Weekly Reflection

Thirteenth Sunday (“C”) – June 26, 2016

When the Lord calls us and says, “Follow Me,” the response He is looking for is an immediate one. To the person who says, “Let me go and bury my father first,” Jesus’ reply is quite clear, “Leave the dead to bury their dead; your duty is to go and spread the news of the kingdom of God.” There is a popular hymn that uses words from this Gospel, “The foxes have their holes and the swallows have their nests, but the Son of Man has no place to lay down.” Despite the cheerful tune, the message, if we think about it, is an alarming one. Jesus has nowhere to call His home.

If we understand Jesus properly there is no reason for us to fear. Jesus is telling His disciples that their bsiness is the proclamation of the kingdom of God. If it is their business that means it is our business, here and now. People can often forget that we are in this business together as brothers and sisters. People can sometimes think that they are not the worthy ones and a holier and more qualified person will come along. Jesus is telling us very clearly today that the proclamation of the kingdom is the business of all of us.

In this coming week, look at ways in which you are able to respond to the Lord’s call. Jesus has said to each and every one of us, “Follow Me,” and that is why you and I are here at Mass. Let’s not fall into the trap of waiting for a holier-looking person to come along. We ourselves, with God’s holy grace, are the people called by the Lord to follow Him. Whatever we may look like, whoever we may be, whether we receive recognition for it in this world or not, we are called to the business of proclaiming and building up the kingdom of God.

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Eleventh Sunday (“C”) – June 12, 2016

Today in the Gospel Jesus is invited to a meal by Simon the Pharisee, but once He is seated at table a woman with a bad reputation gatecrashes the party and starts behaving in what the other guests believe to be a very inappropriate manner. She begins weeping over Jesus’ feet. Imagine if that happened today. This sinful woman has been accepted, forgiven by Jesus. She reflects the abundant grace of God, which unexpectedly breaks through boundaries that hums beings see to impose. Simon the Pharisee, rather like older brother in the story of the prodigal son, doesn’t want to celebrate God’s unlimited forgiveness; he disapproves of it.

Christian communities can often respond as Simon did. We can disapprove of too much generosity, especially to people who seem to be breaking the rules all the time. We might have have a certainly sympathy with the village of hard-working peasants who turned away the ex-convict Jean Valjean because he represented too much of threat to their security. No doubt the bishop who gave him hospitality was seen as a silly old man who was out of touch with reality. God’s love seems disruptive and even dangerous. How else do we expect to overcome the divisions and hostilities that divide families, communities and nations in our world unless we allow God’s unlimited forgiveness to work in us, so we can witness to God’s healing love in our lives?

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Tenth Sunday (“C”) – June 5, 2016

In the Gospel, even more than the first reading, the element of compassion is to the fore. As Jesus and His companions approach the little town of Nain, about 5 miles from Nazareth, another procession is making its way towards the city gate. It’s a funeral procession for a young man, the only son of a woman who has also lost her husband. She is alone and Jesus felt sorry for her; the meaning of the original Greek word is very strong – He is moved to the core of His being, He is filled with compassion. A few moments later, He hands over to the widow her son, now restored to life.

In restoring a dead man to life, Jesus is reminding us that His almighty power will one day work an even greater miracle for each of us – not a mere reprieve, not a mere restoration to the life wonderful beyond anything we could imagine and lasting for ever. Like everyone else we have a natural fear of death, or at least of the process of dying, but as believers we know that the risen Christ has lost none of His boundless compassion; He only waits to draw us through death into everlasting life.

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Sunday in the Octave of Corpus Christi (“C”) – May 29, 2016

All meals carry with them the potential of nourishment and healing and more. Particularly important meals of celebration, shared with others, confirm our identity and allow us to celebrate our very existence and all our lives give to us. We need the food and drink to sustain us, and we need to be thankful for what life provides for us not just in the meal but in the people with whom we share our lives. All these elements are present when we celebrate the Eucharist together. As we come together to remember what He did for us, as we share the message of God’s kingdom, as we pray for healing, as we eat the bread and wine that have become the body and blood of Christ, we make present the mystery of the cross and resurrection. We are truly Christ’s body in and for our world. Christ’s body is made incarnate again through our own humanity, offered to each other as food and drink to nourish and to heal.

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Most Holy Trinity (“C”) – May 22, 2016

The Spirit of God lives in the Church and in each person. This is the gift and the promise that the Lord made to us. And so if we turn to the Spirit and ask for guidance and inspiration our prayer will not go unheeded. We will be given sensitivity to the needs of others and a loving desire to help them. These gifts of the Spirit are all forms of “seeing” and once we see, we will not know how to act. St. Paul in his life journey, was given new sight by the Lord after being struck blind on the Damascus road. His new sight proved to be tremendous vision. He could see the glory of God ahead of him as our glorious destination. He could also see that even our sufferings can be beneficial events in our life, that we can bring good out of them. Suffering leads to patience, and patience leads to perseverance, and perseverance to hope, and our hope will not deceive us. The brightness of God now blesses our lives and calls us to bless one another, in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.

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Pentecost (“C”) – May 15, 2016

The apostles are no longer terrified and in hiding after Jesus’ crucifixion, but, driven by what seems like a powerful wind from heaven and tongues of fire, they go out into the market square proclaiming the marvels of God. The people are from many foreign places but everyone hears and understands in his or her own language what is being said. It signifies a reversal of the confusion of language in the story of Babel and the beginning of humanity’s restoration to unity.

Not only is the Spirit of God our helper but also, as St. Paul says in the second reading, He has “made His home” in us. The source of this divine life of the Spirit within us is the Father “who raised Jesus from the dead”. Having received the gift of the Spirit we are called to live “spiritual lives”. We may lack the power to describe the beauty of God’s creation, but with the help of the Holy Spirit we can speak in words that bring love, healing and reconciliation. When the words are accompanied by actions of self-giving they will be understood and accepted, whatever the language of the recipient.

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Seventh Sunday of Easter (“C”) – May 8, 2016

Christian communities are not always the most united of groups. Yet Jesus asks us to go out preaching the need to be one with others as well as ourselves. Can we do this without being hypocritical? We can reassure ourselves by looking at the early disciples. The were often at odds with each other both before and after their experience of the risen Lord and His gift of the Holy Spirit. However, they do appear to have been better at sorting out their differences after Pentecost than before. It is as though they recognized in each other that gift of God’s love and so gave each other the space to explore what that love was saying.

Our ability to be one and to live, believe and work together in harmony is ultimately the gift of God’s own love within us. It will always be a challenge to express this fully. We will try shortcuts, make assumptions, identify God’s will too quickly with our own. We will be afraid. But like the sunflower constantly turning its face to find the sun, so we are asked to turn our faces again and again to God, that it may be God’s love that truly enlightens us and helps us to choose the right path.

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Sixth Sunday of Easter (“C”) – May 1, 2016

In today’s Gospel, Jesus assures us that we are more than any earthly group can make us, and we are interior led by more than any human code or sense of honor. Through the giving of the Spirit, we become dwelling places of the Holy Spirit, and if the Holy Spirit, then the whole of the Blessed Trinity. This teaching of Christ on the indwelling of the Holy Spirit is absolutely central to the New Testament.

Like any adventure in living together, allowing the Holy Spirit to dwell within us requires certain things. First of all, spending time with God in prayer. Not only do we raise our minds to God, but our hearts become aware of God’s presence within us and in the Church. Secondly, living together with friends requires communication. We need both to speak and to listen. The time we spend in prayer helps us reveal our joys and sorrows, our hopes for this world and our desire for eternity.

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Fifth Sunday of Easter (“C”) – April 24, 2016

The setting for this Sunday’s Gospel is the Last Supper. Jesus had promised to give the Holy Spirit to instruct and guide the Church after His Ascension into heaven, but at this moment of His final meeting with the apostles before His death He was eager to tell them what was closest to His heart. He did so in but a few words: “Love one another.” These days some Catholics think that the Church has gone soft. They lament the fact that the practice of fasting and abstinence has been lessened both in its frequency and its severity. They say there is too much talk about mercy and not enough about penance. They judge that the Church is lax about allowing frequent communion. They seem to be of the opinion that the “good old days” meant it was a challenge to be a good Catholic. The truth is that some of the external practices were easy to comply with in comparison with the command of Jesus. When we face what His commandment entails, we see that it is far from easy, especially when we understand what Jesus meant when He declared that His commandment is new. That is what He meant when He added, “Such as my love has been for you, so must your love be for each other.”

It was this commandment of love which inspired the preachers of the early Church, like Paul and Barnabas whom we heard about in the first reading, to travel great distances under difficult circumstances to proclaim the good news. It was love which made their hearers accept the faith and persevere in it so that the Church spread throughout the world. It was love which moved the martyrs to give up their lives. It was love which inspired saints to serve others unselfishly without hope of gain. And it is this same love for each other which will make us good Catholics today. Participating in the Eucharist helps us to become more and more like Christ so that we may keep His commandment, “Such as my love has been for you, so must your love be for each other.”

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Fourth Sunday of Easter (“C”) – April 17, 2016

When Jesus uses the image of sheep to describe those in His care, He is describing a situation to which His listeners can easily relate. In the Old Testament, priests, prophets and kings failed in their responsibilities to such an extent that God the Father took back the flock into His personal care, and now they are entrusted to Jesus, the good shepherd. Sheep need a shepherd to look after them, to guide them and keep them safe. Just as parents recognize the different cries of their own children, so the good shepherd listens for the cry of His sheep. And just as children recognize the voice of their parents, so those who belong to Jesus listen for His voice and follow Him.

Perhaps we can gather from what we have already said that God’s house as described by Jesus is not some many-roomed country mansion, good to look at but impossible to live in. The church is not a museum to be visited, holding the treasures of a bygone age. The Church is a community of people who care about the world in which we live. The care about the people among whom we live, especially those who are most in need. Today we ask God to help us all to recognize the voice of the good shepherd and to follow Him; to understand, however, that we are not just sheep who follow, but sharers with Jesus in His mission to seek out and save those who are lost. Today is a day for all of us to commit ourselves in such a way that young people from our community will feel that a call to priesthood is a natural and normal way to find happiness and fulfillment for their lives; to be shepherds and not museum guides.

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