Ignatian
Spirituality: Set the World Ablaze
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Twenty-Ninth Sunday of Ordinary Time
October 18, 2015
Isaiah 53:10-11; Psalm 33; Hebrews 4:14-16; Mark 10:35-45
We look to church workers as men and
women dedicated to the Gospel who have sworn off any advantage to their
careers. Of course, the church needs to pay its workers a fair and living wage,
but we do expect our ministers to care for the poor, to reflect Christ’s
values, and to represent a good moral life in line with the kingdom of God. It
is jarring when we hear James and John, as disciples who should know better,
ask Jesus about seats of honor in his kingdom. They are the inner circle of friends
with Jesus and still they seek what amounts to honor and glory from humans
rather than from God. However scandalous it seems, it is quite natural in our
church organizations to have those who seek greater human glory.
Jesus attaches the cup of suffering
to the pursuit of glory. When James and John ask their brazen question, Jesus
asks them if they can willingly suffer for him. Confidently, they say yes. They
will suffer for those seats of glory as badges of honor, but it reveals that
they are seeking glory for having endured the suffering. These are all the
wrong reasons. It shows that they do not understand how suffering tears a
person apart.
Isaiah mentions the purpose of
suffering for the Lord’s servant. He writes, “If he gives his life as an
offering for sin, he shall see his descendants in a long life, and the will of
the Lord shall be accomplished through him.” Isaiah concludes that the sufferer
will understand its purpose once he has gone through it and his suffering will
benefit others.
However, Isaiah does not address the
main question of religions: If God is all-knowing and all-powerful, why does
God allow the suffering of the innocent? For instance, where is the redemptive
meaning in the death of an infant? Does all suffering have meaning? Suffering
does not discriminate. Sometimes bad things happen to good and bad people alike
and there does not seem to be an inherent purpose. Life gives us quite enough
suffering; our task is to figure out how we will enter into it well and be
prepared for when it strikes.
The best medicine for suffering is
to find something for which to be happy each day and to hold onto it. When we
choose our happiness, it can diminish the consequences of suffering. While
suffering isolates us from others and causes us to doubt our self-worth,
happiness pulls us closer to others and brings joy to the relationship. When we
work hard to reconcile fractured relationships, we find these bonds surprisingly
sustaining when we are the ones in need and we receive much needed grace. It
helps us to clear up misconceptions and misunderstandings so the distance caused
by hurt feelings can be lessened. In fact, we must do all that we can to
strengthen bonds of community because suffering will never go away and we need
each other in those times of need. Always, someone is in search of some words
of encouragement and healing. Perhaps, the words that come from your mouth can
give a person hope. In fact, everyone you know suffers silently in ways you are
not aware. Look at everyone, not as a threat or foreigner, but as someone who
needs a connection with God through you.
You cannot obtain humility unless
you have experienced humiliation. You then know what it feels like to be at the
lowest and you then possess an otherworldly knowledge that demands that we
respect and care for the persons around us. Suffering humiliates, and the one
who suffers needs extra-special care. The upcoming year of mercy is designed to
help us see each other as vulnerable loved ones in need of special compassion.
While suffering separates us, this mercy and compassion unites us and touches
our common humanity. Life is much more comforting when we can hold each other’s
hand instead of having fists ready to go at one another.
Of course, many will be social
climbers, careerists, and self-indulgent seekers. We will even find those
people in our local church and in the church hierarchy. They have special needs
that we cannot touch until they let the reality of others into their lives.
They may never be satisfied because they want more. We know the secret though.
We know that a good moral Christian life is not about greatness, accolades,
status, respect, or honor, but we need a certain amount of it. We are to do our
best in all things, but we know that loving service to others brings about the
glory of God that we cherish silently. We know that it is the unnoticed simple
acts of kindness that are remembered. We are all given the cup of suffering to
drink whether we want it or not; we must take it with the hands of kindness and
realize that everyone else is drinking it too. Then we must go to others and
treat them with mercy.
Themes for this Week’s Masses
First
Reading:
·
Monday: (Romans 4) Abraham did not doubt God’s
promise in unbelief; rather, he was empowered by faith and gave glory to God
and was fully convinced that what God had promised he was also able to do.
·
Tuesday: (Romans 5) Through one man, sin entered
the world, and through sin, death, and death came to all. For just as through
the disobedience of one man the many were made sinners, so, through the
obedience of the one the many will be made righteous.
·
Wednesday: (Romans 6) Sin must not reign over your
mortal bodies so that you obey their desires. You who were once slaves to sin
have become obedient from the heart.
·
Thursday: (Romans 6) You have been freed from sins
and have become slaves of God, the benefit that you have leads to
sanctification, and its end is eternal life.
·
Friday (Romans 7) The willing is ready at hand, but
doing the good is not. For I do not do the good I want, but I do the evil I do
not want.
·
Saturday (Romans 8) There is no condemnation for
those who are in Christ Jesus. For the Law of the Spirit of life in Christ
Jesus has freed you from the law of sin and death. If Christ is in you, the
spirit is alive because of righteousness.
Gospel:
·
Monday: (Luke 12) Take care to guard against all
greed, for though one may be rich, one’s life does not consist of possessions.
Then Jesus told the parable of the rich man who stored up a harvest, but his
life ended prematurely.
·
Tuesday: (Luke 12) Be like the servants who await
their master’s return from a wedding, ready to open immediately when he comes
and knocks.
·
Wednesday (Luke 12) Jesus tells the parable of the
prudent steward. Much will be required of the person entrusted with much, and
still more will be demanded of the person entrusted with more.
·
Thursday (Luke 12) I have come to set the earth on
fire, and how I wish it were already blazing. Every household will be divided.
·
Friday (Luke 12) You read the signs of the weather,
but not the signs of the times. Why do you not judge for yourself what is
right?
·
Saturday (Luke 13) Some people told Jesus about the
Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with the blood of their sacrifices.
Jesus began to talk about the nature of great suffering. He told the parable of
the person who planted a fig tree in his orchard. He had given up on its
fruitlessness, but a friend urged him to wait one more year for its produce.
Saints of the Week
October 18: Luke, evangelist (first century) was the author of his version of
the Gospel and the Acts of the Apostles. He is described as a doctor and a
friend of Paul. He was a well-educated Gentile who was familiar with the Jewish
scriptures and he wrote to other Gentiles who were coming into a faith.
October 19: North American Jesuit martyrs: Isaac Jogues, John de Brebeuf, priests,
and companions (17th century) were killed between 1642 and 1649 in Canada
and the United States. Though they knew of harsh conditions among the warring
Huron and Mohawk tribes in the New World, these priests and laymen persisted in
evangelizing until they were captured, brutally tortured, and barbarically
killed.
October 20: Paul of the Cross, priest (1694-1775), founded the Passionists in
1747. He had a boyhood call that propelled him into a life of austerity and
prayer. After receiving several visions, he began to preach missions throughout
Italy that mostly focused upon the Passion of the Lord. After his death, a
congregation for nuns was begun.
October 23: John of Capistrano, priest, had a vision of Francis of
Assisi when he was imprisoned during an Italian civil war at which time he was
the governor of Perugia. He entered the Franciscan Friars Minor in 1415 after
ending his marriage. He preached missions throughout Europe including a mission
to Hungary to preach a crusade against the Turks. After the Christian victory
at the Battle of Belgrade in 1456, John died.
October 24: Anthony Claret, bishop (1807-1870) adopted his father's weaving
career as a young man, but continued to study Latin and printing. After entering
seminary, he began preaching retreats and giving missions. He published and
distributed religious literature and founded the Missionary Sons of the
Immaculate Heart of Mary. He was appointed archbishop of Cuba but was called
back to Spain to be Queen Isabella II's confessor. He resumed publishing until
the revolution of 1868 sent him into exile.
This Week in Jesuit History
·
October 18, 1553: A theological course was
opened in our college in Lisbon; 400 students were at once enrolled.
·
October 19, 1588: At Munster, in Westphalia, the
Society opens a college, in spite of an outcry raised locally by some of the
Protestants.
·
October 20, 1763: In a pastoral letter read in
all his churches, the Archbishop of Paris expressed his bitter regret at the
suppression of the Society in France. He described it as a veritable calamity
for his country.
·
October 21, 1568: Fr. Robert Parsons was elected
Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford. He resigned his Fellowship in 1574.
·
October 22, 1870: In France, Garibaldi and his men
drove the Jesuits from the Colleges of Dole and Mont Roland.
·
October 23, 1767: The Jesuits who had been kept
prisoners in their college in Santiago, Chile, for almost two months were led
forth to exile. In all 360 Jesuits of the Chile Province were shipped to Europe
as exiles.
·
October 24, 1759: 133 members of the Society,
banished from Portugal and put ashore at Civita
Vecchia, were most kindly received by Clement XIII and by the religious
communities, especially the Dominicans.
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