Ignatian
Spirituality: Set the World Ablaze
predmore.blogspot.com
Twenty-Second Sunday of Ordinary Time
August 30, 2015
Deuteronomy 4:1-2, 6-8; Psalm 15; James 1:17-18, 21-22, 27; Mark 7:1-8,
14-15, 21-23
Ah, our fickle relationship with the
law. The Israelites bent and challenged the laws just as we do. We are proud
when we cleverly manipulate the law to our advantage and we get burned up when
the law catches up with us, but when it comes to holding someone else to the
law, we stringently hold fast and want justice metered out to the offender. We
have a problem. We do not want the laws to apply to us, but we want them held
to the highest standards against others. When we lord it over others, we are
acting as counter-signs against our faith. We do not see the laws as something
positive, but an encroaching aspect of our lives that must perpetually be
challenged, yet these laws provide us with protection, safety, personal space,
positive attitudes, and they contribute greatly to the common good. Laws are
designed to contribute to the proper functioning and flow of society, while
agitating the law slows down the slow forward movement of community standards.
Moses reminds us that the commandments are given to us so that we have
life-giving freedom because they will make the Israelites into a great nation.
Laws without charity are not laws at
all, and charity is our authentic Christian virtue. The very antithesis of
charity is bitter zeal, which we see in religious fundamentalism. Someone who
holds tightly to a law acts like the Pharisees that Jesus holds up for
scrutiny. They are people who honor God with their lips, but their hearts are
far away from charity. People who worship documents without integrating mercy
and compassion perpetuate bitter zeal. We need to lead them to the law of
charity.
The Pope’s visit to the U.S. next
month may pit those who cling in comfort to highly idealistic church teachings against
those who admire the Pope’s call for greater mercy and compassion. For years,
conservatives held court denouncing those who asked for a softening of tone and
attitudes to officious church rulings. They were known as culture warriors
because they stood against the values of the world and sought to change them,
and their tone and style disrespected many. It is not a way to build a healthy
church. Today, a new tone of tolerance, understanding, and acceptance is
creeping into the church’s style and the vast majority of people are responding
in gratitude. Documents without charity lead to bitter zeal. Pope Francis is
setting right what has long been broken. Pope Francis is returning us to the
teachings of Jesus.
Jesus changed attitudes of many
hard-hearted people. He showed everyone that the world was good, but he pointed
out that the things that come out from within are what defile. In other words,
people are good; the world is good; society is good. We do not have to always stand
against it and condemn it. We have to uphold what is good and build a more
just, compassionate, and merciful society. It will take a while to change the
church from its place of harshly judging others to become one that welcomes the
stranger and cares for each other. It will become a church that his humble.
We have to make sure our souls and
our churches are devoid of evil attitudes because they defile from the inside
out. Church is often a place where people with poor boundaries are welcomed and
their behaviors accepted. We cannot let this be. When someone exhibits an
unholy attitude and tone, we must help them soften their bitter zeal as we
approach this Jubilee Year of Mercy. The business at work here is the salvation
of everyone’s souls, not just someone who agrees with your theology. We are
responsible for each other’s souls, and it begins with our attitudes.
Reforming our attitudes to
include humility is a start. Teach people to honor positive attitudes that work
to build a cohesive, harmonious community. Our generosity of heart will lead
others to salvation. We are not in a game to win a theological position; we are
in the life and death ministry of saving souls. Make it a mantra to start the
day: My ministry is to save a soul today. It will only come about if our attitudes
conform to that of Christ and the saints.
Themes for this Week’s Masses
First
Reading:
·
Monday: (1 Thessalonians 4) We believe that Jesus
died and rose, so too will God, through Jesus, bring with him those who have
fallen asleep.
·
Tuesday: (1 Thessalonians 5) Disaster comes upon
the complacent, but not for you who are not in darkness. Let us stay alert and
sober.
·
Wednesday: (Colossians 1) We always give thanks to
you for your love of Jesus Christ and for the love that you have for all the
holy ones because of the hope reserved for you in heaven.
·
Thursday: (Colossians 1) We do not cease praying
for you and asking that you be filled with the knowledge of God’s will through
all spiritual wisdom and understanding.
·
Friday (Colossians 1) Christ Jesus is the image of
the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation. He is the beginning, the
firstborn from the dead, that is all things he might be preeminent.
·
Saturday (Colossians 1) You were once alienated and
hostile in mind because of evil deeds; God has now reconciled you in the
fleshly Body of Christ through his death, to present you holy, without blemish,
and irreproachable before him.
Gospel:
·
Monday: (Luke 4) Jesus came to Nazareth and
attended synagogue on the Sabbath. He read from the scroll of Isaiah and when
finished declared, “This reading has been fulfilled in your hearing.” No
prophet receives honor in his hometown.
·
Tuesday: (Luke 4) Jesus came Capernaum in Galilee
and taught on the Sabbath with authority. A man’s unclean spirit was silenced
and thrown out of him. The demon recognized Jesus as the Holy One of God.
·
Wednesday (Luke 4) Jesus cured Simon’s mother-in-law
and at sunset, all who had people with various diseases brought them to him to
be curried. At daybreak, everyone was looking for him, but he said he had to
leave. “To the other towns also I must proclaim the good news of God’s
kingdom.”
·
Thursday (Luke 5) At Lake Gennesaret, Jesus saw two
boats with fishermen washing their nets. He signaled to Simon, who was
frustrated with the last night’s catch. Jesus told him to put out his net and
Simon caught so many that the boats were in danger of sinking. Simon recognizes
his sinful nature and asks Jesus to depart. He doesn’t.
·
Friday (Luke 5) The scribes and Pharisees asked why
his disciples do not fast while John’s disciples do. One day they will, but now
they do not have to while the groom is with them.
·
Saturday (Luke 6) Jesus ate the heads of grain in a
field on the Sabbath and some Pharisees protested. Jesus recalled David’s
precedent and declared that the Son of Man is lord of the Sabbath.
Saints of the Week
September 3: Gregory the Great (540-604) was the
chief magistrate in Rome and resigned to become a monk. He was the papal
ambassador to Constantinople, abbot, and pope. His charity and fair justice won
the hearts of many. He protected Jews and synthesized Christian wisdom. He
described the duties of bishops and promoted beautiful liturgies that often
incorporated chants the bear his name.
This Week in Jesuit History
·
Aug. 30, 1556: On the banks of the St. Lawrence
River, Fr. Leonard Garreau, a young missionary, was mortally wounded by the
Iroquois.
· Aug.
31, 1581: In St. John's Chapel within the Tower of London, a religious
discussion took place between St. Edmund Campion, suffering from recent
torture, and some Protestant ministers.
·
Sep 1, 1907. The Buffalo Mission was dissolved
and its members were sent to the New York and Missouri Provinces and the
California Mission.
·
Sep 2, 1792. In Paris, ten ex-Jesuits were
massacred for refusing to take the Constitutional oath. Also in Paris seven
other fathers were put to death by the Republicans, among them Frs. Peter and
Robert Guerin du Rocher.
·
Sep 3, 1566. Queen Elizabeth visited Oxford and
heard the 26-year-old Edmund Campion speak. He was to meet her again as a
prisoner, brought to hear her offer of honors or death.
·
Sep 4, 1760. At Para, Brazil, 150 men of the
Society were shipped as prisoners, reaching Lisbon on December 2. They were at
once exiled to Italy and landed at Civita Vecchia on January 17, 1761.
·
Sep 5, 1758. The French Parliament issued a
decree condemning Fr. Busembaum's Medulla
Theologiae Moralis.
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