Monthly Archives: July 2022

20220801 Monday Ordinary 18 C

When Jesus was stressed or felt overwhelmed, he would slip away from the crowds to a secluded place to pray and meditate.  Sometimes Jesus would have one or several of the disciples with him but often he would be by himself.  This was time to think and ponder the world around him, the pressures of ministry so demanding that sometimes he could not even get a chance to eat, about his coming passion and death, and to pray with his Father. 

When Jesus heard about the death of John the Baptist, he got in a boat and went to a deserted place to be alone to regain his strength.  The boat had to be a small boat that he could use by himself.  People saw Jesus leaving in the boat and followed along the shore hoping to be cured or have a family member cured, or to see a miracle and hear Jesus teach. 

Frequently the Gospels tell us that Jesus was moved with pity when he saw the crowds that came to be close to him.  He was moved with pity because he loved the people as his Father loved him.  He would cure their sick and teach them about the Kingdom of God using parables. 

We all need the quiet time away from everyone, including our spouses and families to pray and meditate.  Reading scripture, a devotional or a spiritual book, and prayer helps us draw closer to God, just as Jesus did. 

When we, like the crowds, seek Jesus for healing and strength to deal with everyday burdens and anxieties, we find that Jesus is there waiting for us.  He calms our fears and gives us peace to comfort us in our troubled lives.  Jesus looks at us with the same pity he felt for the crowds because he loves us so much. 

When it seems that the world is crashing in on us and we have no where to turn, we turn to Jesus knowing that his love is always there for us.  Regardless of our sin, we can approach Jesus with a sorrowful heart and receive forgiveness. 

In today’s Gospel, Jesus took two fish and five loaves, looked to heaven, said the blessing, broke them and fed five thousand men plus women and children.  If Jesus could do that, he can feed our heartbroken, hungry souls and draw us closer to God. 

In a few moments, our priest will consecrate the bread and wine which will become the body and blood of Christ.  Jesus will feed us to nourish our souls and sustain us for the trials and temptations that come every day. 

We must approach with a heart that is truly sorry for the times we have failed and sinned.  The Psalmist understood this when he wrote:

For in sacrifice you take no delight,
burnt offering from me you would refuse,
my sacrifice, a contrite spirit,
a humbled, contrite heart you will not spurn.

Jesus is here with us at this very moment, waiting for us to approach him with a humbled, contrite heart.  Then the miracle of feeding the crowds will happen again.  He will feed each of our hearts for the trials and temptations ahead. 

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20220718 Monday Ordinary 16 C

“Teacher, we wish to see a sign from you.” 

Jesus replied that “no sign will be given”.  How many times in our lives have we asked for a sign from God?  Or made promises that if God did a favor for us, we would be good or repay God in a certain way? 

As a child, did you ever pray to God for a shiny bicycle promising that you would be perfect for a year or maybe the rest of your life?  Or as we grow older, ask God to cure your child, parent or spouse from a terminal disease and you would turn from your sinfulness and follow him?  In a sense, we are asking God for a sign even though we are really trying to bargain with God for something we want. 

Later in life, we have difficult decisions to make and ask God for a sign to help us make the right decision.  Lord, send a Cardinal to my windowsill this morning and I will accept the offer from College A or a Jay bird and I will accept the offer from College B. 

Or, Lord, let my current manager come and talk to me now and I will reject the offer for a new job in another department that means more pay but also more responsibility that I’m concerned may require too much time away from my family. 

We basically know that we can’t bargain with God.  God’s love is forever there for us regardless of our sin and failures.  Asking for God’s guidance is critical in our lives, and we should always seek God’s will.  However, asking for a concrete sign from God that we define isn’t the right approach to finding God’s will in our lives. 

Jesus said that “no sign will be given on that day except the sign of Jonah the Prophet.  Just as Jonah was in the belly of the whale three days and three nights, so will the Son of Man be in the heart of the earth three days and three nights.  Jesus was referring to his Passion and death, spending three days in the grave and rising to bring us salvation.  Jesus was telling us to seek God’s love, to accept God’s salvation which is freely given to us by his death and resurrection. 

Yesterday’s Gospel was about Martha worrying about having to take care of all the tasks at hand while Mary was with Jesus.  This is what Jesus was telling Martha.  Don’t worry about looking for signs and revelations, seek God with all your heart and all these other things will be taken care of by your Heavenly Father. 

Our psychological make up wants concrete answers and relying on God to provide is difficult for us.  We want our life planned out and know what profession we will follow, who we will marry and how we will succeed. 

Our individualism demands that we take care of everything, that we solve every problem and that we are in control.  It is extremely hard, if not almost impossible to put our ego aside to trust in God and not ourselves. 

Lord, help us to stop bargaining with you and looking for signs but seek your love with our whole heart instead. 

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20220711 Monday Ordinary 15 C

Jesus frequently took his disciples aside to teach them how to live after he would leave them.  The disciples had no idea what was in store for Jesus and how he would die.  But Jesus knew and prepared them to build the church after his resurrection. 

In today’s Gospel, Jesus said to his Apostles: “Do not think that I have come to bring peace upon the earth.  I have come to bring not peace but the sword.”  Jesus continued to say, “and one’s enemies will be those of his household”.  Extremely harsh words for someone who proclaimed the Good News to the poor.  But Jesus had to prepare his disciples for the future. 

Then Jesus begins to put things into perspective.  He said:

“Whoever loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me, and whoever loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me; and whoever does not take up his cross and follow after me is not worthy of me.  Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it. 

These were the conditions of Discipleship that Jesus gave to his disciples.  Absolutely nothing could come in between them and God.  And they apply to us today just as much as to Jesus’ Disciples in that time. 

Jesus was teaching that they had to follow him without any reservations.  Nothing in their life could be more important than following him.  Jesus knew that they would have doubts and fear for their lives, even to the point of denying that they knew him.  But Jesus had to plant the seed, teach the important truths so when the Holy Spirit comes, they would have the knowledge to know what to do and what to teach others. 

Jesus was preparing his disciples to understand that people would hate them just as people of that time hated him.  But he did not stop with the cost of discipleship.  Jesus also taught them the rewards for being a disciple.  Jesus said that regardless of which position we serve him; whether a prophet meaning a leader, a righteous person meaning a layperson living a holy life or a person who is providing a drink of cold water to his disciples, they will be rewarded. 

The message that Jesus taught in his day was to love God more than anything else; more than family, more than power, more than comfortable lifestyles, more than themselves.  This last one, more than themselves, is probably the most difficult value to release to Jesus. 

In our consumer materialistic world today, it’s all about me; what I want, what I need and what makes me happy.  It’s all about me.  Jesus said this in the Gospel: “Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.” 

We can find our life in the success of work, material wealth and control over others.  We think that we have achieved success with these things and we are in control of our lives, but we have let these things come between us and God.  It is only when we have completely surrendered our lives to Christ; when we have made him the most important value for us, even to the point that we are willing to die for our faith in him, that we will find our life in heaven. 

Let us pray that Jesus will help us lose our lives to the enticements of this world so we can find our life serving others and sharing Christ’s love with them. 

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20220710 Ordinary 15 C

In ancient times, honor was more important than life.  It was considered acceptable to lie or even kill an opponent if that person dishonored your family’s name.  Bringing shame on an opponent was a tactic that is still practiced today.  Our current political polarization and feuds exemplify that human nature remains unchanged over the millennium. 

In today’s Gospel, Luke makes the point that the reason the scholar of the law asked this question was to test Jesus, to try to dishonor Jesus with a question that he could not answer correctly.  “Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?” 

Jesus, like he so often did, asked a question in return.  “What is written in the law?  How do you read it?”

The scholar replied: “You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your being, with all your strength, and with all your mind, and your neighbor as yourself.”  This is the same answer Jesus gave another scholar previously. 

Jesus commended him for his response.  But because he wished to justify himself, he said to Jesus, “And who is my neighbor?” 

Jesus was a great master at using parables to make a point.  He tells the story of a person who is on the way from Jerusalem to Jericho.  Traveling in those days was dangerous because of the robbers along the highways.  The man is robbed, beaten, striped of his clothing and left along the road for dead. 

Jesus tells of three people who pass by the victim; a priest, a Levite who served in the temple and another person that everyone probably expected to be a Jew, but Jesus uses a Samaritan instead.  This really turned the story on a different level for the listeners because the Jews and the Samaritans were enemies and the treatment by the Samaritan to a Jew would make the victim unclean. 

The priest probably considered helping the victim but the risk of becoming unclean was too great.  The Levite probably considered helping the victim but passed on for the same reason.  “What if the victim was not a Jew?” was in their minds because that would make them unclean.  We don’t have the concept of being unclean and needing to go to Jerusalem to be purified so we could be holy again.  But in that day, it was paramount to avoid anything that could make one unholy. 

John Pilch tells us:

“The Samaritan offers the first aid (wine, oil, and bandages), which the Levite could have done but neglected to do.  The Samaritan’s risk is that this victim might hate him upon
regaining consciousness.  Samaritan wine and oil were considered impure and would have made the (very likely) Judean victim impure too!” 

Finally, the Samaritan, in contrast to the robbers, promises to return and pay any additional expenses.  This is perhaps the most foolish part of this story.  If the victim should die, his family, who will not be able to find the robbers, may kill his benefactor instead.  Or if the victim survives, he may rage at this Samaritan for making him impure with Samaritan wine and oil.  It is impossible to underestimate the importance of purity, that is, the determination to “be holy as the Lord is holy”. 

It’s hard for us to understand this concept of hatred and avoidance of people just because of their race or culture and the impact that they might make us unholy and impure.  As Catholics, we believe that all people are created in God’s image and deserve to be treated with dignity and respect.  And yet, we find it all around us if we look with open eyes.  We find it in our attitude toward immigrants, toward Pro Abortionists who attack us, and toward those who don’t share our views. 

In the Gospel, Jesus turns the question on the scholar and asks, “Which of these three, in your opinion, was neighbor to the robbers’ victim?”  The scholar is now backed into a corner and must answer Jesus.  He answered, “The one who treated him with mercy.” 

We often avoid the person standing on the street corner with a cardboard sign asking for help, or wish the person wasn’t there.  We look the other way, so we don’t have to make eye contact. 

We are fortunate that when we go to the grocery store to get food, the shelves are stocked, and we can buy it.  Even though the pandemic had some shortages, we have forgotten the inconvenience.  It’s easy for us to forget that the war in Ukraine is creating a food shortage in Africa and thousands are expected to die of starvation because of it.  We must do what we can through Catholic Relief Services and like organizations to help them. 

Closer to home, it is imperative that we remain “Neighbor” to those who vandalize our churches and the Blessed Body because of our stand for Life.  It is easy for hatred against them to creep into our hearts. 

It is also imperative that we stand against Capital Punishment and Euthanasia for the old and terminally ill.  Eight states have enacted laws making a prescription for medication to end one’s life accessible to everyone.  These have fallen into the shadows of the fight against Abortion but must remain in our prayers and our fight for ‘Life from Conception through Natural Death’. 

So, who is my neighbor?  In today’s parable, Jesus said that even our enemy is our neighbor, and we must care for them like family.  Sometimes those two become the same.  How many of us have a family member we can’t stand or even hate?  Regardless of the reason, Jesus tells us that we must treat them as our neighbor too. 

It’s so easy for little things to creep into our hearts without our recognizing them for the impact they have on our spiritual lives.  Dislike for someone gradually over time becomes hatred.  Irritations from the loud obnoxious family member gradually becomes avoidance of the person.  Distain for the poor on the corner asking for help hardens our hearts against helping anyone. 

Jesus gave the scholar an invaluable lesson that applies for us today.  After the scholar answered the question, “The one who treated him with mercy.” Jesus said, “Go and do likewise.” 

We must examine our hearts and ask ourselves “Do I treat everyone with mercy as Jesus taught?” 

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20220704 Monday Ordinary 14 C

Today’s Gospel has not just one, but two examples of what I would call “Extreme Faith”. 

In the first account, “an official came forward, knelt down before him, and said, “My daughter has just died.  But come, lay your hand on her, and she will live.”  This miracle is recorded in all three of the Synoptic Gospels. 

While the ruler’s name is mentioned in the other Gospels, it’s the miracle that is important rather than the synagogue ruler’s name.  Jesus goes with the person to heal his daughter.  The Gospel of Luke tells us that “As he went, the crowds almost crushed him.” 

In all 3 Synoptic Gospel accounts, the story of the raising of the synagogue ruler’s daughter is interrupted by the story of healing for the woman with a hemorrhage. 

In the second account, “A woman suffering hemorrhages for twelve years came up behind him and touched the tassel on his cloak.  She said to herself, “If only I can touch his cloak, I shall be cured.” 

With the crowds around Jesus so dense that they almost crushed him, many people had to be pressing against and touching Jesus.  But Jesus knew that someone with great faith touched him because he felt that power had gone out of him.  Only someone with a desperate need and great faith could have drawn power out of him. 

This is the only instance of someone being healed by touching Jesus that I could find.  In all the other miracles in the Gospels, Jesus touches the person to heal them.  In that culture, a woman would not have dared to touch a man let alone a Rabbi.  The woman’s faith was so great that she was healed.  The Gospel tells us “And from that hour the woman was cured.” 

“Jesus turned around and saw her, and said, “Courage, daughter! Your faith has saved you.”  Notice that he didn’t say your faith has healed you.  He said, “Your faith has saved you.”  Jesus so often forgave the sins of the person in addition to healing them.  He was concerned about the whole person rather than just the physical body ailments. 

The synagogue ruler knew that Jesus’ touch would heal his daughter.  And the woman who suffered from hemorrhages knew that if she could just touch Jesus’ garment, she would be healed.  The power of Jesus’ touch is still there for us today if we have faith. 

Jesus wants healing, both spiritual and physical, for us today like he did when he walked this earth.  But it takes faith on our part. 

Do we have faith, like the parent of the girl who died and the woman with the hemorrhage, to receive his healing? 

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