Ignatian
Spirituality: Set the World Ablaze
The Fourth Sunday of Lent
predmore.blogspot.com
March 26, 2017
1 Samuel 16
1 Samuel 16:1, 6-7,
10-13; Psalm 23; Ephesians 5:8-14; John 9:1-41
The story of the man born blind
raises important questions about faith and knowledge because the ones who have
sight and knowledge turn out to be the ones who are blind and faithless. The
poor man born blind must have felt like he went through a Senate confirmation
inquiry because he is peppered with questions from every angle and he responds
brilliantly to each question showing that his faith reveals true knowledge. He
speaks from his experience and does not try to answer questions that are beyond
his knowledge. He does not guess, hypothesize, draw conclusions, or speculate.
He speaks only of his experience, and by doing so, his wisdom stands out.
The question that begins the search
of the truth is: Who sinned – the man born blind or his parents? Jesus says,
“You got it all wrong. Sin is not the cause of disability or misfortune. Sin is
something that emerges from within a person.” It reveals the faulty, simplistic
view that we hold about sin. In the Gospels, Jesus is often teaching people a
new definition of sin because sin comes from attitudes and values within a person.
However, even though we know how Jesus defined sin, we still get it wrong
today. We have to examine those areas of our lives where we do not even try to care
for others. Sin is not caring enough about someone to help them.
So, if sin is something that arises
from within and if our eyes are the vehicles by which we form judgments, we
have to be careful to form our perceptions correctly. How do we inform our attitudes
about the information we take in? Are we too quick in arriving at conclusions?
A good question to always ask ourselves is: Am I experiencing a movement of
warmth towards my neighbor? If not, we may be moving in the direction of sin.
If I am moving towards greater understanding and warmth, then I am less
inclined to sin because I care enough about my neighbor to let love win out.
Therefore, we have to learn how to
see the world’s events differently than we have. We need to glimpse them
through the lens of faith, which gives us better knowledge. We have to ask: Am
I able to see what is right with the world rather than finding what is wrong?
Can I see the positives instead of being critical? Can I suspend my need to
make judgments until I get further information that may shed light on someone’s
actions or words? I simply may not have enough knowledge to make a proper
judgment. Therefore, I replace my initial judgments with positive regard,
meaning that I will actively search for the best in everyone’s motivations
until I know with certitude something to the contrary. I seek to see the world
as if I were looking through Christ’s eyes.
Faith brings us knowledge that we
cannot explain easily to others and we are only asked to give our witness
statements like the blind man. This
knowledge may conflict with people of influence and authority with
institutional backing like the religious authorities in the Temple who were
judging this blind man, but we have the courage to hold true to God’s vision
for the world. Our sight leads to faith, which gives us knowledge of what is
right with the God. This is a world worth celebrating.
How are your eyes seeing the world?
What are the impressions that you are forming? Are they inspiring you to create
more “good” or are you making less loving judgments? Ask God to give you
further sight and insight. Ask God to heal your sight and your knowledge so you
can be the agents of grace. Ask God to give us new faith that allows us to open
our eyes again so that we can see the face of Jesus as if for the first time. I
bet it has a smile on it.
Scripture for Daily Mass
First Reading:
Monday:
(Isaiah 65) The Lord is about to create new heavens and a new earth; the things
of the past shall not be remembered; there will always be rejoicing and
happiness.
Tuesday:
(Ezekiel 47) The angel brought the prophet to the entrance of the temple where
life-giving water flowed forth and bringing life to all.
Wednesday:
(Isaiah 49) The Lord finds favor with Israel and promises help on the day of
salvation. The Lord will help Israel keep the commandments because He cannot
forget her beauty.
Thursday:
(2 Samuel 7) The Lord said to David: Your house shall endure forever; your
throne shall stand firm forever.
Friday:
(Wisdom 2) The wicked said, “Let us beset the just one because he is obnoxious
to us. Let us revile him and condemn him to a shameful death.”
Saturday:
(Jeremiah 11) Jeremiah knew their plot, but like a trusting lamb led to
slaughter, had not realized they were hatching plots against him.
Gospel:
Monday:
(John 4) Jesus returned to Galilee where he performed his first miracle. Some
believed in him. A royal official approached him as his child lay dying, but at
the hour Jesus spoke to him, his son recovered.
Tuesday:
(John 5) Jesus encountered an ill man lying next to a healing pool, but when
the water is stirred up, no one is around to put him in. Jesus heals him and he
walks away. The Jews protest that Jesus cured on the Sabbath. The Jews began to
persecute Jesus.
Wednesday:
(John 5) Jesus explains that he is the unique revealer of God and cannot do
anything on his own. He judges as he hears and his judgment is just because he
does not seek his own will.
Thursday:
(Matthew 1) The birth of Jesus came about through Mary, betrothed to Joseph. In
his dream, the angel tells Joseph to take the pregnant Mary as his wife.
Friday:
(John 7) Jesus did not wish to travel around Judea because the Jews were trying
to kill him, but he went up during the feast of Tabernacles where he was
spotted. He cried up in the streets, “You know me and you know where I am
from.”
Saturday:
(John 7) Some in the crowd said, “This is the prophet.” Some said, “This is the
Christ.” A division occurred because of him because they could not settled how
he fit into Scripture. Nicodemus interjected, “Does our law condemn a man
before it first hears him and finds out what he is doing?” The crowd dispersed
to their homes.
Saints of the Week
No saints are included in the calendar this week as it is often Holy Week
or Easter Week.
This Week in Jesuit History
·
March
26, 1553: Ignatius of Loyola's letter on obedience was sent to the
Jesuits of Portugal.
·
March
27, 1587: At Messina died Fr. Thomas Evans, an Englishman at 29. He had
suffered imprisonment for his defense of the Catholic faith in England.
·
March
28, 1606: At the Guildhall, London, the trial of Fr. Henry Garnet,
falsely accused of complicity in the Gunpowder Plot.
·
March
29, 1523: Ignatius' first visit to Rome on his way from Manresa to
Palestine.
·
March
30, 1545: At Meliapore, Francis Xavier came on pilgrimage to the tomb of
St. Thomas the Apostle.
·
March
31, 1548: Fr. Anthony Corduba, rector of the College of Salamanca, begged
Ignatius to admit him into the Society so as to escape the cardinalate which
Charles V intended to procure for him.
·
Apr 1, 1941. The death of Hippolyte Delehaye in
Brussels. He was an eminent hagiographer and in charge of the Bollandists from
1912 to 1941.
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