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The Love that Compels

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Daily Scripture

Upcoming Daily Scriptures

Daily Scripture, May 7, 2023

Scripture:

Acts 6:1-7
1 Peter 2:4-9
John 14:1-12

Reflection:

Master, show us the Father, and that will be enough for us.
Jesus said to him, “Have I been with you for so long a time
and you still do not know me, Philip?” -John 14:9

I can totally relate to Philip’s disbelief. Jesus, you give me a nice home, a fancy car, and respect amid the powerful decision-makers of the world I live in and then suggest, that I if I want these, I had to freely share them with all those I meet, holding back nothing. What? Maybe that worked in the world 2,000 years ago, before double-entry accounting, computers and satellites that assure me of recognition and authority worldwide. At the same time, this technology shares the wars, the unimaginable destruction taking place in my world, people that think that they can have it all too. How do I go forward?

We can choose the right path at least for today. To go forward even when we are ‘enlightened’ by faith can be a risk. And so often the Christian journey calls us to go forward into what is not known. ‘What will happen if… I forgive the other or I trust in this moment or I dare to ask for forgiveness etc?”

I think I totally understand this father business, because I was so lucky to have a father who loved to sow seeds and tend them daily until he thought they were ready to go off and do the same, never losing contact with each other, but sharing with each other in the abundant life promised.

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

Daily Scripture, May 6, 2023

Scripture:

Acts 13:44-52
John 14:7-14

Reflection:

King Charles III is crowned today in Westminster Abbey in London. Years before this historic, long-awaited day, Charles, as Prince of Wales, was doing Great Things, including food distributions and energy bill relief for the neediest in Great Britain. He has used his wealth to promote protections for the environment, and advocated for preservation of cultural and architectural heritages. Farmers in Sub-Sahara Africa have benefited from his efforts to help them make necessary adaptations for survival as the climate and economies swiftly change.

Indeed, despite his human inadequacies, the King is doing Great Works.

In today’s Gospel Jesus talks about his oneness with the Father. No words can adequately describe the oneness he experienced with his “Abba,” his Daddy, but we know the oneness bore much fruit. Indeed, he did Great Works.

In today’s section of the fourteenth chapter of John’s Gospel, Jesus makes a startling prediction: “whoever believes in me will do the works that I do, and will do greater ones than these…” We, his brothers and sisters in faith, will do Great Things? Greater things than Jesus did? Really?

Is this a divine guarantee that we, in our brief spans on earth, will leave legacies of buildings, projects completed, millions lifted from poverty, injustices made right? Will we be honored with the Presidential Medal of Freedom or the Nobel Peace Prize for our Great Works?

Probably not.

So, what did Jesus mean when he assured us we will do greater works than he, the miracle worker who changed the water into wine, raised Lazarus, gave the blind man sight, and cured the royal official’s son at Capernaum did?

His dazzling Great Works reflected his Father working in him to draw all of us to God, to abide in God.

The dazzling Great Works we do because we believe in Jesus are probably a lot subtler, more nuanced. Yet, the impact that our lives, lived in union with God, are having on others is probably more profound than we will ever know in this lifetime.

I think of a young mother who works for poverty wages at a dollar store in a section of town riddled with drugs, violence, prostitution, alcoholism and theft. She is committed to caring, as a single parent, to feeding, clothing and loving her five children in home unfit to be a chicken coup. Every day she is faithful in getting her children to school, paying bills and reporting to work. The influence she has on her family, her customers and on me, she will never fully know.

But I guarantee her influence is a Great Work. I am inspired by her faithfulness to God, which she often mentions to me, and to her commitments as a mother. When I experience a setback, a disappointment, a loss, I think of her and the profound grace God gives her each day to do the little things that she is called to do. This lifts me.

Believing in Jesus leads us to want to abide in him, to let him abide in us. This union, prayerfully experienced in moments of silence each day, opens our deepest selves to make room for the Spirit to fill us, to set us on fire, to act in amazing loving ways. These ways may not lead us to do Great Works as King Charles does. More likely we will be led to act quietly, behind the scenes, without fanfare, to be faithful to our daily responsibilities, done in love. Caring for a disabled or ill family member or neighbor, treating people with justice, compassion and love, being faithful parent, spouse, employee while opening our hearts, our homes, our neighborhoods, our country to our brothers and sisters who are hungry, lost, afraid, alone . . .these are all Great Works.

In your quiet moments of prayer today, ask God to do Great Works in you. And don’t be surprised if the answer to your prayer is: “just keep doing the little works you are doing, faithful one.”

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, May 5, 2023

Scripture:

Acts 13:26-33
John 14:1-6

Reflection:

Where I am going you know the way.” Thomas said to him, “Master, we do not know where you are going; how can we know the way?” Jesus said to him, “I am the way and the truth and the life.  -John 14:5

Once in Rome, my wife and I were trying to find a particular landmark. We stopped and in our best broken Italian, asked a local which way to go. With great enthusiasm and many hand gestures he gave us a long string of directions to follow. We thanked him with a Grazie mille! (A thousand thanks) and continued on our way. Once we were out of earshot, I asked my wife how much of that she had understood. She replied, “I got the first part, keep going straight. Then he lost me!”

In today’s gospel Thomas is confused and asks Jesus for directions. Jesus says, it is simple: “I AM the way.” His direct answer is both heartening, and at times, difficult to understand. But Jesus asks us as he did His first disciples, “Follow me.”

How many of us start along the path towards the Father and then find ourselves distracted or discouraged, drawn this way and that, turned around and casting about, looking for the way? We may follow one of the paths the world offers: riches or fame, overstimulation or languor, wondering why we are still dissatisfied. And yet, Jesus is always before us, beckoning us onward, saying, “I am the way, follow me.” Unlike our Italian friend in the story above, Jesus doesn’t give us a series of complicated directions then send us on our way to fend for ourselves. No, He accompanies us every step of the way. As He teaches in Matthew 28:20: “I am with you always, until the end of the age.” We just need to pause and center ourselves, then turn once again to Him.

To finish off the story I began with, my wife and I realized we could go forward until we were lost again, then ask another person for directions. So it is on the path to the Father. We can (and should!) ask daily, if not minute by minute, “What is the way, Lord?” Jesus never tires of revealing to us, “I am the way. Follow me.”

Talib Huff is a retired teacher and a member of the retreat team at Christ the King Passionist Retreat Center in Citrus Heights, California. You can contact him at [email protected].

Daily Scripture, May 3, 2023

Scripture:

1 Corinthians 15:1-8
John 14:6-14

Reflection:

Even within the ‘bubble’ of a “lifetime faith” (a way of life one has known since early years), we sometimes need a ‘faith with a faith’ to hold fast to the fact that Jesus is the image of God.

Every time our mind is stretched in that direction, and we learn something new about Jesus as the revelation of God and thus gain some insight into the mystery of God, we can so easily slip backward. That is, when we relax or pause from being contemplative, we can easily tend to revert to deeply held and usually unconscious feelings about God that tend to reinforce old images. It is as if humankind has a default position when it comes to the divine, and it re-sets itself every time we pause our prayer or lose focus on Jesus himself.

Jesus is more than the image of God, true as that is. He shows us the dynamic life of God and the kind of life God wants to live with us. In his every word, deed, attitude, and teaching Jesus is revelation itself.  His life was and is with us in the Resurrection, lived in an ongoing dynamic of revelation, healing, compassion and compassionate leadership to bring us home to God.

It takes some faith to truly appreciate that everything we see, hear and feel when we contemplate Jesus is a revelation of God.

To be in a relationship with Jesus enables us to know God and is not so much about proofs (“show us the Father”), but rather it is to step out into life each day trusting that he is the way, truth and life. To adhere to his vision and to live like Jesus, as best we can, is to know God. It is as simple and as profoundly mysterious as that.

The challenge for each one of us, life-long followers as we may be or newly commissioned disciples, is to not take this relationship for granted, but rather to keep growing in faith.  “Have I been with you for so long a time, and you still do not know me?” asks Jesus of Philip.

The question can be a talisman-like one for us, one to keep close and ‘wear’ so that it can serve as a reminder and challenge us to greater depths. It is a question for us to take into this day and indeed, into life.

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

Daily Scripture, May 2, 2023

Memorial of St. Athanasius, Bishop, and Doctor of the Church

Scripture:

Acts 11:19-26
John 10:22-30

Reflection:

St. Athanasius, bishop of Alexandria in North Africa, has been recognized by the Catholic Church for his holy life and his profound theology, and is now revered as a “Doctor of the Church.” But in his lifetime, he was regarded as a troublemaker by the Roman emperors and even some of his fellow bishops. He was persecuted and threatened; and banished from his people in Alexandria five times. He spent seventeen of forty-six years of his episcopate in exile.

Although St. Athanasius lived in the fourth century, he experienced intimidation and displacement much like the earliest disciples, whose ministries are described in the Acts of the Apostles. And like Barnabas in today’s reading from Acts, “he encouraged the believers to stay true to the Lord in firmness of heart” (Acts 10:23) despite all their obstacles.

In the fourth century of Athanasius, the obstacle was a heresy called Arianism, which taught that Jesus was not fully divine. There was bitter division in the Church on this issue. St. Athanasius taught that Jesus the Son of God, the Eternal Word through whom God made the world, entered the world in human form. This is the Incarnation, meaning to “take on flesh.”

St. Athanasius risked his life and his reputation to continue to preach the truth of Jesus’ Incarnation because he believed it so deeply. He challenges us to love our world because Jesus the Eternal Word entered our world in human form and shared our reality, loving it ALL. Our love for this world shows in our reverence for life on our planet: species of animals and plants that have evolved over millennia; as well as the diverse cultures, which are the result of human genius to survive and thrive in varied places around the world.

And so, we pray for courage to respond:

—when ecosystems are being destroyed and Indigenous people removed from their lands,   

—when people struggle to hold on to their cultural ways of life after they are displaced by climate change, war, or persecution,

—when we fail to see the face of Jesus in someone of a different ethnicity, nationality, or religion.

We ask for the graces of loving determination, clarity of thought, and reverence for life that we celebrate today in the life of St. Athanasius of Alexandria, Doctor of the Church. In the name of Jesus, we pray. Amen.

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.

Daily Scripture, May 1, 2023

Scripture:

Acts 11:1-18
John 10:11-18

Reflection:

While all Scripture is the living word of God carrying a message to us as individuals and as part of the Community of Faith there is something very special about the readings during the Easter season. The word that comes to mind upon reflecting on today’s readings is Unity. We are one.

We are made one by our common baptism. We have One Shepherd who has One Voice who is Jesus and he knows me by name.

Yet, in our oneness we are different, we have different life experiences, different reference points, all made uniquely as a piece of God’s own life. As such we are called to reflect that life of Christ to all we meet. There is unity in our diversity, and we must recognize and celebrate that blessing.

I was struck by Jesus’ words in the final verse of the Gospel: “A thief comes to steal and slaughter and destroy; I have come so that they might have life and have it more abundantly” v.10. I wonder if we miss the point of this verse when we see the thief as other than ourselves. Those are strong words: steal, slaughter, destroy. Taking these words and adding a line from our first reading, “..who was I to be able to hinder God?” v.17b, begs the question, have I ever hindered God?

Have I in my humanity ever stole or slaughtered or destroyed? Of course, I have! We all have in some form or other, it’s our broken humanity and even that unites us. In the final verse of our first reading as the circumcised believers listen to Peter’s experience they stopped objecting and glorified God, saying, “God has then granted life-giving repentance to the Gentiles too.” v.18 These words sound very much like the abundant life Jesus came to bring to all.  Unity, trust, faith, humility, wisdom. All are included, all are equal when we remain open to humbly listening to the Spirit in our world.

We choose abundant life whenever we put ourselves in the proper place as a child of God among many.

May we all come to Taste and See the Goodness of the Lord in each other.

May we drink deeply from the abundance of the Good Shepherd who calls us all by name. Amen.

Jean Bowler is a retreatant at Mater Dolorosa Passionist Retreat Center in Sierra Madre, California, and a member of the Office of Mission Effectiveness Board of Holy Cross Province.

Daily Scripture, April 30, 2023

Scripture:

Acts 2:14a, 36-41
1 Peter 2:20b-25
John 10:1-10

Reflection:

When I was a little girl, I remember my parents always being very careful to make sure our backyard gate was always locked. No one could get in, and I, being a little three-year-old girl, could not get out. I wasn’t supposed to talk to anyone through the gate, no matter what they said. The gate was security and safety, giving my parents a sense of knowing that no harm could come to me from outside that gate. 

And what was outside the gate? I remember my parents warning me about bad people who could take me and hurt me. When we went shopping, I always had to hold my Mom or Dad’s hand, I couldn’t talk to strangers, I definitely could NOT take candy from a stranger. At the age of three, I had a very specific understanding of what danger could be. 

In today’s gospel reading, Jesus is the gate. Only good people will use the gate – they would have no need to jump the gate or make a hole through the fence. He is the keeper of the gate – the gate opens, he calls them by name and leads them as a group through the gate. The beauty of this is that the sheep can recognize their shepherd’s voice. They don’t recognize anyone else’s voice.

Jesus came to give new life in abundance. We are totally his, and as we continue to recognize his voice, may we follow him on to our heavenly home.

Patty Masson is the Director of Adult Formation and Evangelization for St. Ignatius of Loyola Catholic Church in Spring, Texas.

Daily Scripture, April 29, 2023

Memorial of Saint Catherine of Siena, Virgin & Doctor of the Church

Scripture:

Acts 9:31-42
John 6:60-69

Reflection:

Start being brave about everything. Drive out darkness and spread light. Don’t look at your weaknesses. Realize instead that in Christ crucified you can do everything. – Saint Catherine of Siena

Today the Church celebrates the feast day of one of the four women who are Doctors of the Church, Catherine of Siena. Her influence on Pope Gregory XI to return to Rome from Avignon, France was Divine intervention only because she listened to God with deep love and was open to the Holy Spirit.

The above quote from Saint Catherine of Siena goes so well with the readings for today. It is also relevant for our present situation in our country and world. It challenges us to be the one who “drives out darkness and spread light”. It challenges us to be the ones who bring light to those around us. A smile, a small act of kindness or a gentle word. As humans we tend to look at our shortcomings when God has given us many gifts and talents. When we focus on these, we become so much stronger.

In the first reading from Acts of the Apostles, Saint Peter is traveling around and comes across a paralyzed man and through Saint Peter’s healing other people of the region “turned to the Lord”. As he continued his travels he comes to Joppa and hears, through two messengers, that “a disciple named Tabitha” has fallen ill and has died. Seeing the grief of the friends and family he is moved to pray for her and raised her up. It stuck me how both accounts sound like the healing accounts of Jesus in the Gospels. Not surprising that Saint Peter, being the head of the Church, would be the mirror image of Christ showing affirmation of his authority given to him by Christ. Saint Peter is using his authority to spread the light of Christ by alleviating suffering.

As Christians, disciples of Christ, we too are called to use our God given talents to help ease pain and suffer and be joy, peace, and light to others. In the Gospel, Jesus tells the disciples that the words that he has spoken to them are “Spirit and life”. The words of the Gospel and readings from other books of scripture are meant to feed our souls, stoking the Light that lives in us. Saint Catherine’s quote at the beginning of this reflection says it best, “Drive out darkness and spread light.” To do this, we need to take time for prayer and reflection and then put that energy into action. The Saints would most likely say to do the ordinary things of life extraordinarily.

May the Light that was given to you at your Baptism continue to burn as light for others.

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

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