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The Love that Compels

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Claire Smith

Daily Scripture, June 8, 2023

Scripture:

Tobit 6: 10-11; 7: 1bede, 9-17;8: a4-9a
Mark 12: 28-34

Reflection:

The Greatest Commandment: Love God and Love Others

In the Gospel of Mark, chapter 12, verses 28 to 34, we find a powerful exchange between Jesus and a scribe. The scribe approaches Jesus and asks, “Of all the commandments, which is the most important?” Jesus responds, “The most important commandment is this: ‘Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’ The second is this: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no commandment greater than these.”

These words of Jesus encapsulate the essence of true spirituality and righteousness. Love for God and love for others form the foundation of a fulfilled life. Jesus reveals that our devotion to God should be complete and all-encompassing, involving every aspect of our being – heart, soul, mind, and strength. This love for God should overflow into our relationships with others, where we are called to love our neighbors as ourselves.

By emphasizing these two commandments, Jesus highlights the interconnectedness of our love for God and our love for fellow human beings. Loving God requires us to genuinely care for those around us, treating them with kindness, compassion, and respect. It compels us to go beyond mere religious rituals and extend a helping hand to the marginalized, show empathy to the hurting, and offer forgiveness to the broken.

This teaching challenges us to examine the priorities in our lives. Are we truly loving God with our whole being? Are we actively expressing that love through our actions toward others? It’s easy to get caught up in religious activities without experiencing the transformational power of love. Jesus invites us to a deeper understanding of faith, urging us to embody love in all that we do.

As we embrace the greatest commandment, we find that love has the potential to change lives and bring healing to a broken world. It is through genuine love, both for God and our neighbors, that we can make a meaningful impact and leave a lasting legacy of compassion and grace.

Let us heed Jesus’ words today and allow love to be the guiding principle in our lives. As we walk in love, we embody the essence of true discipleship and fulfill the purpose for which we were created.

Deacon Peter Smith serves at St. Mary’s/Holy Family Parishes in Alabama. He is a retired Theology teacher from Holy Family Cristo Rey Catholic High School in Birmingham, a retired soldier from the US Air Force, and a member of the Passionist Family.

Daily Scripture, June 7, 2023

Scripture:

Tobit 3:1-11a, 16-17a
Mark 12:18-27

Reflection:

Have you not read in the Book of Moses,
in the passage about the bush, how God told him,
I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, 
and the God of Jacob
?
He is not God of the dead but of the living.
You are greatly misled.

-Mark 12:27

Every Tuesday afternoon I visit a friend of another faith who is in hospice care, and even though over the years we have both claimed no fear of death, here we are on each visit, sharing how terrifying this concept becomes when we must move out of the realm of the intellect into today, disrupting not only our plans for today, but evidently for all time to come. OMG!

We’ve shared how letting go and willingly venturing off from our homes as children, I entered a very familiar life in the Monastery I lived across the street from, and he, believe it or not, went off to the Clown School in Baraboo Wisconsin. Although very different paths leading to this day, a day neither of us could have imagined at that time.

Along the way, we’ve shared how both of us have made many mistakes, some of which held us in bondage to individuals and institutions that we had harmed, or we thought had harmed us. Learning to let go of these mistaken beliefs, or in the words of St. Paul of the Cross and many other mystics, forgiving ourselves, each other and the institutions we mistakenly or not believed were the cause of all our problems, has allowed us to live in the moment.  

Dear God, help me believe the Apostle Mark’s reminder to the people of his day, that You are in charge. Help me let go of all my expectations—resentments in the making. Help me forgive myself and others I believe have harmed me, and finally, help me accept that not only are You, our Emmanuel with us today, but so are, our parents and all Your creation.

Dan O’Donnell is a Passionist Partner and a longtime friend of the Passionists.  He lives in Chicago.  

Daily Scripture, June 6, 2023

Scripture:

Tobit 2: 9-14
Mark 12: 13-17

Reflection:

The late John Kavanaugh, a Jesuit at St. Louis University, related an encounter with Mother Theresa while on a visit to her mission serving the poorest of the poor in India.

In a conversation he asked her to pray for him.

“What would you like me to pray for?” she asked.

“Clarity,” he answered.

“No,” she responded.

“No?” he asked in surprise.

“No. I will not pray that you have clarity. I never have clarity. But I will pray for you to have trust. We must pray to fully trust God.”

The story speaks to the psalm of today: “The heart of the just one is firm, trusting in the Lord.”

In our high tech, efficient, North American culture, we are taught from an early age to take the initiative to create a life of comfort and financial security, a life free of worry and full of pleasure and respectability. Put your mind to a task or goal and you will succeed! Plan your work and work your plan!

This culturally formed way of living implies we are capable of achieving anything we set our minds to. The message is clear: we are independent beings with unlimited ability.

The downside comes when we hit a wall, realize our limits and fail. The ultimate boundary on our omnipotence is, of course, death, which is on the list of to-dos for each one of us.

When Mother Theresa told Fr. Kavanaugh she would only pray that he have trust, she was countering his wish for a clarity that would have shown him the way to some goal or project or action he wanted to achieve. She said no.

Instead she offered a prayer for more lasting and important gift: absolute trust in God.

The beauty of the psalmist’s words ring true to Mother Theresa’s insight: “An evil report he shall not fear; his heart is firm, trusting in the Lord. His heart is steadfast; he shall not fear…”

This kind of trust in God is possible only by God’s grace. We cannot will it. We must pray for the grace to have it.

But once we experience this total trust, our world’s strong messages of fear of loss of control, the quest to be in charge, and to win no matter the cost or means to victory, are shed to make room for an awesome tranquility that bring peace.

Pope (now also saint) John XXIII wrote in his journal three years into his papacy (1958-1963) of this sure, inner peace:

My experiences during these three years as Pope . . .bears witness to this maxim and is a moving and lasting reason for me to be true to it: absolute trust in God, in all that concerns the present, and perfect tranquility as regards the future. The various initiatives of a pastoral character which mark this first stage of my papal apostolate have all come to me as pure, tranquil, loving, I might even say silent, inspirations from the Lord, speaking to the heart of his poor servant who, through no merit of his own save that that very simple merit of mere acquiescence and obedience, without discussion, has been able to contribute to the honor of Jesus and the edification of souls.

(Journal of a Soul, pp 313-314.)

In your quiet moments of conversation with God this day, you might want to discuss your longing for the grace to fully trust.

Jim Wayne is a board member of the Passionist Solidarity Network (PSN), and author of The Unfinished Man. He lives in Louisville, Kentucky.

Daily Scripture, June 4, 2023

Scripture:

Exodus 34:4-6,8-9
2 Corinthians 13:11-13
John 3:16-18

Reflection:

Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity

Today we celebrate a major belief of our Catholic Faith:  our belief in three Persons in one God…Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  We believe in the Most Holy Trinity…a “mystery” of divine relationship, drawing us into the special, life-giving relationship that is shared with us in the Person of Jesus.

Each of today’s Scripture readings add divine brushstrokes to the portrait of our belief in the Most Holy Trinity. 

Our first reading, from Exodus 34, shares the experience of Moses going up Mount Sinai to encounter “…the Lord, the Lord, a merciful and gracious God, slow to anger and rich in kindness and fidelity…”  A true Father / Parent, caring for their growing children.

The Gospel selection is a classic, John 3:16-18…the ever-so-popular statement of belief in Jesus.  “God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him might not perish but might have eternal life…”  God loves us!  Jesus is our Salvation!

The New Testament selection from Paul’s 2nd letter to the Corinthians presents Paul as the “cheerleader”, encouraging us all to live as people of faith:  mending our ways, encouraging one another, living in peace, greeting one another with a holy kiss.  Paul concludes with a blessing that is truly Trinitarian:  “The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with all of you.”  We are called to live the Life of the Holy Trinity!

Indeed, we celebrate a Mystery.  It wasn’t until the Council of Nicea in 325 that this teaching of the Church was formulated.  It may take us time to comprehend the fullness of this dimension of our faith, but the teaching is clear:  in God there are three Persons, equal and distinct; the Father shares life with the Son, and they are bound together by an everlasting love or dynamic power that we call the Holy Spirit.  The Trinity / God is relationship, “rejoicing” in the sharing of life and growth and warmth and intimacy…for you and I and all of creation!

As Easter People, as Pentecost People, let us praise God who shares the fullness of Divine Life with us in the Most Holy Trinity.  May we fruitfully reflect on our living and sharing that Divine Life, with the encouragement that St. Paul shared with the Corinthians.  Full of the Trinitarian Life of the Father, Son, and Spirit, may we be 21st Century women and men of healing, encouragement, peace, and true love.  God so loves the world!

Fr. John Schork, C.P. serves as the Province Vocation Director and also as Local Superior of the Passionist Community of Holy Name in Houston, Texas.  

Daily Scripture, June 3, 2023

Scripture:

Sirach 51:12cd-20
Mark 11:27-33

Reflection:

Two realities emerge from the gospel today. One is the fact that Jesus lived each day in the face of criticism, opposition, and risk. We take for granted that his life was mobile and missionary, but we often do not see that this same itinerant preaching life was one surrounded by constant ridicule, challenge and at times insult.

Many encounters, from which we often glean real treasures of teaching and revelation, are in fact moments for Jesus when he is ‘on trial’. Times like that of today’s passage from Mark are all too typical of the daily life of Jesus. We hear a challenge about the origins of his authority, designed no doubt to elicit a response that might be used against him, but his answer not only reveals the true origin of his authority, but silences his critics.

Jesus parallels his own situation with that of John – and the chief priests, scribes and elders find themselves trapped in their own question and its implications. Jesus can be seen as having authority conferred by God and proclaiming a message that is not only comforting, but well received by the people.

The second learning for us who are privileged to enter this encounter through the scriptural witness, is to see that Jesus’ authority is not only founded on God, but that it also has its own provenance. That is, Jesus himself, his courageous witness, his vision, and his teaching are all compelling and attract people drawing them in to relationship and response.  There is an authority born by the very fact that his teaching is accepted and welcomed by all who hunger for new life and good news. The truth has its own power and Jesus spoke the truth.

Ironically the setting of today’s gospel is the Temple precinct, in many ways the centre of authority, wealth and power in his society. Yet here speaking and teaching is the real centre of relationship to God and the revelation of the truth about God.

His message is our truth too, let us treasure it.

Fr. Denis Travers, C.P., is a member of Holy Spirit Province, Australia. 

Daily Scripture, June 2, 2023

Scripture:

Sirach 44:1, 9-13
Mark 11:11-26

Reflection:

Last Sunday’s Pentecost liturgy reminded me of the time when I served as a pastoral minister in a parish. We were blessed to be a multicultural community; and people from the parish offered the Prayers of the Faithful in their many languages, our small experience of the miracle at the first Pentecost! I also enjoyed handing out pieces of paper to the parishioners, each paper with a different gift of the Holy Spirit. During the liturgy, we reflected on how we use those gifts personally and for our parish and wider community.

My favorite gift of the Spirit is the gift of wisdom, which can be defined as the “understanding and knowledge that comes from a deep connection to one’s inner self and the divine.: In today’s first reading from Sirach, the author wants us to know that true wisdom resides in the people of Israel, because they have a deep connection with God, and so they share in God’s wisdom. Yahweh is their God, and they are God’s people.

In today’s Gospel, Jesus is angry. When he comes to the Temple where God’s people worship, he sees the abuses in Temple worship. He does not see the true wisdom that Sirach speaks of there in the Temple. Instead, He sees foolishness, greed, and thoughtlessness.

And Jesus acts out a parable by cursing the barren fig tree. The fig tree, long used as a symbol for the people of Israel, has become barren, like the people Jesus encountered in the Temple. Somehow, they have lost their true wisdom, their understanding and knowledge that comes from a deep connection to one’s inner self and the divine.

The last part of today’s Gospel is Jesus’ exhortation to return to God, the Source of Wisdom:

“Have faith in God.
Amen, I say to you, whoever says to this mountain,
‘Be lifted up and thrown into the sea,’
and does not doubt in his heart
but believes that what he says will happen,
it shall be done for him.
Therefore I tell you, all that you ask for in prayer,
believe that you will receive it and it shall be yours.” Mark 11: 22-25

Patty Gillis is a retired Pastoral Minister. She served on the Board of Directors at St. Paul of the Cross Passionist Retreat and Conference Center in Detroit. She is currently a member of the Laudato Si Vision Fulfillment Team and the Passionist Solidarity Network.

Chapter Newsletter – May 31, 2023

Masthead

In this issue

  • VIDEO: Our Provincial Chapter is Here!
  • A Deeper Integration of Charism
  • VIDEO: The Passionist Way with Paul Wadell
  • What Does it Mean to be Anti-Racist
  • A Moment of Synodality
  • Join Us for our Final Walk with Us Thursday
  • Prayer for the 36th Provincial Chapter

Our Passionist Family: The Call of the Charism

Our Passionist Charism knows no bounds, calls us to remember our interconnectedness and compels us beyond our comfort zones to seek justice with love.

Chapter Trailer Image v2

Visit the Chapter Website

A Deeper Integration of Charism
By Phil Paxton, CP

Early in our Chapter preparation process, Fr. Jim Strommer, C.P., shared with us the consideration of our upcoming Chapter as a “formation” Chapter. It would not be a Chapter along the lines of Chapters in the past where decisions were made that were to be implemented by leadership. At the same time, it would not be the same as the last Chapter, where visioning was the driving force and action steps were discussed and considered.

No, this Chapter would hopefully lead us into a deeper integration of our Passionist Charism, our identity as a Passionist Family and our awareness of important issues such as care for our common home, cultural and racial diversity and equity, migration and the plight of millions of migrants and shared leadership, all within the context of Synodality.

Now what I just wrote can seem like a mouthful of buzzwords and trendy jargon. But these terms speak to us about the situations of real people, including ourselves. It is important for me to realize that formation is not divorced from visioning, nor is it isolated from making important decisions. Formation informs how we look at the world and what is going on in our times. It informs our vision and our discernment. Formation informs not only the decisions we may make, but how they are made, and with whom.

If I am honest with myself, I know that I am not perfectly formed. A Chapter meeting, no matter how profound and meaningful it may be, will not complete my formation, but I hope it will help me, and help us, to continue to grow.

I hope to continue to grow in understanding what it means to be Passionist. I hope to continue to be open to learning from my brother and sister Passionists, both vowed and lay. I hope to be open to learning from the people with whom I work, and those whom I am called to serve. And I hope to be open to learn from any source of education and formation that may come my way. I do not believe I am unique in this. My apologies if this all sounds trite and obvious.

May our Chapter help keep us on the path where the Holy Spirit is leading us.

The Passionist Way with Paul Wadell

Paul Wadell give the history and evolution of The Passionist Way.

CP Way - Paul Wadell

What Does it Mean to be Anti-Racist
Compiled from an Article by Anna North June 3, 2020, VOX and Ibram X. Kendi TED Talk

Remember Amy Cooper, a white woman, who called the police on Christian Cooper, a black man who was bird watching in New York’s Central Park, because he asked her to put her dog on a leash. He videoed her saying “I’m going to tell them there’s an African American man threatening my life.” The video went viral.

When she made a public apology, she began by saying “I’m not a racist.” Maybe that’s likely what most of us would say, especially if we have just done something racist.

Ibram X. Kendi, Director of the Antiracist Research and Policy Center at American University, wrote a book entitled “How to Be an Anti-racist,” published in 2019.  In it he states, “The opposite of ‘racist’ isn’t ‘not racist,’” he writes. “It is ‘antiracist.’”

The term itself has come to be used to describe what it means to actively fight against racism rather than passively claim to be non-racist. Anti-racism involves taking stock of and eradicating policies that are racist, that have racist outcomes and making sure that ultimately, we’re working towards a much more egalitarian, emancipatory society.

Read more...

A Moment of Synodality
By Bob Choiniere, Chapter Facilitator

In just a few weeks, members of the Passionist Family will meet in Sierra Madre, California for the 36th Provincial Chapter meeting. Those gathered at the Chapter will engage in critical conversations about our charism, the call of the gospel and the signs of our times and the way we are being called to stand with the crucified in our world. But these conversations will not begin at the Chapter meeting. In fact, they have been occurring for many months. The Chapter will be the culminating moment of a much larger conversation that has been unfolding in the province for the past few years. Most recently, each Thursday this Spring, members of the Passionist Family have come together to listen and engage one another around future leaderships, migration, diversity, the environment and our Passionist Way.

Tomorrow, Thursday, June 1 (12:00 p.m. PT, 2:00 p.m. CT, 3:00 p.m. ET), we will take a moment to savor and gather the graces of all of these conversations and together discern what the Holy Spirit might be calling us to as we move ever closer to Chapter. 

The meeting on June 1 will be a time to name what continues to resonate with you as you reflect on the Thursday conversations and to name the way that the Holy Spirit might be calling us to respond as a community of faith. In a word, it will be a moment of Synodality. We believe that the Holy Spirit resides in the hearts of every member of the Passionist Family. When we come together to listen and reflect, we participate in a collaborative effort to articulate the Holy Spirit’s call. Every person, every prophetic voice, every listening ear is needed. Therefore, I would like to invite you to attend the culminating meeting on June 1 and be part of the journey to discern what God’s desire is for us as we seek to authentically respond to God’s call.

Join us for Our Final Walk with Us Thursday

Walk with Us Thursdays Zoom Link

June 1 Preparing for Chapter

12:00 p.m. PT
2:00 p.m. CT
3:00 p.m. ET

Recordings of previous Walk with Us Thursdays
are available on the Chapter website.

Dios Amoroso,

We thank you, for You have led us
to grow together in the Passionist Way.

You have called us, not only as individuals,
but together as a Passionist Family,
juntos como hermanos y hermanas,
to recognize more and more the crucified of today.

We hold in our hearts and minds
all of crucified creation: migrants and refugees,
and those beset by poverty and violence, systemic racism,
injustice and oppression, pain and distress.

As we prepare for our upcoming Provincial Chapter,
keep us forever on the path we pray.

Help us to continue to hear the cries of the crucified,
as we work together as the visionaries You have called us to be.

Foster in us the leadership required to meet the needs of our times.

May whatever conclusions we draw, whatever actions we take,
be done en el amor de Cristo Crucificado, and in His name, we pray.

Amen.

Holy Cross Province
2023 Chapter

June 8-13, 2023
Sierra Madre, California

All materials for Chapter can be found
on the Chapter 2023 website at https://passionist.org/chapter2023/

Daily Scripture, June 1, 2023

Scripture:

Sirach 42:15-25
Mark 10:46-52

Reflection:

Did you ever spend hours preparing a speech about a topic you were really passionate about only to have it fall on deaf ears or at the very least get a mediocre review?  Even though you were sure that the message would be well received and your listeners would surely give it the attention it warranted, but, alas, it just didn’t happen!

Well, we see this happening with Paul in his famous speech to the Athenians at the Areopagus as found in the first reading today from the Acts of the Apostles.  Paul prepared, planned and delivered what he thought to be a great philosophical message about Jesus.  The people did not want to hear anything about this Jesus and surely not in the manner that Paul was trying to tell them.

It was a hard lesson for Paul to learn.  He was not a philosopher, but, rather a tent maker converted to Christianity through his encounters with Jesus.  He was trying to be someone he wasn’t and it just wasn’t working.  So often we too try to be what we think others want us to be which in the end finds us disappointed and disillusioned.

Like Paul, we are called to be followers of Jesus Christ and to preach his message of love, compassion and mercy. May we recommit ourselves this day to give witness to the great love God has for us in how we live, love and care for ourselves and others.

Theresa Secord is a Pastoral Associate at St. Agnes Parish, Louisville, Kentucky.

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