Monday, July 25, 2016

July 24, 2016: 17th Sunday in Ordinary Time

God has won for us salvation from our sins and new life in Him, by Christ's dying and rising in the Paschal Mystery.  And He invites us to draw close to Him, to be in a relationship with Him.  He wants us to plead for His mercy, confident that He will give it.  He wants us to persistently seek Him, as demonstrated by the parable of the person who comes to a friend at night, seeking food for guests.

We must be persistent, because it's all about actively seeking God.  He wants us to pray as a way to grow in relationship with Him.  Prayer may not always get us the answer we want, but it gives us His presence, which brings us alive in Him, in a whole new way.

Father Hurlbert very insightfully noted in his homily at Ascension this weekend that the one type of prayer in which we're always guaranteed the answer we seek is in the sacraments.  For example, when we call down the Holy Spirit on the bread and wine, they actually become the Body and Blood of Christ.  In reconciliation, we verily receive God's mercy, which we seek.  Indeed, we encounter the very presence of God Himself.


Tuesday, July 19, 2016

July 17, 2016: 16th Sunday in Ordinary Time

The readings call us to get to work--the work of growing closer to God.  That is what gives meaning to everything in life, when we see it as an opportunity to be present to God and glorify Him.

Part of this is having an attentiveness to our circumstances that makes us aware of God's presence in them.  This kind of awareness is what makes Abraham act immediately when three visitors arrive.  Aware of their Divine nature, he offers Them gracious hospitality.

Martha keeps busy in waiting upon the Lord Jesus when He comes as a guest, but loses sight of how meaningful it is to be in His presence because she's so busy in the act of waiting on Him.  When she openly expresses her frustration with her sister, who should have been helping her, Jesus draws her attention to what is most important--that which Mary keeps aware of as she remains at His feet, being present to Him and the gracious words He offers.  (The commentary in the lector workbook I use notes that in that society it was not a woman's place to be at the feet of a rabbi, and a woman was expected to be serving in the kitchen.  Truly Jesus is bringing about a new social order.)

Father Hurlbert put it well in his homily at Mass, saying that any work we do for God should keep us busy like Martha, but we should come out of it like Mary, with a greater awareness of God's presence.  In so entering His presence, we are more aware of the Mystery that God has drawn us into, that we, made righteousness, may abide in His presence.

Tuesday, July 12, 2016

July 10, 2016: 15th Sunday in Ordinary Time

God speaks His Word to us, now in Jesus Christ who speaks from within our hearts, that we might respond to His invitation of love: His Word ultimately calls us to turn outward to show love to other people.  Regardless of who they are, they are all the same in that by showing them mercy, and loving them from the heart, they become our neighbor.  Indeed, there is much room for us to expand our horizons in embracing so many others as "neighbor" in the exchanging of mercy.

This love comes as God, the Creator, has reconciled all through the redemptive blood of His Son Jesus Christ.  By the Paschal Mystery, God shows us love, and so we love Him back, and then turn to love others in showing them mercy in action.

Tuesday, July 5, 2016

July 3, 2016: 14th Sunday in Ordinary Time

God gives us comfort and assurance that He will come to us and lavish us with His abundant care.  We can trust in Him and rejoice because He is bringing us a Kingdom.  We who are His disciples now have our lives directed by working to bring forth this Kingdom in our world, and one day, we will enter it.

It is a Kingdom that is ours when we commit our lives to the Cross, by which we have been made new.  At this time of year when we the people of the United States celebrate our freedom, we Christians recall, as Paul writes in stirring words in Galatians 6, the glorious freedom won for us in the Cross of Christ.