Ignatian
Spirituality: Set the World Ablaze
predmore.blogspot.com
Twenty-Fourth Sunday of Ordinary Time
September 13, 2015
Isaiah 50:5-9; Psalm 116; James 2:14-18; Mark 8:27-35
Being faithful to God is not easy
and brings about unwanted suffering, but we can endure it because of the
charity we hold in our hearts. Isaiah gives us the image of the Suffering
Servant whose soul is turned towards God, but endures insults and beatings from
all sides. This servant acted in kindness, with compassion, was meek and
gentle. We are supposed to mirror these qualities from God, but our world does
not want us to do it. A kind person is considered weak. Bullies smell this and
they seek dominance. Fortunately, we understand that bullying needs to be
stopped because God does not act through force or violence. At most times,
whenever someone raises his or her voice or lifts a hand in threat, that person
acts like a bully.
Be kind anyways. Be compassionate
and merciful – as Pope Francis teaches us. Kindness, though at first rejected
and seldom understood, will become your strength. Besides, we are kind because
God loves us, and then we love God back, and if we love God, then we have to
love our friends and family – even those who annoy us with their dysfunction.
We have to remember that they love us – even in our dysfunction. Kindness and
mercy change the hearts and minds of others and builds the type of society in
which we want to be.
I tell people to lie all the time.
Whenever someone is having relationship problems, I suggest that when they next
see the person, they say something like, “I missed you. I’m glad to see you
again.” It takes the edge off the tension and conveys to the person that you
still fundamentally care for him or her, but that you are simply going through
trying times. Saying that little piece of fiction not only assures them of
their place with you, it changes you into a move loving person. The tensions
soften a bit so that your humanity, not your disagreements, can resolve the
dispute.
I recently sat with a monk at a
cloistered monastery while he spoke of a friendship he wanted to end because it
had become out of control. A benefactor provided many gifts and lots of
delicious food out of generosity and kindness. In the beginning, he knew he
needed to restrict the free-flow of gifts because they change the nature of the
friendship, but he wanted to be hospitable and welcoming. Gifts and food are
tricky business in relationships. From the start, we are to be clear about our
rules for giving and receiving them. Over time, the benefactor and the monk
were trapped because neither could speak about what they needed and the
relationship became unnecessarily complicated. Relational boundaries were all
bolloxed up and the monk wanted simply to tell the person to go away.
I asked the monk, “Why do you think
this benefactor keeps coming to you?” He replied, “Because this person likes
me.” I asked, “Could it be that this person seeks you out as a man of God and
wants news of salvation from you?” I continued, “Your job in this world is to
save souls and point them to Jesus Christ, who wants to save them. Please do
not end the relationship because you are telling the person Christ is no longer
interested. Instead, manage the relationship with mercy and integrity and helps
save this person’s soul. It will take hard work and lots of time, but it is the
work we Christians are to do.” The monk agreed. Sometimes we need to keep the
larger goal in mind while we are immersed in the chaos of daily life.
Jesus realizes this when he tells
Peter and his disciples that suffering comes to anyone who follows him and
takes up his cross. Most people will do anything to avoid suffering, but we
calmly enter into our suffering because we answer the most important question
Jesus asks us: Who do you say that I am? We do not answer with our intellect,
but we simply respond to a place deep in our hearts. You are my God. You are
the Christ. You are the one who makes sense of this world and its chaos. Every
day you grow more important to me. I will gladly stay with you, and we will
walk this journey together.
Themes for this Week’s Masses
First
Reading:
·
Monday: (Numbers 21) The Lord sent seraph serpents
to the wandering Jews, which bit them so that many died. The impatient people grumbled
about their disgusting food. Moses mounted a seraph on a pole and lifted it up
for them to gaze upon.
·
Tuesday: (1 Timothy 3) Bishops must be
irreproachable, temperate, self-controlled, hospitable, gentle, and not a lover
of money. Deacons must be dignified, free from addictions, not greedy, and
holding fast to the mystery of the faith.
·
Wednesday: (1 Timothy 3) Paul will visit soon, and
he tells them how to behave as the church of the living God, the pillar and
foundation of truth.
·
Thursday: (1 Timothy 4) Set an example in speech,
conduct, love, faith, and purity. Do not neglect the gift you have. Read and teach.
·
Friday (1 Timothy 6) Avoid erroneous teachings
because from these come envy, rivalry, insults, suspicions, and mutual
friction. Instead, pursue righteousness, devotion, faith, love, patience, and
gentleness.
·
Saturday (1 Timothy 6) I charge you before God to
keep the commandment without stain. The Lord Jesus, who is without stain, will
reward you with eternal power.
Gospel:
·
Monday: (John 3) Jesus said to Nicodemus that the
Son of Man must be lifted up just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the desert.
For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who
believes in him may not perish, but have eternal life.
·
Tuesday: (John 19) Standing by the cross of Jesus
were his mother and his aunt, Mary, wife of Cleopas, and Mary Magdalene, and
the beloved disciple. He said, “Woman, behold your son.” Then he said to the
disciple, “Behold, your mother.”
·
Wednesday (Luke 7) Jesus asked, “To what shall I
compare this generation? We played the
flute and you did not dance, we sang a dirge and you did not weep.”
·
Thursday (Luke 7) A Pharisee invited Jesus to
dinner. A sinner woman brought an alabaster flask on ointment and bathed the
feet of Jesus with her tears. The host objected and Jesus replied, “Which of
two people will love more the person who forgave the debt – the one with the
larger debt or the lesser?” He then
forgave her sins.
·
Friday (Luke 8) Jesus journeyed from town to town
with his disciples and the women whom he healed. They provided for him out of
their resources.
·
Saturday (Luke 8) Jesus told the parable of the
sower and the seed. Some fell of poor soil, some fell on rocky ground, some
seed fell among thorns, but some fell on fertile ground and produced a
hundredfold.
Saints of the Week
September
13: John Chrysostom, bishop and doctor (347-407) was a gifted homilist and was called "Golden Mouth" because his
words inspired many. He was raised in Antioch and joined a community of austere
hermits but the lifestyle damaged his health. He became the archbishop of
Constantinople where he introduced many conservative and unpopular reforms. He
fled to escape an uprising from the people and on the way to exile he died.
September
14: The Triumph of the Holy Cross remembers the finding of the true cross by the Emperor Constantine's
mother, Helen in early 4th century. Two churches were dedicated in the name of
the cross on this day in the 4th century. Therefore, the feast was applied to
this day. In the 7th century, the feast was renamed, "The Triumph."
The Church of the Holy Sepulcher in 335 was also dedicated on this day.
September 15: Our Lady of Sorrows was once called the
Seven Sorrows of Mary as introduced by the Servite Friars. After suffering
during his captivity in France, Pius VII renamed the devotion that
encapsulates: Simeon's prophecy, the flight into Egypt, searching for Jesus at
age 12 in the Temple, the road to Calvary, the crucifixion, the deposition, and
the entombment.
September 16: Cornelius, pope and martyr (d. 253) and
Cyprian, bishop and martyr (200-258) both suffered in the Decian
persecutions. Cornelius was being attacked by Novatian, but since Novatian's
teachings were condemned, he received the support of the powerful bishop,
Cyprian. Cyprian was a brilliant priest and bishop of Carthage who wrote on the
unity of the church, the role of bishops, and the sacraments. Cyprian died
under Valerius after supporting his church in exile by letters of
encouragement.
September 17: Robert Bellarmine, S.J., bishop and doctor
(1542-1621) became a Jesuit professor at the Louvain and then professor of
Controversial theology at the Roman College. He wrote "Disputations on the
controversies of the Christian faith against the Heretics of this age,"
which many Protestants appreciated because of its balanced reasoning. He
revised the Vulgate bible, wrote catechisms, supervised the Roman College and
the Vatican library, and was the pope's theologian.
September
19: Januarius, bishop and martyr (d. 305), was bishop of Benevento during his martyrdom during the Diocletian
persecution. He was arrested when he tried to visit imprisoned Christians.
Legend tell us that a vial that contains his blood has been kept in the Naples
cathedral since the 15th century liquefies three times a year.
This Week in Jesuit History
·
Sep 13, 1773. Frederick II of Prussia informed
the pope that the Jesuits would not be suppressed in Prussia and invited
Jesuits to come.
·
Sep 14, 1596. The death of Cardinal Francis
Toledo, the first of the Society to be raised to the purple. He died at age 63,
a cardinal for three years.
·
Sep 15, 1927. Thirty-seven Jesuits arrived in
Hot Springs, North Carolina, to begin tertianship. The property was given to
the Jesuits by the widow of the son of President Andrew Johnson.
·
Sep 16, 1883. The twenty-third General
Congregation opened at Rome in the Palazzo Borromeo (via del Seminario). It elected Fr. Anthony Anderledy Vicar General
with the right of succession.
·
Sep 17, 1621. The death of St Robert Bellarmine,
bishop and doctor of the Church.
·
Sep 18, 1540. At Rome, Pedro Ribadeneira, aged fourteen,
was admitted into the Society by St Ignatius (nine days before official papal
confirmation of the Society).
Sep 19, 1715. At Quebec, the death of Fr. Louis Andre, who for 45 years
labored in the missions of Canada amid incredible hardships, often living on
acorns, a kind of moss, and the rind of fruits.
No comments:
Post a Comment