Weekly Reflection

Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time – July 19, 2015

Today’s story both reminds us of what has gone before this episode and gives hints about what is to follow. As it opens, we are told that Jesus’ disciples have been away. As the story ends, the set-up is complete for the account of one of the most famous miracles ever: the feeding of 5,000. In between, and using no more words than are absolutely necessary, St. Mark the evangelist describes both the arrival of people, and the place where they gather, in a way that will give added significance to the feeding miracle, which we will hear next week in St. John’s version. We are told that Jesus instructed His disciples to come away to a lonely place where they could be by themselves. The desert reminds us immediately of the Israelite’s 40 years in the desert. The disciples have not had anything to eat; the Israelites were faced with starvation until God fed them with manna.

Every single image, every single word in this Gospel story has significance. It reminds us of Israel’s history; it recalls the prayer of Israel – which is what the psalms were – and it is like St. Mark wanted his readers to think of the Eucharist. He needed to reassure his readers that the one who shepherded the crowd, who fed those who were hungry and who had compassion on those who lacked a shepherd, is not absent from this world. He continues to be present and to minister to each generation in the same way. It is especially in the Eucharist we celebrate that the Lord who is shepherd, teacher and source of food continues to be present to us today.

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Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time – July 12, 2015

In today’s Gospel story of Jesus sending His disciples out on mission, St. Mark tells us that the one thing they were allowed to take with them was a staff for the journey, nothing else. The disciples were not going on holiday. They did not need to pack anything. In fact, all they needed was the assurance of Jesus and the power that He gave to them to teach and to heal. All other requirements they could expect to receive from the people they visited – shelter, a place to sleep and food to eat. These things they could reasonably expect in return for the work they were doing, preaching the word of God and healing those who were sick. Their purpose is to save; to save people going astray or who find themselves lost in this life. The instructions that Jesus gave are geared to keeping the focus on the importance of what the disciples say and do. That is why they are commanded to find a place to stay and to stay there. They are there to serve and save people. That is why the command is given to shake dust from their feet if they are rejected in their work. It is meant, not as retaliation, but to be a sign. Even in being dismissed they can still preach the Gospel and indicate its importance.

Some priests and religious people are career people. Religion is their preferred way of life, but no matter of salvation. It’s a job. Amaziah, the priest of Bethel, in today’s first reading, was such a person. When he tells Amos it is clear that he is preaching because he has to. He is not doing it for the good of his health! The Lord demands this of him that he should preach the real word of God to people, and not some idle nonsense. When people climb holy mountains, they do so because they feel a call to climb, a summons to go higher, a desire to see more clearly and a yearning to be a better person. The word of God calls us all the time. The faith we have been given is the stick that helps our climb, the staff that supports our journey. Let us take up our staff every day and journey together to the mountain of the Lord.

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Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time – July 5, 2015

In the Gospel today Jesus goes back to His home town of Nazareth. He preaches in the local synagogue and people are amazed by what they hear. “Where did He get all this wisdom from?” they asked. Through His teaching and His miracles Jesus challenges their understanding of what a Jewish Messiah should be. The people become angry that He has disturbed their domesticated idea of God and of themselves. “Who does He think He is? He is getting above himself. He is a carpenter. After all, He has grown up with us and we know His family.” And they shut their minds and hearts to Him. Jesus should not have been too surprised by their reaction, for He knew that this is what had happened to prophets like Ezekiel and Jeremiah throughout Jewish history. Who are prophets? They are the ones who offer a different vision of our society, a vision sanctioned by the word they receive from God. They point out the bonds of the covenant that linked God to God’s people and bound the people to one another are being broken. But the prophets who have the courage to speak the words God wants His people to hear often have to pay the price for such temerity just as their predecessors did.

The prophetic vocation is an integral part of our Christian faith. How else can the Lord warn His people of their failures to keep His covenant of justice? But such a calling often results in the suffering, even the death, of the prophet and that is why many of us feel rather uneasy about these disturbing voices. There are times, in the world, in the Church, in our country, or even in more domestic situations, when we know something should be done. Do we have the courage to be even a little bit prophetic over some issue of justice, or at least to open ourselves to listen to a prophetic voice? We may hesitate, for we know of the inevitable discomfort and change that it may bring. But how else will a society be healed unless a word is spoken? Ezekiel reminds us of God’s calling: “Whether they listen or not, this set of rebels shall know there is a prophet among them.

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Thirteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time – June 28, 2015

Jesus offers us two examples of healing and new life through faith. First, Jairus, the synagogue official, asks Jesus to come and lay His hands on his little girl to make her better and save her life. In the sacrament of anointing of the sick the priest lays his hands in silence on the sick person before the oil is applied to head and hands. The the young woman suffering from the haemorrhage knows she has to touch Jesus for healing, even though such an act in Jewish law will make Him unclean because of her condition. Jesus commands her faith, a faith that has enabled her to put trust in Him and go beyond the accepted boundaries of convention. In later Greek tradition the woman was given the name Berenice, which translates into the Latin Veronica, the woman who in the Stations of the Cross wipes the face of Jesus on His journey to Calvary, leaving the imprint of that face on the cloth.

We are taught both to receive life from Jesus and to convey His gift of life to others. We are invited to be touched by Him and remain in touch with Him. Without His love in our hearts we are not fully alive, and we are certainly not able to offer that love to others. Our hearts and minds are touched as we listen to His word during the liturgy, and we are nourished spiritually as we receive the gift of His body and blood in communion. By the simple act of a handshake when we exchange a sign of peace we proclaim the peace that exists between us. We may not be, for the most part, doctors or nurses, but the way we greet each other, the way we smile, the way we listen, the way we hold each other in friendship or compassion, are all carrying out of love of Christ and our witness to Him.

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Twelfth Sunday in Ordinary Time – June 21, 2015

The disciples had forgotten that each time we set out on a journey it is an act of trust. Were the disciples really thinking about the risks as they set out that evening in the small boat? Perhaps the presence of Jesus made them believe that nothing could harm them. Jesus is able to see the storm in a different light. He lives His life as one of constant trust in His heavenly Father, and when the storm blows up He places His trust completely in His Father. This is why He asks the disciples why they have no faith.

We might think that the disciples would have learned their lesson: to see the need to live each moment of life placing their trust in God, particularly when things are most desperate. Jesus sleeps because He trusts in His Father; however, the disciples sleep because they are oblivious to what is about to happen. If we lack trust in God, then either we live our lives in constant terror, or we find ways to blot our our fears.

In His death on the cross Jesus Christ takes all our fears upon Himself, and restores us to a relationship of trust in His Father. This does not mean we have no more fears, but it does enable us to live our lives with the assurance that the Father will raise up with His Son those who trust in Him. We can be like the disciples setting out in the boat. We can be oblivious to the fragility of life, to the risks that surround us. When something happens that throws us off balance we can become overwhelmed by fears. All we took for granted seems to be threatened, like a boat in a storm. At such times we are called to place our trust in God, but we cannot do this ourselves. It is Jesus Christ who enables us to trust in His Father. He takes our fears on himself, and brings us the hope of new life.

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Eleventh Sunday in Ordinary Time – June 14, 2015

Whether we’re young or old, we stand in need of encouragement. And that is true especially of our spiritual life. In our efforts to follow in the footsteps of Jesus, it’s easy to get discouraged, to feel that we are making little or no progress. If that’s how we feel, today’s readings could serve as a spiritual pick-me-up.

The prophet Ezekiel, who gave us our first reading, lived at one of the most disastrous periods of Israel’s history, when its people had been hauled off into exile far away from their homeland and many were feeling that God had abandoned them. Ezekiel assures them that this is not so. On the contrary, the Lord has a plan for His people. In the Gospel, Jesus tells a parable, a story with a message not unlike that of Ezekiel. He speaks of a tiny mustard seed, which grows so huge that it provides a resting place for all birds of the air. And He tells us that the Kingdom of God is like that. While this parable gives us the big picture of God at work, Jesus tells another parable, which might be described as God’s work in miniature. God works not only on the grand scale, not only in nations and among nations, but also on the small scale, in the lives of individuals. And so Jesus tells the story of a farmer who sows his seed and then, until the harvest arrives, must patiently wait. All he knows is that secretly, night and day, the seed is growing, always growing, though he doesn’t know how; one day it will produce the blade, then the ear and finally the full grain of wheat.

In our lives, too, the Lord has sown His seed and is permanently at work within us. And while we are called to cooperate, the work of salvation is God’s achievement, not ours. In fact God is longing for us to grow in faith and hope and love, in freedom and goodness, more than we do ourselves.

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Sunday in the Octave of Corpus Christi – June 7, 2015

If you had gone into a church in the 10th century, you would not have seen a tabernacle, but a dove-shaped container hanging over the altar. It was called a pyx, and the Blessed Sacrament could be placed inside. Jesus is present. This is the body and blood of the risen and living Lord. He deserves our attention, indeed our adoration, not only at the moment of communion but whenever we come into the church.

The custom developed of carrying the Blessed Sacrament in procession, for the veneration of believers. This is part of what we do on Maundy Thursday evening – we take the Eucharist to the altar of repose, so there is a short procession round the church; but the occasion is a sad one, because Jesus is beginning His passion. In many countries on the joyous day of Corpus Christi there are processions through the streets, with the Blessed Sacrament exposed in a precious casing called a monstrance: children scatter rose petals, citizens hang colored banners out of their windows, the town band plays.

What about us? In the tabernacle, here, our Lord is alive and welcoming. The sanctuary lamp, always burning, is a sign of that. Christ invites us to come and spend time with Him. If we have an hour of exposition, with the Eucharist displayed on the altar, it’s a time of opportunity. Here, in the Eucharist, we can have that quiet, prolonged, personal conversation that is the heart of all prayer. Today we can focus on the full beauty of this great gift that we are given. May we always feel the gentle presence of Jesus, drawing us like a magnet to His company.

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Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity – May 31, 2015

In our readings is a message that takes us to the heart of why, as Christians, we do everything “in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.” These words tell us about God’s abiding love for us, God’s presence with us, and the mission that God calls us to. The risen Jesus, taking leave of His disciples at His ascension, not only says, “I am going to prepare a place for you;” but also, as Matthew records, instructs His followers to go out and make disciples.

It is all too easy on Trinity Sunday to content ourselves with naming the Trinity as “mystery” and then go about our business as normal. The Trinity tells us who we are, as baptized people; it opens us the riches of prayer and intimate life with God; it assures us of God’s closeness to us as we go out to do God’s work in the world. In practice, then, simply to begin each day “in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit” is to enter, day by day, more deeply into this mystery of love. From such prayer we can find small but powerful ways of living the mission of the Trinity in our lives. Let’s find moments in the coming week where, like God who is Trinity, we can go out to others in love, knowing God is with us in all things.

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Solemnity of Pentecost – May 24, 2015

The readings for today’s Solemnity of Pentecost, each in their own way, describe the effect of God’s Holy Spirit in terms of speaking a language of understanding a culture. The apostles are transformed from being huddled in the upper room in fear of their lives into people who are filled with joy and courage as they rush out to share the good news of the resurrection of Jesus. They speak foreign languages, they are given the gift of speech. All people understood the Gospel message, each in their own language. In the Gospel, Jesus describes the Spirit as the one who speaks the truth – acting as a witness to the truth about Jesus. Throughout John’s Gospel, the truth about Jesus is quite simply that Jesus is the Son of God. With the Spirit speaking through them, the apostles can translate God’s love so that all people can hear and accept it.

Champollion worked for years to be able to decipher the hieroglyphs of the Rosetta Stone. No one can learn a language in an instant. In the same way, the Spirit leads the followers of Christ into the complete truth – a gradual process in our personal lives and as community of faith. How do we know if we are speaking the language of God’s love? St. Paul gives a vivid description of those who speak the language of the Spirit and those who don’t. Indecency, sexual irresponsibility, envy, drunkenness, bad temper – these are sure signs that a person has not learn the language of God. But when God’s Spirit lives in us, then what we are able to express comes from that core of our being – a language that is as beautiful as it is clear, because it comes from God: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, gentleness. Since the Spirit has taught us how to speak, let our lives speak the language of God, the language of love.

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Seventh Sunday of Easter – May 17, 2015

The first reading, from Acts, shows the Holy Spirit operating in the apostolic Church. Jesus has already appointed the Twelve as leaders of a visible, structured organism. The Twelve have authority to teach and sanctify by presiding at the sacraments and preaching. Since the earliest times of Christianity there has always been a certain suspicion of structures and hierarchy in the Church. Any group needs a structure, and the Lord provided us with the apostolic succession, the priesthood, the sacraments, to structure His own mystical body. He wants it to be a visible, tangible presence on earth.

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