Ignatian
Spirituality: Set the World Ablaze
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The Second Sunday of Lent
March 1, 2015
Genesis 22:1-2, 9-13, 15-18; Psalm 116; Romans 8:31-34; Mark 9:2-10
Scripture presents us with momentous turning points this
week. Abraham, though he has been faithful to God in the past, responds to God
by being willing to sacrifice his son Isaac, who God acknowledges, as “your
only one, the one whom you love, your beloved.” Abraham, because of his prior
trust in God, is willing once again to follow the Lord’s commandments, even
though it would sadden him greatly. In the Gospel, Jesus takes Peter, James,
and John up the mountain to be transfigured in their presence into a dazzling
white not seen like anything on earth. Jesus is the one declared beloved by the
voice from the cloud, the one whom God loves in a special way. It is Jesus, not
Isaac, who is destined to be sacrificed.
These are crucial turning points in the story of these
men. Abraham long practiced fidelity to God and he survived the crucial test of
giving up his only son. His other son, Ishmael, was born to a servant woman,
and not born of the free marriage to Sarah. Abraham’s “yes” validated God’s
trust in him, which bestowed the fatherly blessing upon his descendants. While
the fate of Jesus was becoming clearer, he took his inner circle of friends up
the holy mountain where he Moses and Elijah appeared alongside him. God
revealed Jesus to be more special than the lawgiver and the prophets. Jesus is
identified the one whose faithfulness will lead to salvation. He tells his
friends that he will rise from the dead.
Abraham’s turning point allowed the blessing of God to
transfer from himself to his son and his descendants. In other words, his
fidelity was no longer a personal response, but one that affected everyone who
followed. Through Isaac and Israel, God’s promises continued. After the
Transfiguration of Jesus, his mission changed drastically. His eyes looked
firmly forward to Jerusalem, the destination of his journey where the great
prophet would be rejected, reviled, and killed. His mission became clear. He
was truly God’s beloved, the one who would be sacrificed as the extreme test of
fidelity.
In the Spiritual Exercises of
Ignatius of Loyola, a retreatant’s turning point follows a period of fidelity
where Jesus personally asks for this faithfulness to increase. After being with
Jesus, watching him, listening to him, learning from him, Jesus, as the eternal
king, asks a person, “Will you come with me and imitate me as I make my way to
the cross? Just be with me, and feel with me, as I endure the final events of
my day.” Typically, a retreatant resists because of the pain he or she will
experience, but the only possible answer is “yes.” This is the turning point,
when the heart, the mind, and the will are united by the imagination and one’s
whole being says “yes” to Jesus. This is the magis, the more. Our lives are no longer are own because we live
for a higher purpose.
Do you have a moment in your
personal history that you consider a turning point in faith? We assent to God
in small ways that strengthen our commitment, but is there a time when you felt
your resolve to God become unmistakable so that a new path opened up for you?
It involves giving a more thoughtful, deeper response to Christ that comes from
knowing that he is your beloved as well. Your love for him reflects his
affectionate care for you based on a whole lifetime of memories. It is a time
when silence takes root together because you have stood by each other. Nothing
more needs to be proven; you are in this together.
Lent is a time to tell ourselves
again our stories of faith and to see how the friendship with Christ has
developed. Let Christ remind you of those times that are significant to him.
Let him choose you once again and call you his Beloved, the one whom he loves.
We need these times of loving remembrance because this is the time of our magis, the more, because the Cross looms
ahead, however we go into it knowing that our friendship has endured all trials
and tribulations. His death lives on in us. We can go forth – onward and upward
– secure in our faith, transfigured because Christ’s love forever changes us.
Themes for this Week’s Masses
First Reading:
Monday: (Daniel
9) We have rebelled against you God and sinned, but you have remained faithful
to us in the covenant. You, O Lord, have justice on your side.
Tuesday: (Isaiah
1) Wash yourselves clean and make justice your aim. Obey the commandments and
take care of your neighbor.
Wednesday: (Jeremiah
18) The people of Judah contrived against Jeremiah to destroy him by his own
words.
Thursday: (Jeremiah
17) Cursed is the one who trusts in human beings. More tortuous than all else
is the human heart. The Lord alone probes the mind and tests the heart.
Friday: (Genesis
37) Israel loved Joseph best of all, which created resentment among his
brothers, who later sold him into slavery for twenty pieces of silver.
Saturday: (Micah
7) God removes guilt and pardons sins and does not persist in anger.
Gospel:
Monday:
(Luke 6) Jesus said, “Be merciful,” and “Stop judging because you will be
judged by the way you judge.”
Tuesday: (Matthew
23) The scribes and Pharisees have taken their seat on the chair of Moses. Be
wary of someone’s teaching if they have no integrity between their words and
actions.
Wednesday: (Matthew
20) As Jesus went up to Jerusalem, he told his disciples, “Behold. The Son of
Man will be handed over to the chief priests, condemned to death, handed over
to Gentiles, an crucified, and will be raised on the third day.”
Thursday: (Luke
16) A rich man dressed in purple garments died shortly after Lazarus, a beggar.
In heaven, Lazarus was rewarded and the rich man was tormented in hell. He
appealed to God to spare his family, but was told that they would not listen to
Moses or to anyone who was raised from the dead.
Friday: (Matthew
21) Jesus told the parable of a vineyard owner, who entrusted the land to
servants, but these men seized the land and possessed it. They killed the
servants and the heir. When the owner returned, he cast the wretched men into a
tormented death.
Saturday: (Luke
15) Jesus is accused of welcoming sinners and eats with them. He then tells the
story of the prodigal one who was well received by his father upon his return.
The one who was lost has been found.
Saints
of the Week
March 1: Katherine Drexel (1858-1955), was from a wealthy Philadelphian
banking family and she and her two sisters inherited a great sum of money when
her parents died. She joined the Sisters of Mercy and wanted to found her own
order called the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament to work among the African and
Native Americans. Her inheritance funded schools and missions throughout the
South and on reservations. A heart attack in 1935 sent her into retirement.
March 7: Perpetua and Felicity (d. 203), were two catechumens arrest and
killed during a persecution in North Africa. Perpetua was a young noblewoman
who was killed alongside her husband, their young son, and their pregnant
slave, Felicity. They were baptized while under arrest and would not renounce
their faith. Felicity was excused from death because it was unlawful to kill a
pregnant woman, but she gave birth prematurely three days before the planned
execution. They were flogged, taunted by wild beasts, and then beheaded. They
appear in the First Eucharistic Prayer.
This Week in Jesuit History
·
Mar 1, 1549. At Gandia, the opening of a college
of the Society founded by St Francis Borgia.
·
Mar 2, 1606. The martyrdom in the Tower of
London of St Nicholas Owen, a brother nicknamed "Little John." For 26
years he constructed hiding places for priests in homes throughout England.
Despite severe torture he never revealed the location of these safe places.
·
Mar 3, 1595. Clement VIII raised Fr. Robert
Bellarmine to the Cardinalate, saying that the Church had not his equal in
learning.
·
Mar 4, 1873. At Rome, the government officials
presented themselves at the Professed House of the Gesu for the purpose of
appropriating the greater part of the building.
·
Mar 5, 1887. At Rome, the obsequies of Fr. Beckx
who died on the previous day. He was 91 years of age and had governed the
Society as General for 34 years. He is buried at San Lorenzo in Campo Verano.
·
Mar 6, 1643. Arnauld, the Jansenist, published
his famous tract against Frequent Communion. Fifteen French bishops gave it
their approval, whereas the Jesuit fathers at once exposed the dangers in it.
·
Mar 7, 1581. The Fifth General Congregation of
the Society bound the professors of the Society to adhere to the doctrine of St
Thomas Aquinas.
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