Ignatian
Spirituality: Set the World Ablaze
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Second Sunday in Lent
February 21, 2016
Genesis 15:5-12,
17-18; Psalm 27; Philippians 3:17-41; Luke 9:28-36
Last week in Scripture, the Holy
Spirit blessed Jesus before his trials in the desert; this week, God’s voice,
heard from a cloud, affirms him as “my chosen Son.” The transfiguration
confirms Jesus and fortifies him for what is to come, that is, the Cross that
looms on the horizon. The presence of Moses and Elijah attest that the road
Jesus is on is in accord with the Law and the Prophets. As the inner circle of
the disciples is brought to the holy mountain to witness this event, the
mission of Jesus quickens and becomes more solemn. He can now set his face
towards the fulfillment of his mission in Jerusalem.
This whole scene hinges upon the
first act of Jesus: he is at prayer. Prayer is real and it changes us. The
disciples note that the face of Jesus was changed in appearance and his
clothing became dazzling white. Now, when we pray, our clothing might not brighten,
but our face, our soul may. Thomas Merton once spoke that great line, “There is
no way of telling people that they are all walking around shining like the
sun.” He wrote this during an epiphany as he was standing on a commercial
district street corner in Louisville, Kentucky. He continues, “I suddenly saw
the secret beauty of their hearts, the depths of their hearts where neither sin
nor desire nor self-knowledge can reach, the core of their reality, the person
that each one is in God’s eyes. If they could all see themselves as they really
are. If only we could see each other that way all of the time.”
We could be happier, contented, more
trusting people if we could experiment with our prayer to find our individual
style of relating to God. It might mean breaking out of the box and coloring
outside the lines, but our creativity will help us discover a relaxed way of
being with God. As Jesus shows us in the Baptism and the Transfiguration,
prayer begins when God is able to affirm us as individuals. Without a doubt,
God wants to honor us and praise us. We simply ask God to behold us and to know
us intimately because we all want to be seen and heard and known. God, who
created us, wants to call the very best out of us, and from my experience
working with people in spiritual direction and retreat direction, we cause God
to gasp in amazement at who we are and what we have become. God gazes upon us
in wonder and is very pleased and God wants to tell us very often of his
immense pride and delight in us. God wants us to know how much God enjoys us. If nothing else in prayer happens, then all is
good.
However, our life of discipleship
has to be rooted in prayer because hard work is on our horizons. Pope Francis
shows us that he is not afraid of doing the difficult tasks of discipleship,
namely, reconciliation and healing. The most difficult work to be done occurs
in families where members are estranged from one another causing profound
heartache. Last Friday, the Pope met with his estranged brother, the Russian
Orthodox Patriarch, and set the path for reconciliation; two years ago, he
reached out to Bartholomew, the Greek Orthodox Patriarch to commit to dialogue
for reunification. As Pope Francis gives us an example, we must commit to our
local efforts at forgiving, reconciling, and uniting. Our task might not be as
grand as our Pope’s, but it is just as important to God, and to us. The way of
the cross is difficult, we cannot escape it, so we might as well confront it
with as much vigor, courage, and resolve as Jesus did. Just make sure that God
affirms you first and fortifies you for the journey.
Let God love you. Please! Let yourself
be filled with God’s personal, intimate love of you as the basis for your
prayer. Let God take you outside on a clear night, just as the Lord did with
Abraham, so you can gaze upwards together and see the immensity of the stars
and feel the magnanimous love God has for you. Allow God to bless you – with
great joy and give you great fortune. Allow God to be gentle to you and to tell
you that you are a beautiful soul with a beautiful face and that God wants
nothing more from you than your continued friendship and just to waste time
together. Let God glorify and transfigure you to be the person you both want
you to be. Let God’s blessings be transparent so that others say of you, “Look
at that radiant person, walking around, shining like the sun.”
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
February
21: Peter Damian, bishop and Doctor
(1007-1072), was orphaned and raised by his brother, Damian, a priest in
Ravenna. He began as a hermit monk and was then made abbot and cardinal. He
became a reformer in the church often speaking out against clerical laxness.
February 22: The Chair of Peter is celebrated on
this day. Previously, both Peter and Paul were remembered until their feast was
transferred to June 29th. As the custom was ingrained in practice,
Christians continued to honor the contributions Peter made to the church as the
first of the apostles in continuous succession.
February 23: Polycarp, bishop and martyr (69-155), was
made bishop of Smyrna and was the leader of the second generation Christians.
He was a disciple of the apostle John and a friend of Ignatius of Antioch. He
wrote catechesis and rites for initiation into the Christian community. He was
martyred in 155 and is a Father of the early church.
This Week in Jesuit History
·
Feb 21, 1595. At Tyburn, the martyrdom of Robert
Southwell after he had suffered brutal tortures in Topcliffe's house and in
prison. He embraced the jailer who brought him word that he was to be executed.
As he breathed his last, Lord Mountjoy, who presided over the execution,
exclaimed: "May my soul be one day with that of this man."
·
Feb 22, 1599. By order of Pope Clement VIII, the
superiors general of the Jesuits and the Dominicans, assisted by others, met to
settle, if possible, the controversies about grace. Nothing came of the
meeting, since the Dominicans insisted on the condemnation of the writings of
Fr. Molina.
·
Feb 23, 1551. The Roman College, the major
school of the Society later to become the Gregorian University, began its first
scholastic year with 15 teachers and 60 students.
·
Feb 24, 1637. The death of Francis Pavone.
Inflamed by his words and holy example, sixty members of a class of philosophy
that he taught and the entire class of poetry embraced the religious state.
·
Feb 25, 1558. St Aloysius Gonzaga received
tonsure at the Lateran basilica. Within the next month he would receive the
minor orders.
·
Feb 26, 1611. The death of Antonio Possevino,
sent by Pope Gregory XIII on many important embassies to Sweden, Russia,
Poland, and Germany. In addition to founding colleges and seminaries in Cracow,
Olmutz, Prague, Braunsberg, and Vilna, he found time to write 24 books.
·
Feb 27, 1767. Charles III banished the Society
from Spain and seized its property.
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