritual capacities that are mine because I have received all the gifts of
the Holy Spirit?
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Jan 7 |
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JANUARY 7
John 2:1-12
"Do
whatever he tells you."
The mother of Jesus" is
never named in John's Gospel. She appears though, very early on, and is
addressed by Jesus as "Woman." This continues the pattern established in
this Gospel which recalls the book of Genesis and the story of creation. In
Genesis live is the woman tied to the first sin. Here, the New Eve becomes a
model of fidelity. Whereas the first woman was tricked by the serpent into
disobedience, the "Woman" of the New Covenant is presented as one who
orchestrates a revelation of the Lord's glory so that others may believe.
The New Eve is seen as the true mother of all the living. Thus, just before
the completion of the Passover sacrifice on Calvary, the Lord presents the
"Woman" as mother to the beloved disciple. This disciple represents all who
are living in the church. Through him, the Lord makes each one of us a son
or daughter of the "Woman," the mother of all the living.
One of the
amazing characteristics of the apparition at La Salette is the fact that the
Beautiful Lady is never named by the children. She was nevertheless
immediately thought to be a mother. And in an intriguing statement, Maximin
said, "She was tike a mama whom her own children had beaten and who had
escaped to the mountain to weep." Of course, Our Lady does make it clear
that she is speaking to her children. It is also remarkable that the Woman's
instruction at La Salette is the means the Lord uses to declare "rocks and
stones will be changed into mounds of wheat," a proposed miracle reminiscent
of the miracle at Cana.
Was Maximin's interpretation
of Our Lady's reason for weeping true in a sense? What is the promise of the
gospel accompanying the woman's instruction, "Do whatever he tells you"?
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Jan 9 |
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MONDAY OF THE FIRST WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 1:14-20
"Then they abandoned their nets and followed him."
The gospel reading tells us
about Christ calling some fishermen to share with him the responsibility of
gathering God's family and proclaiming the Good News of salvation. Soon
after he had begun his public life Jesus wanted to lay a
solid foundation for the continuation of
his mission. Although he was not as popular at this early stage of
his ministry as his miracles and acts of mercy would later make him, Jesus
succeeded with his plan to build up his staff. His presence and
words must have been tremendously
powerful and marvelously inviting. As both God's message and
messenger, he is the cornerstone of the Kingdom. He must gather to himself a
small band of kindred spirits to whom he can unburden his own heart and upon
whose hearts he may write his message. Christ approaches
these men in their own life situation, as
they were carrying out their daily chores.
In response to the call, the fishermen
left behind their precious nets and began to walk the dusty roads of
Palestine with Jesus.
At La Salette Mary spoke the
words of her Son, "Come near, my children...." God's invitation is
continuously extended through Mary. She comes to us with a plea that we
abandon our sinful ways and turn back to Christ. She calls us near him,
because as a person she knew the pain of being in this world of alienation
and suffering. She is truly our mother whose heart yearns to help us find
lasting refuge in Jesus, the Savior. Her
entire conversation focused on him. He comes to us, as he did to his
first recruits, in our daily struggles and tasks.
Like Mary
should we not center our focus on Christ? What holds us back from abandoning
our nets and favorite shores?
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Jan 10 |
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TUESDAY OF THE FIRST WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 1:21-28
"What have you to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth?"
Jesus began his preaching in
the synagogue, primarily an institution of learning. In tone and method, his
teaching struck his listeners as a new revelation. He did not teach like the
scribes, the experts in the Law. He was a man with a message. He spoke that
message with authority and power. He himself was the new Torah, the supreme
rule of faith and life. Such authority astonished his audience
and the evil powers. "What have you to do with us? Mind your business. Go
away. Go anywhere so long as you don't interfere with our ways." The powers
wished to go on exploiting men, women, youth, and children, wanted to keep
them addicted, bound by hatred and jealousy, burdened by inhuman abuse and
cruelty. To this cry of the evil spirit, Jesus answered, "Be silent and come
out of him." He makes the same answer today. He is concerned with every
burden that weighs heavily on human shoulders.
At La Salette Our Lady
brought a message of freedom to her people. A freedom that requires complete
trust in God and obedience to his will. "If my people will not submit, I
shall be forced to let fall the arm of my Son." Mary's words were spoken
from her heart. They were not meant to alarm us with the fear of punishment
but to sharpen our concern about our personal relationship with Jesus. She
urges us to cultivate that relationship so that he might become more
transparent in our lives as we grow more
confident in his power. His power can and must own and possess us.
We all need to be owned and possessed. By whom shall I
be possessed? Have I allowed Jesus to manifest his authority over my whole
life?
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Jan 11 |
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WEDNESDAY OF THE FIRST WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 1:29-39
"He approached, grasped her hand and helped her up."
Peter's mother-in-law was ill; the simple household was
upset. And for the disciples the most natural thing in the world was to tell
Jesus about it. After the exhausting experience of the synagogue service,
Jesus could have claimed the right to rest. But once again nothing could
keep him from doing good. The need of others took precedence over his desire
for rest. He could feel the anxiety and concern of his disciples. He did not
wait for an audience in order to exercise his healing power. He was there to
heal Peter's mother-in-law. That world is our world, a world full of men and
women haunted by fear, burdened with worry.
This world seeks a healer. Personal
fatigue could not keep Jesus from performing
an act of kindness and healing. We must
learn to look at people with compassion, to feel their anguish of
heart. We are never blessed for ourselves alone, but for
others .
The apparition at La Salette is rooted in the vision our
Mother has of us, her needy, poor, sinful
and wretched children. Her never-tiring and endless love finds
expression in the tears she shed at La Salette. There she opened her heart
and spoke to Maximin and Melanie in a
soft and tender voice. Through them, she was speaking to us as well.
Like that of Jesus, Mary's compassion overflowed in
tears. We are eternally grateful to God
for giving us such a mother. She appears to us in our daily lives
with a helping hand. Since we long for healing, she will certainly lead us
to Christ, her Son.
Isn't it true that tiredness is often used as an excuse
for not doing good? "Let us not grow weary in doing what is right"
(Galatians 6:9) How can I put this sound advice of the apostle Paul into
practice?
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Jan 12 |
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THURSDAY OF
THE FIRST WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 1:40-45
"Moved
with pity he stretched out his hand, touched him ...
The psychologist Erich Fromm
wrote: "Alienation as we find it in modern
society is almost total; it pervades the
relationship of man to his work, to the things he consumes, to the
State, to his fellowmen and to himself." Today's gospel
speaks about this sort of alienation. In the New Testament no disease
terrified people nor moved them to pity more than leprosy. The
leper's fate was indeed hard. Ritually unclean, the leper was to remain
segregated from the community, avoid all contact with others. Though he had
no right to approach or to speak to him, the leper sensed that Jesus'
compassion was his only recourse. Upon receiving
his healing the man could not contain his inner joy. His heart overflowed
with boundless gratitude. The Lord
could have cured him from a distance, but chose to
do so by touching him. We, too, must help others; but we must be ready to
touch one another's lives. We must make sure that our care, our
concern and our love touch those who need our help.
"She wept all the while she spoke to us," the children of
La Salette reported. Mary's tears spoke more loudly of her inner beauty, one
of her most attractive characteristics as a woman. Mary was present, as
always, to bring life, to give care, to
show love. It is a wonderfully feminine virtue to be there with passion for
those one loves, especially in moments of
affliction and distress. She was there in tears on the mountain with
Maximin and Melanie, representatives both of our broken world.
Can we see Our Lady's
tears as a reflection of the sorrow and pity of the Son as he looks
upon an ailing and wounded world? What attitude of mine might repel those in
my life circle?
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Jan 13 |
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FRIDAY OF
THE FIRST WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 2:1-12
"They came bringing to him a paralytic carried by four men."
The crowd had jammed the pavement around the door to
listen to Jesus. Into this crowd came four men bearing on a stretcher a
friend who was paralyzed. We are not told
his name nor the names of those who brought him to Jesus. They are
referred to simply as "four men." Where would this world be without such
people? They were the first of an endless company of those who have made it
possible for others to reach the healing hands of Christ, anonymous apostles
doing good quietly, unselfishly and without fanfare. People whose names
never make the headlines. When he saw the faith of these four men Jesus must
have smiled an understanding and affirming smile. In his sight, this was a
loud proclamation of living faith. In what was perhaps one of the
most joyous moments in his ministry, he
looked at the man, and said, "Son, your sins are forgiven." Healer of
soul and body, Jesus is truly Lord of life.
Mary's words at La Salette reiterate the baptismal call of
every believer. She appeared not to add fame or glory to her credit but to
bring us her Son's healing touch. Her persistent and enduring love compels
her to intercede for us and to carry us
to Jesus. Probably that is why her appearance and intercession are known
in every corner of the world. Her message
is a worldwide call to rediscover Jesus as Savior; it breaks down our
self-erected barriers that we might immerse our paralyzed selves in Christ's
healing love.
What hinders me from
going out of my way to help others? Where should I look for the
motivation to deal with pockets of inertia in my own Christian life?
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Jan 14 |
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SATURDAY OF THE FIRST WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 2:13-17
"Jesus said to him: `Follow me."'
Jesus was walking by the lakeside, teaching like any rabbi
of his day. He must have stopped when he saw Matthew, a tax collector in his
booth. Tax collectors extracted from people as much as they possibly could
and filled their own pockets with the surplus once the law's requirements
had been met. Matthew was, therefore,
thoroughly hated. He was sitting in his office, sitting in his sins, in
his own world of alienation and public
scorn. But he had the will to respond to the entirely unexpected call
of Jesus, "Follow me." He had probably heard about Jesus; he might have
listened on the fringes of crowds to his message, and some-thing must have
stirred in his heart at Jesus' words. He sprang to his feet, followed Jesus
and spent his life in the service of the one who lifted him out of his
emptiness and sin. Matthew manifested his gratitude by hosting a banquet, a
tangible expression of reconciliation
with God. A meal shared is, in fact, a life shared.
We learn about personal involvement from the children of
La Salette. They were called to proclaim their Beautiful Lady's good news.
Her apparition blessed and marked their lives. Every blessing comes with a
corresponding duty, a responsibility they did not shirk. Before and after
the apparition, we see in them an amazing willingness to move freely with
the Spirit. Leaving their beloved mountains and their untroubled way of life
behind, they lent their words, their hearts and their sufferings to this
stirring message.
Discipleship involves extra sacrifice and a life-long
commitment.
How does the Eucharist, the meal I share with my Lord,
affect my personal con-version? When counting my blessings, do I give a
thought to the responsibility each of them entails?
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Jan 16 |
MONDAY OF THE SECOND WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 2:18-22
"How can the wedding guests fast while the bridegroom is with them? "
In the Jewish faith fasting was mandatory only one day in
the entire year, and that was the Day of Atonement. Stricter Jews fasted two
days each week. Jesus did not oppose fasting as such. It could help people
learn to appreciate and value God's gifts, gain spiritual strength against
evil and focus entirely on God. He faulted the Pharisees for making their
fasting a way of drawing attention to their own righteousness, rather than a
genuine expression of devotion to God. Fasting accompanied the rites of
mourning in Israel. Jesus was with his disciples still; so
there was no need to fast. It was time to
celebrate and feast with him at table. We touch here the interplay
between Advent and Christmas, between Good Friday
and Easter. Our entire life in Christ is
interplay between fasting and feasting. The
Lord is truly present to us, yet we await
his coming in glory. We receive the Lord in our hearts in the
Eucharist, but that presence will not be complete until he comes again.
When she helped him recall the day he saw the fragile
wheat at Coin with his father, Mary at La Salette reminded Maximin that
God's care is constant. Eucharist is an everlasting reminder of
God's love for us. Our attitude, experience, understanding, and our voice
are all-important to our appreciation of God's coming
to us in the Eucharist. Each moment of our lives must be a crystal clear
reflection of the Lord who comes to us through bread, broken and
shared. Our abstinence and our sacrifice
will enable us to savor the Eucharistic mystery and center our lives
on the Lord's table.
"How can the wedding guests fast?" Have we lost this
joy? Have we lost the sense of the Lord's presence in our midst?
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Jan 17 |
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TUESDAY OF THE SECOND WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 2:23-28
"The Son of Man is master even of the Sabbath."
In their deep reverence for God's command that the Lord's
Day be kept holy, the Pharisees elaborated some thirty-nine rules governing
its proper observance; they ranged from a prohibition against harvesting
grain to a ban on carrying heavy loads. What made their attitude devious
was their use of God's command to impose
burdens on people, thereby complicating their lives. "What is the
purpose of the law?" is a question we should often ask ourselves. Blind
obedience to law, whether civil, moral or spiritual, is never enough. This
can make narrow-minded or scrupulous Christians of us. We need to educate
ourselves to each law's intent, the reason behind God's inspiration of that
particular precept. Does our fondness for gossip reveal a hidden desire to
appear wiser and holier than others? The Pharisee in us often talks louder
than Jesus in us.
When the Lady appeared at La Salette she said to the
children, "The seventh day I have kept for myself." In doing so she revealed
the deep-seated reason for the Sabbath. The Lord loves us so much, she
reminded us, that he wants us to spend this special day in his company.
Sunday worship cannot be a mere matter of
fulfilling an obligation. It should be the joyful act of a grateful heart.
Mary wishes us to grow in gratitude, to journey in faith, not alone
but in the big family of believers. She wants us to don the garment of
integrity and sincerity as we take our place at table with Jesus.
Is the Pharisee or
Jesus my standard of behavior? Am I overly narrow-minded in my Sunday
observance?
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Jan 18 |
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WEDNESDAY OF THE SECOND WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 3:1-6
"Is it lawful on the Sabbath to save
life
rather than destroy it?"
Jesus
takes time off from his lakeside preaching and healing. Once again he enters
the synagogue on the Sabbath. The leading Jews and members of the Sanhedrin
were there to scrutinize hi every move. They wanted no unlawful act from
him that might mislead the people and entice them from the right way. It was
the Sabbath; all work was forbidden. Had he been a fearful prophet, Jesus
would have managed not to see the sick
man. He well knew that to see him was to heal him, and to heal him
could only mean trouble. "Is it lawful on the Sabbath," Jesus asks, "to do
good or to do evil?" He thus discloses the priority God assigns to
compassion in all his dealings with humanity. The law was meant to enhance
the community's sense of human dignity. How can healing the
paralytic jeopardize this intent? It
can't. Jesus was frustrated with the Pharisees, not because they
observed the Law, but because they were narrow-minded and burdened others in
its application.
Mary's appearance and
intervention at La Salette was rather necessary and most timely in a world
become licentious and self-centered. More than an appeal, her
message carried transforming power and
served as a salutary reminder that evil is to be rejected
energetically, that God is to be embraced enthusiastically. Mary
stands at La Salette as our spiritual
mother and a woman, committed and faithful, dedicated with all her
feminine heart to what is good and right. The voice she raised at La Salette
needs to be heard even today.
How do I utilize
God-given opportunities to do acts of mercy? What might I learn if I
draw up a in list of God's commands and their underlying intent?
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Jan 19 |
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THURSDAY OF THE SECOND WEEK OF THE
YEAR Mark 3:7-12
"They heard of all that he was doing."
The synagogue authorities
and the community elders were set for a conflict with Jesus over the good
works he did on the Sabbath. Jesus discreetly avoids the situation, however,
and keeps the focus on his mission. Leaving the synagogue, he went out to
the lakeside and the open sky. It was not that he withdrew
through fear, but that his hour had not
yet come and that he had much more to do.
Undaunted by the controversy, the crowd
fearlessly followed Jesus. "They heard
of all that he was doing." Reports of his deeds, his assistance to all
in need, served as a magnet that
drew them. Most were drawn to Christ by an inner desire to taste and
see divine acts. The region was electrified. Everyone wants to see a miracle
at least once in a lifetime! Miracles in themselves do not sustain faith.
For the believer, no miracle is
necessary; for the unbeliever, no miracle is possible. What we need
most is- the courage and strength to decide resolutely for Jesus in the
difficult moments of our lives.
The La Salette message
focuses on people's refusal to give God the time he re-quests, their
disrespect for his name, and the hardness of their hearts. It was ad-dressed to people who refused to welcome the word of God into their
lives. Maxi-min and Melanie were
so very blessed to hear Mary's comforting and energizing words. They
were set free from fear and anxiety. The miracle of the apparition did not
come in answer to any desire of theirs, it simply dawned in their lives.
They afterwards gave their whole lives to
make the Lady's message known to all. Having freely received, they
freely gave.
How fearless a
follower of Christ can I truthfully say I am? What is it about Jesus
and his teaching that excites me?
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Jan 20 |
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FRIDAY OF THE
SECOND WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 3:13-19
"He called his disciples to be with him, to preach and to drive out
demons."
Jesus takes one more step forward in carrying out his
mission. He had articulated his message; he had selected his method; he had
shown his divine authority over evil spirits and illness. He had seen large
crowds following him, eager to taste
divine love. He had felt this flock's inner thirst. Now he had to find
an effective way to make his message a lasting one, one that would extend
beyond Galilee. To further his mission he chose ordinary men who were
willing to give their lives for the sake of God's Kingdom. He called them
"that they might be with him, that they might serve as his heralds and have
the power to cast out demons." These three charges are essential components
of the disciple's calling: to be with
Jesus, to understand him, to capture his spirit, to share his trust in God,
to go out and preach the Word of life, the Word made flesh, to heal the
world of all evil spirits. Each of these
blessings carries with it a responsibility. To love God is to love
his works and his children beyond measure.
At La Salette Mary is indeed sent by God and speaks the
words of God. She unabashedly refers to
her two most precious possessions: her Son and her people. Her
pleading in behalf of her children was ongoing, and sinners were drawn to
her Son that they might find in him forgiveness, healing and reconciliation.
In a world broken and divided, the La Salette message remains relevant. To
take the Word of God, called to our attention by Mary, to the ends of the
world is our primary baptismal responsibility. Jesus' death and resurrection
have earned us heavenly citizenship. Mary's apparition reminds us that
sacred duties and responsibilities accompany blessings such as this.
As a disciple of
Christ do I recognize the responsibilities my discipleship entails?
Do I act accordingly?

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Jan 21 |
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SATURDAY OF
THE SECOND WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 3:20-21
"They said, 'He has taken leave of his senses.‑
The crowd follows Jesus
with great affection and excitement. They have seen him performing
miracles and have heard his powerful words. Still we see
them thirsting for more of his wisdom and miracles. Certainly a good
number of them believed in him and their hearts were yearning to be
formed in the ways of God. All these
things sounded so bizarre and strange to his own family, who then
decided that the time had come to take
him home. They perhaps feared the consequences of such acts and
preferred not to be condemned by the Jewish leaders. The language of Mark's
Gospel here offers a dramatic picture of Jesus' humanness:
his reaction and the wide range of emotions he displays are so much like our
own. He was pained when people disappointed him. For the good things he was
doing, he was anything but appreciated by
those closest to him. His own relatives
said, "He is out of his mind." We
sometimes do good and are suspected of having ulterior motives.
The La Salette event invites us to look at the events of
our lives and our world with the eyes of
faith. Whatever causes pain in our relationships must be viewed
from a faith perspective. It was the
absence of a faith perspective that made Mary's presence at La
Salette so necessary. Her single-minded focus on her Son should be ours as
well. Our modern world and self-congratulatory attitude have created blind
spots and denials that challenge us to stand up for Jesus with integrity and
proclaim his word with unflagging enthusiasm.
How do you react when your loved ones do not appreciate
you? Why does affirmation by those closest to us mean so much to us?
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Jan 23 |
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MONDAY OF THE THIRD WEEK OF
THE YEAR Mark
3:22-30
"Truly I tell you, people will be forgiven for their sins
and whatever blasphemies they utter; but whoever blasphemes against the
Hole
Spirit can never have forgiveness, but is guilty of an eternal
sin."
There is something in us
that wants to believe that all can be forgiven. After all, Jesus does battle
with the powers of darkness and he just doesn't win, he actually crushes the
powers of death and raises all life to share victoriously
in his glory. The entire ministry of Jesus is a series of conflicts between
the powers of God at work in him
and the power of evil at work in the world. In every instance the
power of good prevails. Resisting that power, denying its strength,
dismissing its presence is the great sin. The world we live in is filled
to overflowing with examples of
the powers of hell seemingly winning the day. But it may all be
summed up in the spirit of the young Columbine student who died for
believing that goodness prevails while she stared evil in the face. Not
only can a house divided against itself
not stand, neither can a faith, nor a heart, nor a marriage, nor a
family, nor a community. Indeed, "united we stand and divided we fall." The
great sign of the Kingdom actually being built happens when we work together
confronting the evils of the day.
Mary weeps at La Salette because her
children try to live without the communion of God's love. She comes
to call us to communion, to reconciliation. Her apparition
at La Salette is a reminder of the will of the Father so intimately known in
the life and teachings of her Son. We too are her children for whom
she prays for unity and oneness. We are neither Jew nor Greek, neither male
nor female, neither slave nor free. We are her children loved with the same
heart that loved Jesus, brothers and sisters all.
What divides our hearts? What unites our hearts?
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Jan 24 |
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TUESDAY
OF THE THIRD WEEK OF
THE YEAR Mark
3:31-35
"These are my mother and my brothers.
Whoever does the will of God is brother and sister and mother to me."
Someone
once observed that Catholics have a penchant for putting the cart before the
horse when they think that their goodness produces heaven when, in truth, it
is heaven that is the source of all goodness. When Jesus speaks
of family, all manner of questions arise
about his relatives, about the meaning of
brothers and sisters. Or are they
cousins? But Jesus is on another page. More than his closeness to us,
to his followers, then and now, to his mother, to all his brothers and
sisters, Jesus is one with his heavenly Father. His primary relationship is
with his Father. He invites us into that relationship by asking us to do the
will of the Father. The reign of God, for Jesus, rests in the personal
communion of men and women who do the
will of God. Loving the unlovable, the outcast, the enemy requires a
love thicker than blood. The question we ought to be asking ourselves is
"who isn't my brother or sister or mother?"
Not only
does Mother Mary come to us speaking words of wisdom, "Let it be," she knows
the full meaning of that response to God. To say "yes" to God is
to give life to love, to hope, to peace, to the presence of God among us.
Mother Mary says "Let it be done to you according to God's will." Is
it any wonder that Jesus prays in a like manner and teaches us to pray "thy
will be done." Mother Mary comes to us at La Salette speaking words of
wisdom, saying "let me do again for you what I was always meant to do. Let me bring Brother Jesus
to all of you who have forgotten that he is your brother."
What is the will of God asking of me today?
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Jan 25 |
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WEDNESDAY OF THE THIRD WEEK OF THE YEAR
Mark
4:1-20
"A farmer went out
sowing."
The people to whom Jesus speaks are being
encouraged to be good soil, to be good listeners. Jesus isn't simply
asking that his words be given a hearing,
but that they be cultivated and allowed to produce an abundance of meaning.
The measure that they produced, whether thirty, fifty or a hundred
percent according to their abilities, wasn't what concerned Jesus. What he
demanded of his hearers was that his words receive a response, that they
make a difference. At his word, people are healed, forgiven, saved. He
speaks not merely to enlighten our minds but to touch our hearts. To hear
with our hearts is to put faith in him, to believe. Without faith the words
can be confusing: "Love your enemies," "The last shall be first." "Happy are
those who mourn." In The Little Prince, we are told that what is
essential is invisible to the eye and that it is only with the heart that
one sees rightly. And so it is that only
with the heart can one hear rightly. The heart is
the core of hearing and seeing. We can
see and hear in those who are in good soil the power of an abundant
response to the word of God. We can hear and see gentleness and generosity
and undying hope. An abundant harvest is unmistakable.
"Come near, my children, do not be
afraid. I am here to tell you great news." Like
the words of the Gospel, the words of La
Salette are meant to be heard again and
again. They weren't addressed only to
those who heard them the first time. They were meant for a wider
audience, for repeated proclamation. "Make this known to all my people."
They have a claim upon us because they speak to our deepest yearnings for
meaning and healing, for an abundance of life and love.
Who, in my life, speaks gentleness, generosity and
undying hope?
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Jan 26 |
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THURSDAY OF THE THIRD WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 4:21-25
"Listen carefully to what you hear. In the measure you give you shall
receive,
and more besides."
Listen carefully! To whom
do we listen? Do we listen only to the loudest, the most articulate, the
most pleasant? Do we listen with the Lord to the cries of the poor, the
inarticulate, the lonely? Do we listen to people or just to words? Do we
listen for new ideas, for gossip, for the sensational? Do we listen to the
Good News? Henri Nouwen spoke of "learning about God as the very opposite of
piling up ideas." To truly listen is to embrace the silence that allows us
to hear others speak to us about God. If we listen carefully, "God can be
listened out of people." Whose love, whose welcome, whose compassion
reflects the love, the welcome and the compassion of our God? From whose
life do we receive the Word of God? There is a full measure of revelation
awaiting those who have ears to hear. The power of God's word is not
confined to our limited hierarchical and holy expectations. The alien, the
outcast, the sinner spoke to Jesus of God and so he listened. "Real
learning" said Nouwen, "in a spiritual sense, is a growing willingness to
listen."
When Mother Mary says to
Melanie and Maximin, "I am here to tell you great news," she asks for a
hearing from her children. She asks for a hearing of her
suffering and pain on our behalf. She
asks us to listen to the meanings of the signs
of the times. She asks to hear our
prayers. She asks for our voices to tell the world the Good News of
God's reconciling love.
Where and when and by whom does God surprise you with
his revelation?

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Jan 27 |
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FRIDAY OF
THE THIRD WEEK OF THE YEAR
Mark 4:26-34
"The reign of
God ... is like a mustard seed ...
the smallest of all earth's seeds ... springs up to become the largest of
shrubs."
Expect the kingdom to happen in small ways. The kingdom is
like the innocent heart of a small child
eager to love and to learn. It is like the smallest gift of the
widow who gives all that she had. It is like the tiniest of seeds that
produces the largest of plants. The smallest of beginnings can have great
results. God works his wonders among us in very subtle almost unnoticeable
ways ac-cording to his own timetable and manner. The kingdom grows unnoticed
while we go about our lives as usual. It happens constantly, mysteriously. The
message of the mustard seed
encouraged us to face the world with our small resources and trust
that God will accomplish great things through them. If God can take the
smallest of seeds to produce the largest
of shrubs, how much more can he do with our lives. The images of the
reign of God are hidden in the obvious, waiting for
the recognition of those who have faith
to believe, eyes to see and ears to hear. If the kingdom can be seen
in the gospel images of a child's innocence, in the generosity of a widow
and in the beauty of creation then it can also be seen in the love of
someone who quietly
enlarges our life and time and world. There are always some people in whom
the seed takes root and flourishes. God is never without kingdom people.
They touch our lives with little acts of kindness and love which by the
world's standards seem insignificant. But the unfolding mystery is in plain
sight for those who have faith to see.
The kingdom of God is like a mother who gave her all when
she gave the world her son. He grew in grace and love, offering himself for
the salvation of the world. But it is a
story that is all too often ignored, denied, rejected and opposed. So
the story needs to be told again and again. La Salette is an invitation to
faith, the planting anew of the seeds of hope and the cultivating of the
kingdom of reconciling love.
Where do you see the kingdom taking root and
flourishing?
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Jan 28 |
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SATURDAY OF
THE THIRD WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 4:35-41
" 'Teacher, doesn't it matter to you that we are going to drown?'...
'Why are you so terrified? Why are you lacking faith?' "
Jesus reassures the apostles that when he is with them
they have nothing to fear. He also reassures them his own serenity comes
from trusting in the Father who is always with him. That false sense of
isolation that exists in our imagination,
that sense of separateness is usually at the bottom of all our fears. St.
Augustine once said: "The tragedy of human life is that so many of us walk
through life side by side thinking no one else has a problem like ours and
all the way to the grave the people at our side were experiencing the same
things." The popularity of support groups
and Twelve Step programs today, however, suggests
that drowning people are calling out for
help. When we cry out in our panic, like
Peter, we have to believe that it does
matter to God and that he does send help to quiet the storms. There
is no disgrace in calling out for help as Peter does. Jesus
may not solve the problem or change the
situation but he will change us and give us peace, which in reality
does calm the storm. Being in the boat with Jesus doesn't mean that there
won't be any storms. It does mean that we won't have to face them alone. It
just takes a little faith and some capacity for surprise.
Mother Mary's first words at La Salette to Melanie and
Maximin were, "Come near, my children, do
not be afraid." She does this while sharing a worried mother's
concern for her children. She came to encourage her children to put aside
their fears, to be reconciled to God's loving, merciful presence in their
lives. Mary's words at La Salette echo across the years and miles to all her
children, "Come near, do not be afraid."
Where in your life
do you hear the Lord saying to you, "Why are you so terrified? Why
are you lacking faith? Be still!"

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Jan 30 |
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MONDAY OF THE FOURTH
WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 5:1-20
"What is your name? ... Legion is my name."
We, like the man in the Gospel, sometimes find ourselves
in the grip of things and habits that are non-life giving and keep us
restrained or prevent us from growing as
persons. Jesus found it important to ask the name of the spirit
in this man. Once he was able to name the demon, he had power over it and
could cast it out. The same is true for me. I can grow only if I call
my demons and my fears by their names,
and, "they are many," both personal and communal. Only in
acknowledging or naming these weaknesses can I begin to allow God to help me
change my destructive habits. Only when I
have done so, when I've allowed God
to help me see rightly, can I
progressively change and be renewed. Then, like the man in the Gospel
who is healed, I am better able to proclaim the news that God
has been powerful in my life, and that
God can give me a new heart, if I allow him to do so.
At La Salette Mary urges me to do the same. She calls me
to a change of heart. She names some of the demons of the time, which still
apply today: indifference to prayer, to the Eucharist, to respect of the
Lord's Day and the Lord's Name. Mary tells us that God cares, as she does.
God desires to be the true God in my
life. She reminds me to what extent God has gone to reveal the mystery of
divine love in Jesus. Mary urges me, in tears, to return to her Son,
with my whole heart.
Am I able and willing to name my "demons?" Which of
these is the greatest obstacle to my spiritual growth and my relationship
with Jesus?

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Jan 31 |
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TUESDAY OF THE FOURTH WEEK OF THE
YEAR Mark 5: 21-43
"Who touched my clothing?"
We have all had the experience
of being in a crowded place where people jostle one another, bumping and
pushing, oftentimes for no other reason than that there are too many people
present. The jostling, though obtrusive and
aggravating, truly means nothing except
that the place is overcrowded. The pushing and touching mean
nothing. On the other hand, if in the same crowd, some-one reaches out and
touches us gently on the shoulder, to get our attention, we
respond immediately. We can tell the
difference between a push or a shove and a call for our attention.
The woman with a hemorrhage is
desperate. Her need and desire are deep. She
timidly, yet confidently and trustingly,
reaches out and touches Jesus' garment in the hope of being healed.
His sensitivity to her hand and touch as well as to her profound need and
prayer causes him to react, to respond and to heal her.
At La Salette, in no way does
Mary push or shove or even demand. She invites,
she urges, she "touches" our hearts with
her tears and her motherly concern. She gently places before us the
glowing and resplendent image and reminder of her
crucified Son. She reminds us that he
desires to heal and renew. He aches to see
us suffer as a result of our human
blindness, so he "glows" and "shines" to attract our attention, to
touch our hearts, to lead us to repentance and conversion. His hope and
Mary's hope for us is that once we have truly seen him as the light of
our life, we will cling to him, "touch"
him, seeking a change of heart. He desires to grant that gift. Do we
choose to receive it?
Do I fear getting too close
to Jesus? Do I fear what conversion and healing will demand of me? Can I
trust in his love for me?
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Feb 1 |
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WEDNESDAY OF
THE FOURTH WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 6:1-6
"When the Sabbath came he began to teach in the synagogue in a way that
kept
his large audience amazed."
The Gospel tells us that as a faithful Jew, Jesus observed
Sabbath. He understood not only the law of the Sabbath but also the deeper
meaning of the law. Jesus observed many weekly Sabbath moments when he
retired to pray in the silence of the night, by the sea, on the mountains,
in moments of contemplation of God's wondrous and beautiful creation. The
birds of the air and the flowers of the field were contemplated as signs of
God's love. These Sabbath experiences allowed him to see God present to him
and to hear God speak of the harmony of life. As a consequence of his
listening and hearing, Jesus grew in his knowledge of God and God's will. He
could then speak and teach about God to any and all who desired to hear.
Those who were caught in webs of legalism, conservatism and tradition did
not understand or refused to understand. Attentiveness could have helped
them answer their own question. "Where did he get all this?" In his prayer
and communication with God.
At La Salette, Mary urges us to remember the sacredness of
the Sabbath or the Lord's Day. Mary, like Jesus, knows that the Sabbath rest
is not only a way of taking time to worship our loving God, but it is also a
gift to us, a way and a day to allow
ourselves to be re-created, to be renewed in body and spirit. It is a time
to pause and reflect on the true meaning of our lives, our work, our
priorities and especially on the truth that only God is God. All else in
life is secondary. When we observe Sabbath, the Lord's Day or mini-Sabbath
experiences, we become aware of who we are and who God is. Then our
preaching and teaching, both in word and
deed, will tend to be filled with gratitude, joy and a faithful reflection
of God.
How do I observe the
Sabbath? Do the Sabbath experiences of my life help make
me more aware of God's love, or are they
days of more busyness and distractions which draw me away from my
true self?
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Feb 2 |
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THURSDAY OF THE FOURTH WEEK OF THE
YEAR Mark 6:7-13
He instructed them to take nothing on the journey."
It has been said that in Palestine in the time of Jesus,
the natives had five articles of clothing: a long inner tunic, an outer
cloak, a belt, sandals and the oriental
headdress. Travelers carried a bag for food. In sending the disciples forth
to preach and teach, Jesus recommends that they take only the bare
essentials: clothing and a traveling stick for support and protection. No
food, no extras. But they were to take the Word – the good news, the message
of freedom and liberation. How challenging for the disciples and for us. No
extras! No cumbersome distractions and
burdens! An invitation to trust in the power given them by Jesus,
the power of the Word. Their mission is
accomplished. Their joy and amazement are profound!
On' the Holy Mountain of La Salette, Mary sends the
visionaries forth with nothing but their innocence and simplicity and their
experience of the Mountain Vision. It is the Beautiful Lady herself and
what she said, and the dazzling crucifix on her breast that would sustain
them. She sends them forth as they are, innocent and undeserving visionaries
who have been blessed with a transforming experience. "Go, my children,
make this known to all my people." The tenderness, the warmth and intimacy
of this experience are enough to convince her people and lead them to a
change of heart. The people will know that the message and meaning here are
more than these ignorant and innocent children could fabricate. Her people
were converted, then and ever since.
As a disciple of Jesus and a son/daughter of Our Lady
of La Salette, have I been "touched" by my experience of Jesus and Mary at
La Salette?
Are there any
"extras" that I probably carry along to fill the gaps or lack of experience
or lack of trust in the power of the Word?
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Feb 3 |
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FRIDAY OF THE FOURTH WEEK OF THE YEAR Mark 6:14-29
"When Herod heard John speak he was very much disturbed;
yet he felt the attraction of his words."
This gospel scene is a
flashback interjected in the middle of the story of the mission of the
disciples and their return to Jesus. The flashback serves to give us an
insight into what Herod thought of Jesus. The scriptures say, "Herod heard
of it (the mission of the disciples who spoke in the name of Jesus), for
Jesus' name had become well known." Mark takes the occasion to remind his
readers that it was this Herod who had John the Baptist beheaded. The
flashback also tells us of Herod's weakness, Herodias' grudge against John
and Salome's famous dance and her being manipulated into requesting the head
of the Baptist as a reward for pleasing Herod. In addition to telling us
about these people, the flashback serves to not only dredge up painful and
sorrowful events of the past but to bring forth, as well, happy memories of
blessings received.
At La Salette, Mary reminds
people of things they have done and are doing. Her message includes
flashbacks which most people find to be disturbing reminders of our human
weakness and sinfulness. But the apparition also includes two very
positive flashbacks. The first is the reminder of Jesus' crucifixion and
death which is the sign that "God loved the world so much," as John
the Evangelist tells us. The crucifix on Mary's breast is the blinding
reminder. The second is the famous
reminder of the episode of Coin where Mary reminds Maximin and us that, in
her motherly love and concern, she is present to us in the details of
our life. How wonderful to be reminded!
What recent flashbacks in my own life and prayer have
helped to make me more grateful for God's love and presence in my life?
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Feb 4 |
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SATURDAY OF THE FOURTH WEEK OF THE
YEAR Mark 6:30-34
"Come ... and rest a while."
In this Gospel scene Jesus
is revealed as the "Divine Psychologist" and the "Man with a Heart." The
disciples return from their mission excited and happy with the success of
their work but exhausted by its demands. Jesus encourages them to get some
rest, to balance their work with leisure and prayer. He invites them to
enjoy a mini-Sabbath experience. He knows that one cannot be whole nor even
survive long without the necessary physical rest and relaxation. He has seen
to this balance in his own life. Here he reveals his loving concern for the
disciples, for their wholeness and well
being. Later he is touched with pity for the crowds who were "like
sheep without a shepherd." He teaches them and leads them to "green
pastures," to "still waters" where he refreshes their souls.
Our Lady of La Salette
appears in the desert highlands of the Alps. Her very presence there is an
invitation for us and for all pilgrims to "come away and rest
a while." She invites all her children to enter into that mountain
retreat in order to be quiet, to
rest, to reflect and to be refreshed by the good news of God's love that
she brings. "Come," she says, "be not
afraid. I have come to tell you great news."
How often do I allow myself to go into that sacred place of retreat, to hear
Mary's
motherly message and call to repentance, conversion and reconciliation?
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