Ignatian
Spirituality: Set the World Ablaze
http://predmore.blogspot.com
Fourth Sunday of Advent
December 21, 2014
2 Samuel 7:1-5, 8-12, 14, 16; Psalm 24; Romans 16:25-27; Luke 1:26-38
God’s promise
to dwell within each of us in conveyed in these Advent stories. This God who so
often seems inaccessible turns around our plans and assures us of God’s
intention to remain faithful to us. This is surprisingly clear in 2nd
Samuel when David gets a brilliant insight. Since he is living in a house of
cedar and the Lord is much more important than he, David decides to build a
finer dwelling for the Ark of the Covenant than to keep him under a flimsy
tent. Sometimes we give gifts to others that are filled with goodwill but are
not what the giver wants to receive. In this instance, God, through the prophet
Nathan, tells David something to this effect, “I am the one who gives gifts. I
do not want what you plan to give me. I have shepherded you and cared for you
when you could not notice. I will fix a place for my people and I will
establish my house in your kingdom. It shall endure forever before me. My reign
shall endure within your house.”
In the Gospel,
God once again tells humanity that it is God’s wish to dwell with them. He
chooses a young woman from Palestine to receive this gift of new life, a virgin
who will become the savior’s mother. God chose the most intimate way of being a
part of us – to become fully one of us. God’s life will remain embedded with
humanity until the end of time. God chooses us and we are dumbfounded when we
look around at each other and ask why.
In our daily
prayer, we often look for God and we sit and wait and hope for a clear response.
These two Advent sequences flip things around for David and Mary. Perhaps we
have to toss things around in our prayer so that instead of directing our
attention at God, we simply notice God directing attention at us. This shift in
direction is crucial. When we let this happen, we let prayer be accomplished
along God’s initiative. It is not that we search for God, it is that God has
already found us and is seeking us. We have to notice that God is gazing upon
us the way we marvel at the twinkling lights of a Christmas tree. God’s
dwelling is already within us; we do not have to look on the outside anymore.
Some of us get
uncomfortable when someone stares at us because we know we are desired in some
way. What if we just showed up to prayer and realized God’s stare is riveted
upon us because God warmly desires to be with us. We do not have to do anything
but to let God come closer – something we both want. Even God’s most intense
gaze is enough for us to handle because God’s parental care is communicated so
thoroughly that we just receive what God extends to us.
Sometimes we do
not want to show up to pray because events as not going so well. Though we try
to be a loving person who follows the road of discipleship, we are left feeling
beaten down by the tactics of others who tell us there’s something wrong with
us. Others can make us feel miserable and we begin to diminish our self worth.
These are the times when we avoid prayer at all costs because we figure God might
not like our ways either, but these are especially the times that we have to
sit before God in prayer – just to have God look upon us and heal us because of
the many ways others have sinned against us and beaten us down. Allow God to be
a loving parent to that part of you that is raw and unhealed and needs a
blessing. Know that there is nothing wrong with you and that God just wants to
bless you with love and grace. The gaze is gentle and tender and is a balm for
all the world’s ills. God wants you to become strengthened by God’s compassion
so that you may bring the gift of yourself to others – with warts and freckles,
dimples and birthmarks. God finds it beautiful. We need to discover the beauty
God sees within us.
In Advent, we
find ourselves being blessed by God, similarly to the way Mary was. Within her
grew the Christ-child, who would be given to others as a gift. Let the rest of
this Advent be about receiving God’s breathtaking stare of every single graced
moment of your day. Allow God to delight in you as you gracefully respond to
God’s watchful eyes that glimmer and sparkle brighter than those Christmas tree
lights. Know that you entrance God with you goodness, even in your struggles. God
had promised to make his house within yours. God promised us Emmanuel – that
God is with us. Now it is time to let him grow so he may delivered for the
world’s salvation.
Themes for this Week’s Masses
First Reading:
Monday: (1
Samuel 1) Hannah offered Samuel to the Lord to grow in obedience to the faith.
Tuesday: (Malachi
3) I send my messenger before me to prepare the way and suddenly the Lord will
appear. I will send you Elijah the prophet.
Wednesday: (2
Samuel 7) When David settled into his place, he realized the Lord was residing
in a flimsy tent. David wanted to build a house for the Lord, but the Lord
promised that he would reside within the House of David.
Thursday: (Isaiah
62) The Lord proclaims, “Your savior comes, O daughter Zion.” He shall be
called holy and the Lord will frequent the holy city.
Friday: (Acts
6) His tormentors, before Saul, kill Stephen, filled with grace. As they stoned
him, he called out, “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.”
Saturday: (1
John 1) What we have heard from the beginning concerns the Word of Life – for
life was made visible, life with the Father. We now have fellowship with the
Father and with his Son, Jesus Christ.
Gospel:
Monday:
(Luke 1) Mary sings her song of gladness to Elizabeth as the two women show
gratitude for the remarkable life God has given them to carry.
Tuesday: (Luke
1) Elizabeth gave birth to her son and on the 8th day when they were
to circumcise and name him, she said, “He will be called John.” Zechariah
confirmed it and his mute tongue was loosed again.
Wednesday: (Luke
1) Zechariah, regaining his speech, sings his Benedictus in honor of his son,
John.
Thursday: (Luke
2) When the angels left, the shepherds came to see the newborn infant. They knew
the message made known to them by the angel was true. Their savior was born.
Friday: (Matthew
10) Beware of men for they will hand you over to courts and will scourge you.
You will be led to places you do not want to go, but my spirit will teach you
what to say.
Saturday: (John
20) On the 1st day of the week, Mary Magdalene ran to Simon Peter to
tell him, “They have taken the Lord away and we do not know where they put him.”
Saints of the Week
December 21 - O radiant Dawn,
splendor of eternal light, sun of justice: come and shine on those who dwell in
darkness and in the shadow of death.
December
21: Peter Canisius, S.J., priest and
religious (1521-1597), was sent to Germany, Austria, Bohemia, Moravia, and
Switzerland during the time of the Protestant Reformation to reinvigorate the
Catholic faith. He directed many through the Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius.
He is a doctor of the church for his work in bringing many people back to the
faith.
December 22 - O King of all
nations and keystone of the church: come and save us, whom you formed from the
dust.
December 23 - O Emmanuel, our
king and giver of the Law: come to save us, Lord our God.
December 26: Stephen, the first Martyr (d. 35), was
one of the seven original deacons chose to minister to the Greek-speaking
Christians. The Jews accused him of blasphemy. Though he was eloquent in his
defense, Saul of Tarsus condoned his death sentence.
December 27: John, Apostle and Evangelist (d. 100),
was the brother of James and one of the three disciples to be in the inner
circle. He left fishing to follow Jesus and was with him at the major events:
the transfiguration, raising of Jairus' daughter, and the agony in the garden.
He is also thought to be the author of the fourth gospel, three letters, and
the Book of Revelation.
This Week in Jesuit History
·
Dec 21, 1577. In Rome, Fr. Juan de Polanco,
secretary to the Society and very dear to Ignatius, died.
·
Dec 22, 1649. At Cork, Fr. David Glawey, a
missionary in the Inner and Lower Hebrides, Islay, Oronsay, Colonsay, and
Arran, died.
·
Dec 23, 1549. Francis Xavier was appointed
provincial of the newly-erected Indian Province.
·
Dec 24, 1587. Fr. Claude Matthe died at Ancona.
He was a Frenchman of humble birth, highly esteemed by King Henry III and the
Duke of Guise. He foretold that Fr. Acquaviva would be General and hold that
office for a long period.
·
Dec 25, 1545. Isabel Roser pronounced her vows
as a Jesuit together with Lucrezia di Brandine and Francisca Cruyllas in the
presence of Ignatius at the church of Sta. Maria della Strada in Rome.
·
Dec 26, 1978. The assassination of Gerhard
Pieper, a librarian, who was shot to death in Zimbabwe.
·
Dec 27, 1618. Henry Morse entered the English
College at Rome.
This is such a healing homily. I am reading it just prior to my time of meditation and I will keep this thought in my heart that God is a healing balm as God gazes upon me in my time of meditation. Thank you for sharing these thoughts.
ReplyDeleteI hope you were able to experience God's all-embracing wonder of you.
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