Ignatian
Spirituality: Set the World Ablaze
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Twenty-Fifth Sunday of Ordinary Time
September 21, 2014
Isaiah 55:6-9; Psalm
145; Philippians 1:20-24, 27; Matthew 20:1-16
Everyday when
we rise, we have to consider the first and the last things, the goal and
purpose of our lives, because it puts all other activities of the day into
perspective. It quickly resolves the conflict that is presented in today’s Gospel
and it gives us a bird’s eye wisdom about life. It helps us to frame our day
with this question, “Do my choices and actions reveal to others that I am
growing in love and kindness?”
Isaiah says,
“Seek the Lord while he may be found; call him while he is near.” This
searching with the sure expectation of discovering is what matters most. When
we recognize the Lord’s presence, we follow the inspiration of the Psalmist,
“Every day I will bless you and I will praise your name forever.” Gratitude is
a certain sign of God’s closeness. Then we find we become like Paul when he tenderly
writes, “I long to be with Christ.” “Christ will be magnified in my body,
whether by life or by death. For to me life is Christ.” Of all the evangelists,
Paul speaks most affectionately of his desire to be with his friend and Lord,
revealing a most important aspect of his character and worldview.
The Gospel
presents us with a dilemma of fairness that we all face. We always aspire to be
fair because those are high-minded principles taught to us since our youth and
we mediate legal conflicts judiciously – showing great concerns for all parties,
yet very little in life is fair. As you well know, Jesus teaches this parable
to his fellow Jews in an attempt to explain that sinners, prostitutes, tax
collectors, and foreigners have an essential place in God’s kingdom. Is it fair
to a law-abiding Jew who has kept all the laws since youth? No. This is not the
crucial factor. God’s generosity is the factor by which this conflict is
adjudicated. Inclusive hospitality supersedes fairness and is more virtuous. This
might not sit well with a people who consider themselves “God’s chosen ones,”
but God deeply yearns for all people regardless of any characteristic or prior
actions.
Think of the
many ways we feel affronted by unfairness, whether it is a colleague who receives
a higher salary for lesser abilities, or the reckless son receives more than he
deserves in a will, or a carefree neighbor that takes an easy way out of a
financial situation and seemingly gets rewarded. We harbor resentments from
these situations and we cannot forget them easily because we strive diligently
for justice and equality and the world is not fair. Often, unfair decisions do
not favor us and that ‘frosts our cupcakes.’
Sinners and
prostitutes were given a chance to begin their lives again. The Jews grumbled,
but other souls were saved because of God’s generosity. Unfair decisions to us
have a very positive effect upon the person who benefits from the ruling. We
can never know how the person will evolve as they sit in gratitude of the ruling.
This is mystery. The entire point of the Gospel is to give us eternal life.
Let us move
past the point of seeking fairness, but turn the question to, “Am I getting
what I need?” Each day gives us a series of intrusions like the bully who cuts
the cash register line or we feel threatened by the speeding, impatient driver.
Choose justice if you need to, but that is not the solution. You also can
choose tolerance, compassion, or kindness because we always have choices. Do
not let yourself be a passive doormat, but you can let someone’s rude behavior
go because what matters is our pursuit of God’s abiding presence. We possess
what others want. If our actions are loving, welcoming, kind, and forgiving,
then Christ is being magnified in our souls.
Daily life has
many demands on our time and not all of us can rise each morning and take half
an hour to pray because kids have to get to school, diapers need changing,
mouths need to be fed, or a project has to be finished. Daily routines are
exhausting and permit little time for self-care. Simply be gentle to yourself.
We are not always going to act as we like, but let us give ourselves credit for
conducting ourselves worthy of the Gospel more than we do. We can worry less
about the petty squabbles around us because we will get what we need, in light
of the world’s unfairness. We are bigger people than that and we know God is
generous to a fault. It is up to us to choose to live in God’s generosity where
we will understand little, but we will know God cares for us bring new vitality
to our actions. Living gratefully helps Christ be magnified in our souls. We will
be kinder, more gracious, and filled with a more comprehensive wisdom because
we will understand what matters most. You will find God more often than you
seek.
Themes for this
Week’s Masses
First Reading:
Monday: (Proverbs
3) Refuse no one the good on which he has a claim. Plot no evil against your
neighbor, against one who lives at peace with you. Envy not the lawless man and
choose none of his ways.
Tuesday: (Proverbs
21) To do what is right and just is more acceptable to the Lord. The soul of
the wicked man desires evil; the just man appraises the house of the wicked.
Wednesday: (Proverbs
30) Every word of God is tested. Put falsehood and lying behind me and provide
me only with the food I need.
Thursday: (Ecclesiastes
1) Vanity of vanities. What does it profit a man from his labors at which he
toils under the sun? Nothing is new under the sun.
Friday: (Ecclesiastes
3) There is an appointed time for every. What advantage has the worker from his
toil? The Lord has made everything appropriate to its time and has put the
timeless into their hearts.
Saturday: (Ecclesiastes
11) Rejoice, O young one, while you are young and let your heart be glad in the
days of your youth. Follow the ways of your heart, the vision of your eyes.
Remember your Creator.
Gospel:
Monday:
(Luke 8) No one who lights a lamp conceals it with a vessel or sets it under a
bed; rather he places it on a lampstand so that those who enter may see the
light.
Tuesday: The
mother of Jesus and his brothers came to him but were unable to join him
because of the crowds. Jesus replies, “My mother and my brothers are those who
hear the word of God and act on it.”
Wednesday: (Luke
9) Jesus summoned the Twelve and gave them power and authority over all demons
and to cure diseases, and he sent them to proclaim the Kingdom of God and to
heal the sick.
Thursday: Herod
the tetrarch heard about all that was happening. He asked, “Who then is this
about whom I hear such things?” And he kept trying to see him.
Friday: When
Jesus was praying in solitude and the disciples were with him, he asked, “Who
do the crowds say that I am?” Then he said to them, “But who do you say that I
am?” Peter said in reply, “The Christ of God.”
Saturday: While they were all amazed at his every deed,
Jesus said to his disciples, “Pay attention to what I am telling you. The Son
of Man is to be handed over to men.” But they did not understand this saying.
Saints of the Week
September
21: Matthew, evangelist and Apostle (first century), may be two different people, but we have not historical data on either
man. Since Matthew relies heavily upon Mark’s Gospel, it is unlikely that the
evangelist is one of the Twelve Apostles. The Apostle appears in a list of the
Twelve and in Matthew’s Gospel he is called a tax collector. The Evangelist is
writing to Jewish-Christians who are urged to embrace their Jewish heritage and
to participate in their mission to the Gentiles. To Matthew, Jesus is the
fulfillment of the hopes of Jews and the inaugurator of a new way to relate to
God.
September
22: Tomas Sitjar, S.J. and the martyrs of Valencia (1866-1936), were killed in the Spanish Civil War just a week after the war broke out.
Sitjar was the Rector of Gandia and was formerly the novice director and
metaphysics professor. The Jesuit Order was suppressed at the beginning of the
war, which sent the men to disperse into apartments, but since the community
knew them, they were sought out, imprisoned, and later executed because of
their belief in God.
September 23: Pio of Pietrelcina, priest (1887-1968)
was affectionately named Padre Pio and was a Capuchin priest who received the
stigmata (wounds of Christ) just as Francis of Assisi did. He founded a
hospital and became the spiritual advisor to many at a monastery at San
Giovanni Rotondo.
September 26: Cosmas and Damian, martyrs (d. 287), were
twins who became doctors. They were noted because they never charged anyone a
medical fee. They died in the Diocletian persecution. Great miracles have been
attributed to them and the Emperor Justinian is claimed to be healed through
their intercession.
September 27: Vincent de Paul, priest (1581-1660), was
a French peasant who selected to be chaplain at the Queen's household after his
ordination. He provided food and clothing to the poor, including prostitutes,
the sick, disabled, and homeless. He founded the Congregation of Missions
(Vincentians) to preach and train clergy and he co-founded the Daughters of
Charity with Louise de Marillac.
This Week in Jesuit History
·
Sep 21, 1557. At Salamanca, Melchior Cano wrote
to Charles V's confessor, accusing the Jesuits of being heretics in disguise.
·
Sep 22, 1774. The death of Pope Clement XIV,
worn out with suffering and grief because of the suppression of the Society.
False stories had been circulated that he was poisoned by the Jesuits.
·
Sep 23, 1869. Woodstock College of the Sacred
Heart opened. With 17 priests, 44 scholastics, and 16 brothers it was the
largest Jesuit community in the United States at the time.
·
Sep 24, 1566. The first Jesuits entered the
continental United States at Florida. Pedro Martinez and others, while
attempting to land, were driven back by the natives, and forced to make for the
island of Tatacuran. He was killed there three weeks later.
·
Sep 25, 1617. The death of Francisco Suarez. He
wrote 24 volumes on philosophy and theology. As a novice he was found to be
very dull, but one of his directors suggested that he ask our Lady's help. He
subsequently became a person of prodigious talent.
·
Sep 26, 1605. At Rome, Pope Paul V orally
declared St Aloysius to be one of the "Blessed." The official brief
appeared on October 19.
Sep 27, 1540.
Pope Paul III signed the Bull, Regimini Militantis Ecclesiae, which established
the Society of Jesus.
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