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The Love that Compels

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Daily Scripture

Upcoming Daily Scriptures

Daily Scripture, July 29, 2022

Memorial of Saints Martha, Mary, and Lazarus

Scripture:

Jeremiah 26:1- 9
John 11:19-27

Reflection:

      “. . . you are the Christ, the Son of God, the one who is coming into the world.”

During my recent trip to California, I was able to attend Sunday liturgy at San Carlos Cathedral in Monterey. This is the longest active church in the State of California, established by Saint Junipero Serra. This was the place where my maternal grandmother made her first communion and possibly the place where she and my grandfather were married. It was the first time that I had been in this church and I spent some time during and after mass to reflect on the faith of my grandparents and how that effected my faith life. My thoughts went to the many people who had worshipped and supported the parish for over 200 years. How the present members are passing on that faith to others in the community. Certainly a strong testament to the deep roots of faith that have sustained the area for so long.

 Who are the people in your life that helped you to grow in your faith as a child, teenager, adult?

In the Gospel of John, Jesus and Martha have a conversation where Martha makes several faith statements about her belief “in the resurrection on the last day”. The last statement she makes is that she believes “you are the Christ, the Son of God, the one who is coming into the world.” In the Gospels, when Jesus is healing someone it is through that person’s faith or the faith of others that the person is healed. Martha, a woman who is portrayed as to busy to pray in the Gospel of Luke, is the one who has faith that Jesus is going to heal her brother or raise him from the dead in the Gospel of John. Jesus responds to her with one of the “I Am” statements:

     “I am the resurrection and the life; whoever believes in me, even if he dies, will live,
       and anyone who lives and believes in me will never die.”

This conversation between Martha and Jesus might be a Covenant dialog. Martha makes her statements of faith and Jesus replies with the promise of eternal life. Martha’s faith and the faith of the Apostles was not perfect. They kept trying to understand the message just as my ancestors and the people of San Carlos Cathedral are practicing every day. Jesus is the one God has chosen to free people from their sin and to give eternal life. We are making our statement of faith as best as we can. Taking time to hear God’s response, engaging God in our own covenant dialog could possibly be an opportunity to deepen our relationship with God and grow deeper in our faith.

Linda Schork is a theology teacher at Saint Xavier High School in Louisville, Kentucky.

Daily Scripture, July 28, 2022

Scripture:

Jeremiah 18:1-6
Matthew 13:47-53

Reflection:

The words from the prophet, Jeremiah today reminded me of a potter friend of mine. I remember watching him at his wheel as the clay was spinning and being molded into a creation of his choosing.  It was an experience of awe and wonder for all of us waiting eagerly to see the finished product. He lovingly took the time to mold and shape the wet clay into a fine piece of art admired by all.

Carey Landry, noted song writer and musician, wrote the song, Abba Father, in which we can find the creation plan our loving potter God envisioned for each one of us in these words:

            Abba Father. You are the potter; we are the clay, the work of your hands.
            Mold us and fashion us into the image of Jesus Your Son.

Jesus reminds us in the Gospel of Matthew that the Kingdom of heaven includes both the new and the old, the rejected and the praised, the rich and the poor, the immigrant, the prisoner, the LGBTQ, people of all faiths, creeds and skin color. As people who have been created in the image and likeness of God, may our prayer reflect the love and acceptance of all creation as we sing the closing lyrics of Abba Father:

Father, may we be one in You. May we be one in You As he is in You and You are in Him!

Glory, glory and praise to You. Glory and praise to You forever, Amen, forever Amen.

Abba, Abba Father. You are the potter;
We are the clay, the work of Your hands. Abba.

Theresa Secord recently retired as a Pastoral Associate at St. Agnes Parish, Louisville, Kentucky.

Daily Scripture, July 27, 2022

Scripture:

Jeremiah 15:10, 16-21
Matthew 13:44-46

Reflection:

“The Kingdom of heaven is like a merchant searching for fine pearls.  When he finds a pearl of great price, he goes and sells all that he has and buys it.”  The pearl of great price sounds like the ultimate “impulse item!”   If you want it you need to drop everything and sell everything to get it.  You need to do it right now.

As I reflect on these words from our reading today I am impressed with both the urgency and “all or nothing” description surrounding the Kingdom of heaven.  I really don’t know many people who respond this way to the Kingdom of God.  I certainly don’t.

I tend to cling to all the distractions of middle-class existence.  I also tend to drift away from the present moment where the Kingdom of God is located (I think) and think about the past and/or the future.  Nor do I “sell everything.”  I guess I am like most of us who hear these words and wonder.  Even those who renounce possessions sometimes end up living a fairly cozy and well provided for life, with no apparent connection to God’s Kingdom.

I don’t have an easy answer to the obvious questions flowing from the gospel description of the Kingdom of heaven.  And maybe that’s what I do today as I reflect on this passage from Scripture.  I don’t obsess over the question “Am I going to separate myself from all my little treasures to immediately and always focus on the Kingdom of God?”  Maybe today I just sit with this description of the Kingdom, wondering and marveling at its urgency and cost.


Terry McDevitt, Ph.D. is a member of the Passionist Family in Louisville, Kentucky.

Daily Scripture, July 26, 2016

Feast of Saints Joachim and Anne,
Parents of the Blessed Virgin Mary

Scripture:

Jeremiah 14:17-22
Matthew 13:36-43

Reflection:

Jesus dismissed the crowds and went into the house. His disciples approached him and said, “Explain to us the parable of the weeds in the field.”

This opening verse from today’s gospel reading from St. Matthew leads the gospel writer to explain in clear language the variety of seeds and plants found all around. The imagery would have been even more familiar in an agrarian culture living close to the land.

In the midst of so many disheartening headlines and “breaking news” coverage on television; with all the political banter that seems disconnected from our ordinary lives; with all the hurt and violence humans inflict on one another, we would have every right to believe the “weeds” are taking over the field. We can feel overwhelmed and hopeless…a sure sign of the Evil One at work.  Even Jeremiah the Prophet in the first reading today is tempted to give up hope and wonders aloud, “Have you [Lord] cast Judah off completely? Is Zion loathsome to you?”

We need to hear the rest of the story of today’s gospel. The “weeds” do not win. By our own hope and faith, by our own good words and good works we plant seeds that will yield a great harvest. In refusing to participate in vulgarities that demean others or to lose faith in the promise of Jesus that he will remain in our midst, we proclaim the Good News that love and faith in Jesus are greater than death and evil.


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, July 25, 2022

Feast of Saint James, Apostle

Scripture:

2 Corinthians 4:7-17
Matthew 20:20-28

Reflection:

The Son of Man did not come to be served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many. -Matthew 20:28

When the disciples heard Jesus say this, I imagine they must have wondered what this meant.  It likely stirred lively and concerned conversation. “What does he mean ‘give his life as a ransom for many’?”  At this point in Matthew’s gospel, Jesus has now three times foretold his Passion. How the disciples must have wondered and worried over this among themselves.

From our vantage point almost two millennia later, we do not have to wonder.  We know what this meant for Jesus.  And we know what it means for us: an overwhelming self-giving love so that we might have life. All of us.  Not one exception.  A incomprehensible price.  An incomprehensible ransom.

Yet we can still find ourselves back at that place of misunderstanding the essence of the Kingdom to which we are ransomed. We think, like the sons of Zebedee, that security will come if we are in what has long been thought to be a position of power, sitting beside a king who has power over his people, who wields “authority” over subjects.  We human beings strive to maneuver ourselves into positions of power over others and all of of creation. We see this misunderstanding operative in so many ways–from the war in Ukraine to the sexual abuse crisis in the Church to all the ways we as human beings are harming creation and our common home.

These are just some of the blatant examples, yet I suspect from my own thoughts and struggles that this likely operates subtly in all our lives: each time we feel ourselves superior to or judge someone else; each time we retreat inward believing that we will not have enough if we share with someone else; each time we surrender to the pervasive forces today that call us to fear one another.  Jesus does not call us to power over others but rather to power with all of our brothers and sisters, all of creation, not one exception. The power Jesus describes and lives turns upside down how we normally think of power.  He invites us to mutual care of each other, to loving encounter and deep listening, to nourishing and uplifting the unique treasure that each of us holds in an earthen vessel.

This too is powerfully operative in the world today.  Striking examples can be found in both Laudato Si’ and the current synodal process we as the Church are now living. Both call us into an inter-being which is dazzlingly inclusive, and manifests the “life of Jesus” in our body in this present moment–the Body of Christ. As Laudato Si’ 240 says so beautifully, “Everything is interconnected, and this invites us to develop a spirituality of that global solidarity which flows from the mystery of the Trinity.”

And Synodality presents us a path forward–not an easy one for those of us who like details and want to know every twist and turn of the journey.  It is rather a way which requires surrender together to the movement of the Spirit: “a true season of the Spirit!  For we need the Spirit, the ever new breath of God, who sets us free from every form of self-absorption, revives what is moribund, loosens shackles and spreads joy” (https://www.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/speeches/2021/october/documents/20211009-apertura-camminosinodale.html).

May it be so.

Lissa Romell is the Administrator at St. Vincent Strambi Community in Chicago, Illinois.

Daily Scripture, July 24, 2022

Scripture:

Genesis 18:20-32
Colossians 2:12-14
Luke 11:1-13

Reflection:

Awesome Presence and Wonderful Intimacy

In our experience of God, it is important that we try to be conscious of both His majesty and the warmth of His intimacy.  In today’s liturgy Luke relates an essential reading of the Our Father.  In the very first words he sets before us the foundations of prayer, the transcendence and intimacy of God!  “When you pray, say: Father, hallowed be your name!” Lk 11:2   Our prayer will limp badly if we fail to appreciate by grace the Holiness of God and the depth of His love for us.

First of all, Jesus tells us to start our prayer with Father.  The word father is treated 414 times in NT.   The most important father Jesus knew as a child was Joseph.  Father is Jesus’s primary word for God.   It is the most important metaphor of Jesus’s teaching.  It is of great interest that every reported prayer of Jesus in the New Testament starts with the word Father!   What a beautiful compliment to Joseph!  So we begin our prayer with the intimate word father!  St Paul of the Cross would spend two hours on first word of the Our Father!

Luke next relates the words “hallowed be Your name!”    The idea of “holy” in the Scriptures is in Hebrew qadosh.  It is used 115 in OT.  “I am the Lord, your Holy One” Is 43:15. The angels cry out which shakes the heavens.“Holy, Holy, Holy, is the Lord of hosts,   The whole earth is full of His glory.” Is 6:3     Holy in the Latin phrase is: mysterium tremendum et fascinans.   As mysterium, the numinous is “wholly other”– entirely different from anything we experience in ordinary life.

In NT Greek holy is hagiosand is used 233 times. In Mary’s beautiful prayer she exults: “For the Mighty One has done great things for me; And holy is His name.” Lk 1:49  When we view the Universe now with the new eyes of science, we indeed can see how great God is!  Our sun with its planets is speeding around our Galaxy, the Milky Way, about 500,000 miles an hour!  Even at this prodigious speed it will take about 250 million years to make the trip once!  Our Milky Way is just one of 100 billon galaxies.   “By the word of the Lord the heavens were made” Ps 33:6    This welcoming God is indeed incredibly big!

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

Daily Scripture, July 22, 2022

Feast of St. Mary Magdalene

Scripture:

Song of Songs 3:1-4b or 2 Corinthians 5:14-17
John 20:1-2, 11-18

Reflection:

There it is. The simple, one word lesson that encompasses all that Christ has tried to teach us.  The one word which conveys all the love Christ proclaimed with His suffering death. He whispers “Mary” in the dim light before new day.  She, undoubtedly beaten down by the emotions and images of the prior day, may well have not slept.  She returned before dawn to the tomb, compelled to complete the burial rituals they had been unable to complete the day before because of the impending Sabbath.

Even in the darkness, she saw that the immense stone blocking the tomb had been rolled away.  Surely her first thoughts were those of panic and even anger because she had witnessed the vicious, evil and unfair treatment Jesus had suffered the day before by those who tormented and put Him finally, to death. They might have stolen his body as another way of inflicting injury on Him.   

She saw a man standing at the head of the burial bench, and in the darkness, blinded by her tears, she failed to recognize Jesus until He spoke that one simple word which encompassed all of Christ’s love: “Mary”.     

No other words were necessary to impart His love for not only Mary, but for all of us, His people.    Upon hearing her name, Mary’s choked reply was simply, “Rabbi”, addressing Him not as the Man she knew, but in the redemptive role His life had always been. Do I know you when You call me, Lord, or am I blinded by the pain and anger of this world?   

Ray Alonzo is the father of three children, grandfather of two, and husband to Jan for 45 years. He is a USN Vietnam Veteran, and a 1969 graduate of Mother of Good Counsel Passionist Prep Seminary. Ray currently serves on the Passionist Alumni Council.

Daily Scripture, July 21, 2022

Scripture:

Jeremiah 2: 1-3, 7-8, 12-13
Matthew 13:10-17

Reflection:

Many of us remember Paul Simon’s song “The Boxer,” “Still a man hears what he wants to hear and disregards the rest,” (The Boxer lyrics © Mca Music Ltd., Paul Simon Music, Sony/atv Songs Llc, Warner/chappell Music Ltd) 

Both readings today have a common theme: people hear but don’t really listen or we selectively hear what we want to hear. In the first reading, people are not listening to the prophet Jeremiah. He is reminding them of how great God has been to them in leading them out of Egypt and into the promised land. But soon they forgot God’s goodness and got busy going their own way including idolatry to Baal. Jeremiah states the priests don’t even try and seek the Lord. Israel has forsaken the Lord and refuses to listen to Jeremiah. In today’s gospel reading Jesus urges us to open our eyes and really see, open our ears, and not just hear but listen and understand with our hearts. We all know how easy it is to get super busy, easily distracted and be overwhelmed work demands, family responsibilities and variety of other challenges.

Am I one of those persons who are so busy that I  look without seeing, or hear without understanding? (https://www.sacredspace.ie/scripture/matthew-1310-17)  Take some time this day to be still and listen to what God might be saying to you, wanting you to see and understand.  O Lord help me to slow down and listen to your speaking and to see your presence and understand how much you love me.

Carl Middleton is a theologian/ethicist and a member of the Passionist Family.

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