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The Love that Compels

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Claire Smith

Daily Scripture, May 28, 2020

Scripture:

Acts 22:30; 23:6-11
John 17:20-26

Reflection:

It seems Paul had the same problems with the Sadducees in his day as we have today in this pandemic.  Sometimes it seems we are surrounded by those who are in agreement and those in disagreement with how things should be handled and who and what we should do concerning the current state of affairs in these times.  There are many voices vying to be recognized and heard!  Everyone believes their ideas and point of view is the correct way to proceed!

It is the same way with our relationship with God.  Oftentimes we spend a lot of energy on telling God what to do and just how to do it!  Jesus assured Paul that he would be there for him, to have courage and continue to do the work he was being called to do.  Paul stated his belief and hope in the resurrection and boldly stood his ground with the Sadducees in spite of the danger to himself.  The gospel message reminds us of the unfailing love God has for all of us even when we mess up and forget who’s in charge!

As we approach the great feast of Pentecost, the birthday of the church, it is good to once again renew our commitment as disciples of Jesus to answer the clarion call to preach the good news of the gospel.  We are resurrection people, anointed by the Holy Spirit to give witness to God’s word and to do so with courage and hope that we are not alone in this task.  There is no better way of life than to live as children of God, to share this message of hope and courage especially in these uncertain and fearful days of the pandemic.  There is only ONE VOICE that we must listen to and that belongs to the ONE who created us and watches over us as only a loving Mother and Father can do!

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, CHURCH!!!! ALLELUIA, ALLELUIA, ALLELUIA!


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

Daily Scripture, May 27, 2020

Scripture:

Acts 20:28-38
John 17:11b-19

Reflection:

 In today’s readings, it’s time to say goodbye.  Nobody likes goodbyes, especially when they know they will never be reunited.

Such was the case with Paul and his followers in Ephesus where he had ministered for three years.  The people knew they would never see his face again.  In his tearful farewell, Paul offered parting advice.  He urged them to remain vigilant, knowing they will face hard times.

“Be aware,” Paul told the Ephesians, “that after I am gone, you will be tried, even by people you know.  These men are going to pervert the truth in an effort to lead people away from you and from Jesus.”

Paul told the leaders of the church in Ephesus that they must work on behalf of the poor and weak.

Similarly, in his farewell discourse, Jesus prays for his disciples.  He knows they will feel alone, abandoned and frightened.  Their faith will be severely tested.  It is no wonder, then, that this “high priestly prayer” is Jesus’ longest prayer in the gospels.

He prays for unity among his disciples.  Indeed, unity is the cry of the New Testament.  He prays that the Father will protect them in a hostile world.  And, despite their trials and persecution, Jesus prays that they will live in the joy the of the Good News.  In all things, Jesus assures them that the Father will protect and guard them, and not lose them.

We live in difficult times, in the tension of the now and not yet.  We are called to live the Gospel in world that doesn’t always uphold gospel values, and often is hostile to them.  In such times, we are called to stand in the company of the tearful Ephesians and the fearful disciples.  We, too, can take great comfort in Paul’s exhortation and Jesus’s prayer.  We, too, can witness to the Good News — with joy.


Deacon Manuel Valencia is on the staff at Mater Dolorosa Passionist Retreat Center, Sierra Madre, California.

Daily Scripture, May 26, 2020

Scripture:

Acts 20:17-27
John 17:1-11a

Reflection:

How often do we listen to and trust that voice that speaks to our very core? We recognize the voice as true. Somehow, we know it to be the voice of the Spirit – maybe even looking around to see if anyone else heard it. We want to believe but we don’t know what it might mean.

I’ve heard many stories from friends about “voices” they hear and know to be true. One friend told me about the time he was delayed in getting ready to go to Mass. Giving up and settling into a quiet evening, he “heard” that voice telling him to trust and get himself to Mass. There, sitting next to him in the pew turned out to be the love of his life.

Do I understand this? No. Do I trust it? Yes, or at least I try. Has there been a time in your life when you heard deep within your heart that voice and knew it to be truly of God?

In today’s first reading, St. Paul tells the community he must move on from Ephesus: “Compelled by the Spirit, I am going to Jerusalem. What will happen to me there, I do not know.” Paul trusts that God is working through him. He just needs to keep listening, trusting and responding to the Spirit.

This is what “discernment” means in our life of faith: listening. Of course, there are many voices out there vying for our attention. And we have all certainly listened to the wrong voice on occasion. But I imagine all of us can recall a moment of extreme clarity. We just knew something to be true, like my friend: “Trust me, go to Mass.” Or St. Paul knowing he must go to Jerusalem even though he did not know what awaited him there. Even Jesus, trusting in his relationship with his Father, knew he had to go to Jerusalem.

When I was a young Jesuit, the provincial said to me, “We’d like to send you away, like to the missions.” “How far away?” I asked. “Very far, like the Philippines,” he replied. And I said without a moment of reservation, “Yes.” I knew it to be right, and it was. Sometimes the Spirit speaks with great clarity and we need to go with it.


Robert Hotz is a consultant with American City Bureau, Inc. and was the Director of
The Passion of Christ: The Love That Compels Campaign for Holy Cross Province.

Daily Scripture, May 24, 2020

Scripture:

Acts 1:1-11
Ephesians 1:17-23
Matthew 28:16-20

Reflection:

I Am With You Always

Today we celebrate the feast of the Ascension  We remember Christ leaving only His visible presence but His being closer than ever in His faith presence! Today’s feast is a paradox.  Jesus is not leaving us but coming to us.  The worse decision of our lives is to practice social distance from Christ!

The Gospel today ends with one of the most beautiful lines in the Scripture.  “Behold (idou), I am with you always, even to the end of the age.”  Mt 28:20    200 times the NT begins with “look” idou  i.e. to strongly point to the special importance of the following thought.  “I am with you”  These words are found from Genesis to Revelation some 647 times.  Jesus promises He will be with us forever!  The Apache Indians say only one word for the marriage vows ceremony Var la banah which means forever.  Unlike so many today Christ takes His vows very seriously to remain with us to the end of the age.

Two observations might be considered here.  If Christ promised He will be with us, means He is very close! “For in Him we live and move and have our being” Act 17:28   Karl Rahner beautifully observes: “People have God over their shoulder, but few stop, turn around, and say Hello”!   If we would treat our friends with such a lack of notice, they would soon lose interest in us.

The second observation is Christ will never leave us.  “He Himself has said, “I will never desert you, nor will I ever forsake you,”  Heb 13:5  The word desert in the original inspired text is anhiemi. The etymology is ana, “back” and hiemi, “to send,” denotes “to let go.  In modern English He will never drop you.  Many times in Scripture God assures us He will never leave us. ““He who is a hired hand, and not a shepherd, who is not the owner of the sheep, sees the wolf coming, and leaves the sheep and flees, and the wolf snatches them and scatters them. “I am the good shepherd; the good shepherd lays down His life for the sheep.”  John 10


Fr. Bob Weiss, C.P. preaches Parish Missions and is a member of the Passionist Community in Louisville, Kentucky.

Daily Scripture, May 23, 2020

Scripture:

Acts 18:23-28
John 16:23b-28

Reflection:

In the beginning of our Gospel reading for today, Jesus says to His disciples: “Amen, amen, I say to you, whatever you ask the Father in my name he will give you. Until now you have not asked anything in my name; ask and you will receive, so that your joy may be complete.”

In the past, I have thought that “in my name” is a great qualifier for what Jesus promises. I don’t believe that the Father is going to give us anything contrary to Jesus’ commandment to love. But what about now, in the midst of a pandemic? Can’t, shouldn’t, God just take it away, and with it all the pain and suffering and distress that it has caused?

As one who has tried to grow in understanding of the spirituality of the Passion of Jesus, I’m not sure that is the “ask” I need to be making. Perhaps Jesus is inviting you and me to consider what we need to be asking for in His name. And if we were to ask for the alleviation of suffering, perhaps we also need to ask for the grace to do as He did. Perhaps we need to ask for the willingness to be God’s instruments for alleviating suffering, in whatever way we can, whether it’s supporting those on the front lines, or making masks or making phone calls, or working for justice and peace.

Would that make our joy “complete?” Maybe not, but it might help make our joy not dependent on the effects of Covid-19, but on the effects of God’s love for us.

In another part of our Gospel reading, Jesus says, “I have told you this in figures of speech. The hour is coming when I will no longer speak to you in figures, but I will tell you clearly about the Father.” In the sacrifices and heroism in both large and small gestures; in the love and compassion shown to those in need, maybe Jesus has spoken clearly to us about the Father. God is with us in this, and God will get us to the other side.


Fr. Phil Paxton, C.P., is the local superior of the Passionist Community in Birmingham, Alabama. 

Daily Scripture, May 22, 2020

Scripture:

Acts 18:9-18
John 16:20-23

Reflection:

Most of us are familiar with the Global Positioning System.  What does a GPS device do for us?  It gives us directions.  “Take this road; turn here; oops, recalculating; go straight ahead; get ready to turn; avoid cliff; stay the course.”  But before the GPS can give us directions, we have to tell it our destination.  So, what is our destination?

In John’s gospel, chapter 10, Jesus says, “I came so that they may have life and have it abundantly.” (John 10:10) Life, abundant life.  That is our destination.

In John’s gospel, chapter 14, Jesus says, “I will ask the Father and he will give you another Advocate to be with you always…” (John 14:16) The Holy Spirit is called the Paraclete.  Paraclete means someone “called to the side” of another to be guide, protector, comforter, counselor and friend.  In other words, the Holy Spirit is like a GPS to life, to happiness.

During these days before Pentecost we are reminded of the role the Holy Spirit plays in our lives.  If we listen carefully, we will hear the Holy Spirit guide us to our destination.  Among other directions, the Spirit will tell us not to be afraid and to keep on spreading the Good News (today’s Epistle).   The Spirit will lead us to shout to God with cries of gladness (Responsorial Psalm), filled with a joy no one can take from us (Gospel).

Come, Holy Spirit, be our guide.  Give us the wisdom to know what is right, and the courage to do what is right.  Show us the way to abundant life.  And thank you for loving us.


Fr. Alan Phillip, C.P. is a member of the Passionist Community at Mater Dolorosa Retreat Center, Sierra Madre, California.   
http://www.alanphillipcp.com/.

Daily Scripture, May 20, 2020

Scripture:

Acts of the Apostles 17:15, 22-18:1
John 16:12-15

Reflection:

A dream come true!  I suspect that was what St. Paul was thinking as he arrived in Athens.  Here he was, in Athens, the intellectual and cultural capital of the world!  And did he have important Good News to bring!

He made his way to the Areopagus, the center of the intellectual life of Western Civilization, observed the statues of the all the gods from every part of the Roman Empire noting that there was even a statue dedicated to the “unknown” god.  He used that statue as his entrée into speaking about what God had done for us through the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

He preached a beautiful classic sermon in which he revealed that Jesus Christ, the Son of the living God, has made us the sons and daughter of God.  So, we are called to repent and live in the new life we have received through Jesus Christ.  No doubt, Paul used all of his oratorical skills and force of personality to convince his listeners of the truth of his words.  He finishes with a flourish and waits expectantly for the response from the people around him.

But the response of his listeners was not anything like what he expected.  There was no spontaneous applause.  Some scoffed; others say “We should like to hear you on this some other time.”  Ho-hum.  No gasps, no exclamations of wonder, no conversion of heart, no expressions of belief.  There were a few in the crowd who became believers.  We are simply told, “And so Paul left them.”

The lukewarm response of the Athenians to the message of the Gospel was not just a disappointment for Paul, it was personally devastating.  As Paul said in his first letter to the Corinthians, “I came to you in weakness, fear and much trembling.…” (see I Corinthians 2:1-5).  He had used all his considerable intellectual and oratorical skills to bring the Good News to the Athenians and almost nothing had come of it.  A defeat that shook Paul to his very core.  Yet Acts reports, “After this he left Athens and went to Corinth.”

Have you ever done your very best to help someone, to convince them that the path they’re traveling only leads to heartache and death, only to have them totally ignore you?  Have you had that experience of utter failure?  Then you know how Paul felt in Athens.  Even though Paul lost his faith in his well-known oratorial skills, Paul not only went on, he became utterly convinced that Jesus Crucified was the only message that could move men and women’s hearts.  Strangely, he had his greatest success in Corinth!  And what a city that was.  Corinth was a major port city, corrupt, libertine, known throughout the Roman empire as a wide-open city populated by the very worst kind of people.  Yet here Paul preached only about Christ Crucified and found that a suffering Son of God who loved with his whole being was the transforming message.  The educated and wealthy of Athens were unmoved.  The suffering and outcasts of Corinth were transformed by the love they recognized in the heart of Christ.

As we recall this great Apostle, his perseverance in the face of defeat and his willingness to change and depend more on Christ, we pray for the grace to surrender the brokenness of our lives to God’s love, confident that through our weakness, God will bring us ever closer into His love.


Fr. Michael Higgins, C.P. is the director retreats at Mater Dolorosa Passionist Retreat Center, Sierra Madre, California.

Daily Scripture, May 18, 2020

Scripture:

Acts 16:11-15
John 15:26-16:4a

Reflection:

“The Lord takes delight in his people…the Spirit of truth will testify…”

One of the most amazing truths about our God is how much he loves us – delights in us even!  How easy it is for us to lose sight of that truth – we make a mistake and beat ourselves up over it, the treadmill of life gets moving so fast that we forget that we are not in control, our self esteem gets trampled by words of another or our perceived response of a particular situation – causing us to second guess ourselves.

Today’s readings remind us that Jesus promised an Advocate to help keep the Spirit of Truth alive in our hearts, minds and lives.  When was the last time you spent some intentional time in the presence of the Holy Spirit – the Advocate?  What practices have you developed to help you notice the presence of God in your life?  To help you remember how precious you are in God’s eyes, how much he delights in you?

Life can get very crazy and unpredictable – in the blink of an eye!  We know that in a very real way as we continue to navigate through this unprecedented pandemic.  But we are not alone, God is with us – if only we notice.

The season of Spring surround us with new buds, blossoms, scents, birds singing, vibrant colors, rain and blue skies.  We only need to look around to see the joy of God’s creation – joy is how we ‘testify’ to the truth that ‘our Lord takes delight in us’ – perhaps a question for us to ponder is how do we share our joy – how do others notice our joy?


Faith Offman is the Associate Director of Ministry at St. Paul of the Cross Passionist Retreat and Conference Center in Detroit, Michigan.

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