Ignatian
Spirituality: Set the World Ablaze
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The Third Sunday of Lent
March 8, 2015
Exodus 20:1-17; Psalm 19; 1 Corinthians 1:22-25; John 2:13-25
Everyone remembers the Ten Commandments, but it is
important for us to call to mind the preceding event – that God called us out
of slavery and offers us freedom. The whole purpose of the laws is our
liberation and we follow them in response to God’s mercy. Exodus provides us
with an account of Moses giving the laws to the people in exile. Following them
means life for the community while disobeying them brings death and
diminishment. When Jesus overturns the Temple tables, it is because the
Passover is near. Jesus reacts strongly because people are missing the point
that we need to be celebrating God’s abiding love instead of commercializing
our devotional practices. Since God gives freely, we must respond to God as
freely as we are able. We respond in charity to God by following the laws that
govern the right relationship between us, God, and our neighbor.
It is curious for us to see these
readings paired together because the Exodus reading tells us to follow the law,
while Jesus disrupts the holiest of sites and striking at the heart of the
Jewish faith. This event is the one that ultimately leads to his death in the
Synoptic Gospels because Jesus upsets the religious priests and community
elders. His kingd0m-centered theology clashes violently with the
Temple-centered theology. We are left wondering how to balance respect for the law
with the proper actions to take when unjust laws are in place.
In this case, the identity of the
giver of the law is important. God, out of care for the people, gives sensible
laws to follow in response to the covenant, but we have a practice of creating
laws that serve selfish interests of the few and this is what we see in the
Gospel passage. Merchants, the Temple authorities, and civic officials were
gaining a financial advantage that imposed burdens on the people’s free
worship. If a law creates inequities and imposes hardships on others, then it
is not a law at all and needs to be dismantled and disregarded. The passion of
Jesus is exciting because it gives us the hope that we can create a more just,
more harmonious world where God lays low the mighty and lifts up those who have
been mercilessly beaten down. We know God does not want injustices and yet God
realizes we are inclined to profit well by cleverly exploiting others.
Social sin buried deep within our
institutions are nearly impossible to change, and yet, we must try. We have to
choose wisely which battles to fight to bring about God’s justice and we have
to concentrate on those narrow goals because we know others are working on
other goals in a separate way, but with similar objectives. We have to do this
with integrity as Jesus did because we are the example for others. So many
people have started out doing the right things for society, but they get
entrapped in a system that makes them choose the lesser evils – choices they
would rather not have to make. We have to find a way to always choose the good.
The signs Jesus did publicly made many believe in him. We have to always be
attentive to our actions because we want those who see them to be led to
Christ. If love is the basis of our laws and customs and if our love in action
builds up and encourages others, many will be brought to Christ through us.
It is easy to say, “Do good and
avoid evil,” but life is complex. We are not even aware of the ways we become
entrapped in evil structures until it is too late. Let us take this Lent as an
opportunity to follow the law as best we can. It is for our own good. Commit to
following the law and do not justify your actions through rationalizations. Do
your own part well. Strive always to do the good. I am convinced that if we all
try a little harder to make something better, that goodwill will increase
exponentially. When goodness meets more goodness, it bubbles over into
something mysterious that has a beautiful life of its own.
We know that good will win out,
so let’s try to improve upon the good at every chance, with the zeal that Jesus
has for the faith as he corrects the Temple authorities. We will meet
opposition, and sometimes it will be fierce, but when we look around, we have
other Jesus-inspired, goodwill-inspired people who are working towards the same
goal. We have to recognize each other, build up one another, and take their
hands in solidarity. Life gets better when we choose goodness. Life gets better
when we make our world reflect God’s justice. Persevere. We need you always to
strive because your striving is a natural response to God’s solidarity with
you. God wants the very best for you and we are missioned to bring this goodness
to others. God chooses for us – life, goodness, and freedom.
Themes for this Week’s Masses
First Reading:
Monday: (2
Kings 5) Naaman, the king of Aram, contracted leprosy. A captured girl wanted
him to present himself to the prophet in Samaria. Naaman was instructed to wash
seven times in the Jordan River and his flesh became again like the flesh of a
little child.
Tuesday: (Daniel
3) Azariah asked for the Lord’s deliverance. He asked that the Lord deal with
them in kindness and with great mercy.
Wednesday: (Deuteronomy
4) Moses spoke to the people asking them to hear and heed the statutes and
decrees he received from the Lord. Do not forget the things the Lord has done.
Thursday: (Jeremiah
7) They walked in the hardness of their evil hearts and turned their backs, not
their faces, to me.
Friday: (Hosea
14) Return to God, who forgives all iniquity. The Lord will heal their
defection and love them freely for his wrath is turned away from them.
Saturday: (Hosea
6) Come, let us return to the Lord. It is love that I desire, not sacrificed,
and knowledge of God rather than burnt offerings.
Gospel:
Monday:
(Luke 4) Jesus reminded people that a prophet is without honor in his own land
and he called the mind the story of Naaman, the foreigner from Syria, who was
cured.
Tuesday: (Matthew
18) Peter asked Jesus about forgiveness. He said to forgiven seventy-seven time
because unless each person forgives from the heart, he will not be forgiven.
Wednesday: (Matthew
5) Jesus did not come to abolish the law but to fulfill it. Each commandment is
to be observed; the one who does it will be the greatest in the Kingdom.
Thursday: (Luke
11) Jesus drove out a demon that was mute and was then accused of being in
league with Beelzebul. Jesus explained to them how that does not make much
sense.
Friday: (Mark
12) A scribe asked Jesus to declare which is the first commandment. Love the
God with you whole soul and your neighbor like yourself. The scribe was well
pleased.
Saturday: (Luke
18) Jesus told a parable about prayer to those who were convinced of their own
righteousness and despised everyone else. The one who is humble is favored by
God.
Saints
of the Week
March 8: John of God (1495-1550), was a
Portuguese soldier of fortune who was brought to Spain as a child. He was a
slave master, shepherd, crusader, bodyguard and peddler. As he realized that he
frittered away his life, he sought counsel from John of Avila. He then
dedicated his life to care for the sick and the poor. He formed the Order of
Brothers Hospitallers and is the patron saint of hospitals and the sick.
This Week in Jesuit History
·
Mar 8, 1773. At Centi, in the diocese of
Bologna, Cardinal Malvezzi paid a surprise visit to the Jesuit house, demanding
to inspect their accounting books.
·
Mar 9, 1764. In France, all Jesuits who refused
to abjure the Society were ordered by Parliament to leave the realm within a
month. Out of 4,000 members only five priests, two scholastics, and eight
brothers took the required oath; the others were driven into exile.
·
Mar 10, 1615. The martyrdom in Glasgow,
Scotland, of St John Ogilvie.
·
Mar 11, 1848. In Naples, Italy, during the 1848
revolution, 114 Jesuits, after much suffering, were put into carts and driven
ignominiously out of the city and the kingdom.
·
Mar 12, 1622. Pope Gregory XV canonized Sts
Ignatius, Francis Xavier, Teresa of Avila, and Philip Neri.
·
Mar 13, 1568. John Segura and five companions
set sail from Spain for Florida, a fertile field of martyrs. (Nine Jesuits were
killed there between 1566 and 1571.)
·
Mar 14, 1535. Ignatius received his degree from
the University of Paris.
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