Tuesday, May 29, 2018

SACRED HEART AND DIVINE MERCY


                      SACRED HEART AND DIVINE MERCY                  

Devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus
Rooted in the Holy Scriptures and practiced in a variety of ways throughout the Christian centuries, the devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus reminds us that our Lord Jesus never ceases to pour out upon us the sevenfold grace of the Holy Spirit from His glorious Pierced Heart. The devotion was fostered and strengthened, in a wonderful way, through the apparitions of our Lord Jesus to Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque in the seventeenth century.
The essence of the devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus is our response to the piercing of the Heart of Jesus on Calvary. The pierced Heart of Jesus is a permanent invitation for us to place our sinful and poor hearts into the Sacred Heart. The devotion to the Sacred Heart helps us to lift up our hearts to our Lord Jesus throughout the day, overcoming, with the help of His grace, the temptation to sin and finding in Him the strength to love as He loves.
The practice of enthroning the image of the Sacred Heart in our homes and places of work reminds us to draw grace from the glorious Heart of Jesus throughout the day. The enthroned image of the Sacred Heart becomes the centre of our home and our work, the place which recalls to mind that our Lord Jesus alone is the King of our hearts.
The Season of Lent is a wonderful time for individuals and families to prepare for the Enthronement of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, which is fittingly celebrated during the Sacred Triduum of Holy Thursday, Good Friday and Holy Saturday, on Easter Sunday, or during the Octave of Easter. If you desire more information about the Enthronement of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in your home or place of work, I urge you to obtain a copy of The Enthronement of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, published by the Archdiocese.


Devotion to the Divine Mercy
Pope John Paul the Great strongly promoted the devotion to the Divine Mercy, which our Lord gave us to us through Saint Faustina Kowalska in the last century. In a time when so many had grown forgetful of God and, therefore, had despaired of His mercy and love, our Lord Jesus appeared to Saint Faustina, urging us to place our complete trust in Him.
Saint Faustina taught us to pray, especially at the hour of out Lord's Passion and Death, the Chaplet of Divine Mercy, returning us to the source of our salvation in Jesus Christ and our share with Him in the work of salvation. She also taught us to observe the Novena, beginning on Good Friday, to prepare for the celebration of Divine Mercy Sunday. The devotion to the Divine Mercy, like the devotion to the Sacred Heart, helps us to keep our minds and hearts focused on the mystery of our Redemption.
If you are not familiar with the devotion to the Divine Mercy, I urge you to use the weeks of our Lenten observance to begin praying the Chaplet of Divine Mercy daily. I also encourage you to observe the Novena of Divine Mercy.
Devotion to our Lord and His Passion
Both the devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the devotion to the Divine Mercy are privileged ways of coming to know more fully our Lord's love for us and express more fully our love for Him, in return. Both devotions keep us in communion with our Lord in His Suffering and Dying, so that we unite our suffering and dying with Him, as an act of total love of God and neighbour.
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Sunday, May 27, 2018

TRINITY - HEART AND SOUL OF CHRISTIAN LIFE

TRINITY - HEART AND SOUL OF CHRISTIAN LIFE
It is impossible to overestimate the importance of the Trinity in Christian life. The Compendium of the Catechism is very direct about it.
“What is the central mystery of Christian faith and life?” it asks (44) and answers: “the Most Blessed Trinity.”
Later (428), it teaches that we are all called to holiness and says it comes from “intimate union with Christ and, in him, with the Most Holy Trinity” (428).
The Trinity is the heart, soul and source of our Christian life.
But this can seem a bit strange. Following Jesus, we get: He is the God-man whose actions and reactions we can see in the Gospels. Imitating the saints we get: They show us how to live Christ’s life in new contexts.
Life in the Trinity is another matter. The Trinity is a mystery defined for us by its inability to be grasped. God is both three and one. The Son is truly a son to the Father, but they are co-eternal. The Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father, and the Son is the love between the Father and Spirit, but he is also a separate Person and is also co-eternal.
We accept Trinitarian life but do not understand it, so how can we be a part of it?
Today’s readings have the answer.
From the first reading, we learn that life in the Trinity means relying on God precisely because we don’t understand.
Says Deuteronomy: “Did anything so great ever happen before? Was it ever heard of? Did a people ever hear the voice of God speaking from the midst of fire, as you did, and live? Or did any god venture to go and take a nation for himself from the midst of another nation, by testings, by signs and wonders, by war, with strong hand and outstretched arm, and by great terrors, all of which the Lord, your God, did for you in Egypt before your very eyes?”
We may not understand how God works in himself, but we know how God works in our lives, just like, as children, we cannot fathom our parents’ relationship, but can see what it does for us. We know that God calls us, strengthens us, encourages us, protects us and ennobles us.
In the second reading, we learn that Christ is our “in” into the Trinity.
“You received a Spirit of adoption,” Paul writes, “through whom we cry, ‘Abba, Father!’ The Spirit himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, then heirs, heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ.”
We have been adopted by the Father through Christ. The way we talk about this relationship is not just talk: We are one body in Christ, and that means we are united with the Son of God.The Father is no longer a distant, aloof figure — he is Abba, our “dad.”
The Gospel then gives the consequences. In a startling passage, if we only stop to think about it, Jesus says: “All power in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations.”
We are heirs through Christ and the Spirit to an intimate relationship with the Father, which allows us to act in his place in the world.
But there are caveats. We can only sustain this if we act as God instructs.
The first reading gives this caveat: “You must keep his statutes and commandments that I enjoin on you today.”
The second says we are heirs with Christ “if only we suffer with him.”
And in the Gospel, Christ gives us power not to triumph over others, but to share the power, baptizing them into the Trinity and “teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you.”
But each gives a promise if we do as God wants us to do.
You keep the commandments, says Deuteronomy, so “that you and your children after you may prosper.”
We suffer with him, says Paul, “so that we may also be glorified with him.”
And if we spread his Church, says Jesus, “Behold, I am with you always, until the end of the age.”

Sunday, May 13, 2018

DYNAMIC FAITH

DYNAMIC FAITH
James 2:18-19
But someone will say, 'You have faith; I have deeds.' Show me your faith without deeds, and I will show you my faith by my deeds. You believe that there is one God. Good! Even the demons believe that – and shudder. (NIVUK)
Read the verses around this Bible passage from the Internet Bible: in English, and many other languages
Faith is not just an intellectual concept or an emotional experience. Neither is it something we construct by talking. Faith in God is a conviction that we can trust God's word about things we cannot see (Hebrews 11:1-6). To trust Him is a decision of the will which results in confident action. Responding to another person is the essence of relationship. That is equally true of our relationship with God. Although some may suggest that there are two sorts of Christian - the holy thinkers and the practical helpers - it should not be the case. Indeed, it cannot be true.

While some may be more gifted in physical service than others, if it is not an act of obedience to God's Word it is spiritually unprofitable. Likewise, those who have a strong intellectual grasp of Bible truth are spiritually unprofitable if their knowledge does not result in godly behaviour. Those who are truly dedicated to holiness of mind, cannot ignore the practical demands to serve the living God. And those who serve with endless patience and self-sacrifice need the motivation that they find in the life and teaching of Jesus; so that they desire to do the things that please Him.

It is common for people to say that they believe in God. James says, very provocatively, that even the demons believe in God! Demons spoke out of people they possessed, to Jesus, acknowledging His deity and fearful of His authority over them (Mark 1:24). Satan knows that he is already doomed, and that the remaining days of his reign of terror are numbered by God (Revelation 12:12). If the evil spirits are in such awe of God's power, there surely cannot be any sort of tepid belief system for human beings. True faith must result in a conviction of heart, and a determination of will, to obey God's Word in a practical way (Luke 11:27-28).

A Christian life that just revolves around sung worship, teaching and prayers is defective unless it results in living a Jesus-lifestyle of compassionate, sacrificial action towards others. So, where better than the workplace to demonstrate your faith? It may not start with preaching, scripture posters or apologetic debates over coffee, but it should be 'going the extra mile' with those who insult you, comforting the despised, encouraging the disabled and praying for your enemies (Matthew 5:41-44). A willingness to stoop below your 'rights' is good evidence that you really do follow Jesus: it will also open people's ears to hear the explanation of why you live that kind of life and why you trust in Jesus.
Father God. Thank You for giving me the faith to believe in You and be grateful for all that Jesus has done to save me. Forgive me for the times I have failed to do what You have said or done what You have not commanded. Please help me to act in such a way that all those around me at work and in my community may understand what a good God You are, through observing my compassionate obedience, as well as my stand for truth. In Jesus' Name. Amen.

Saturday, May 12, 2018

WHAT IS THE GOSPEL

What is the gospel
 
The word gospel literally means “good news” and occurs 93 times in the Bible, exclusively in the New Testament. In Greek, it is the word euaggelion, from which we get our English words evangelistevangel, andevangelical. The gospel is, broadly speaking, the whole of Scripture; more narrowly, the gospel is the good news concerning Christ and the way of salvation.

The key to understanding the gospel is to know why it’s good news. To do that, we must start with the bad news. The Old Testament Law was given to Israel during the time of Moses (Deuteronomy 5:1). The Law can be thought of as a measuring stick, and sin is anything that falls short of “perfect” according to that standard. The righteous requirement of the Law is so stringent that no human being could possibly follow it perfectly, in letter or in spirit. Despite our “goodness” or “badness” relative to each other, we are all in the same spiritual boat—we have sinned, and the punishment for sin is death, i.e. separation from God, the source of life (Romans 3:23). In order for us to go to heaven, God’s dwelling place and the realm of life and light, sin must be somehow removed or paid for. The Law established the fact that cleansing from sin can only happen through the bloody sacrifice of an innocent life (Hebrews 9:22).

The gospel involves Jesus’ death on the cross as the sin offering to fulfill the Law’s righteous requirement (Romans 8:3–4; Hebrews 10:5–10). Under the Law, animal sacrifices were offered year after year as a reminder of sin and a symbol of the coming sacrifice of Christ (Hebrews 10:3–4). When Christ offered Himself at Calvary, that symbol became a reality for all who would believe (Hebrews 10:11–18). The work of atonement is finished now, and that’s good news.

The gospel also involves Jesus’ resurrection on the third day. “He was delivered over to death for our sins and was raised to life for our justification” (Romans 4:25). The fact that Jesus conquered sin and death (sin’s penalty) is good news, indeed. The fact that He offers to share that victory with us is the greatest news of all (John 14:19).

The elements of the gospel are clearly stated in 1 Corinthians 15:3–6, a key passage concerning the good news of God: “For what I received I passed on to you as of first importance: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures, and that he appeared to Cephas, and then to the Twelve. After that, he appeared to more than five hundred of the brothers and sisters at the same time, most of whom are still living.” Notice, first, that Paul “received” the gospel and then “passed it on”; this is a divine message, not a man-made invention. Second, the gospel is “of first importance.” Everywhere the apostles went, they preached the crucifixion and resurrection of Christ. Third, the message of the gospel is accompanied by proofs: Christ died for our sins (proved by His burial), and He rose again the third day (proved by the eyewitnesses). Fourth, all this was done “according to the Scriptures”; the theme of the whole Bible is the salvation of mankind through Christ. The Bible is the gospel.

“I am not ashamed of the gospel, because it is the power of God that brings salvation to everyone who believes: first to the Jew, then to the Gentile” (Romans 1:16). The gospel is abold message, and we are not ashamed of proclaiming it. It is a powerful message, because it is God’s good news. It is asaving message, the only thing that can truly reform the human heart. It is a universal message, for Jews and Gentiles both. And the gospel is received by faith; salvation is the gift of God (Ephesians 2:8–9).

The gospel is the good news that God loves the world enough to give His only Son to die for our sin (John 3:16). The gospel is good news because our salvation and eternal life and home in heaven are guaranteed through Christ (John 14:1–4). “He has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, and into an inheritance that can never perish, spoil or fade. This inheritance is kept in heaven for you” (1 Peter 1:3–4).

The gospel is good news when we understand that we do not (and cannot) earn our salvation; the work of redemption and justification is complete, having been finished on the cross (John 19:30). Jesus is the propitiation for our sins (1 John 2:2). The gospel is the good news that we, who were once enemies of God, have been reconciled by the blood of Christ and adopted into the family of God (Romans 5:10; John 1:12). “See what great love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God! And that is what we are!” (1 John 3:1). The gospel is the good news that “there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus” (Romans 8:1).

To reject the gospel is to embrace the bad news. Condemnation before God is the result of a lack of faith in the Son of God, God’s only provision for salvation. “For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him. Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because they have not believed in the name of God’s one and only Son” (John 3:17–18). God has given a doomed world good news: the Gospel of Jesus Christ!

Friday, May 11, 2018

WOMAN OF FAITH


Woman of Faith

What is Faith?  Faith is, first of all, God’s action on us. God gives himself to you. He has faith in you since he created you with great hopes for your future. As Jesus says, “You did not choose me, I chose you. I chose you because I believe in you, that you will go out and bear fruit, fruit that will last.” One day, two thousand years ago, God chose a maiden of marriageable age and addressed her as “Hail, favoured one. I have chosen you because I see a great future, a great future that will arise from you womb, and radiate to the whole world, and bring the whole world back to me, the source of all good.”  You remember how Jesus once said: “When I am lifted up I shall draw all men and women to myself.”  When the faith of God entered into Mary, that very faith empowered her to answer her great “Yes” with a complete hope for the future. She would be faithful, strong and reliable. The first among the disciples, she is the one whose discipleship never fails. She is the woman who does not deny, does not betray nor leave her child and run away.

            In Pope Paul VI’s exhortation, “Marialis Cultus”, he noted “a certain dissatisfaction for the cult of Mary and a difficulty in taking her as a model for today” because of the changed circumstances. Modern women do not live in the same world as women of the Middle East at the time of Christ. To this Pope Paul replies that Our Lady is proposed as a model not for her particular (cultural) life-style but for her faith. So Mary is the type (model) of the disciple, and as such for all men as well as women.
            In the Gospels Mary is portrayed as a women of faith, who sings a psalm of praise, known as the Magnificat, upon meeting her cousin Elizabeth in the land of Judah (Luke, 1, 46 –55). The song reflects traditional Hebrew parallelism and metre common in the Psalms and expresses Mary’s belief in and obedience to God. She praises God for exercising divine justice and compassion on behalf of the lowly, both for herself and for Israel as “God’s servant”. With the covenant reference to Abraham, Mary claims this moment as an act in continuity with God’s promises and blessings in the past. Her obedience puts her alongside the leaders of Israel; not only Abraham but also Moses and David. The Magnificat is modelled on Hannah’s (Samson’s mother) song in 1 Samuel 2, 1 – 10, who prayed and said, “My heart exults in the Lord, my strength is exalted in my God.” It preserves the depth of Jewish prayer and is marked by humility and trust in God’s power to save.
            John’s account of the wedding at Cana (John 2, 1 – 13) provides the only Gospel account of a conversation between the adult Jesus and Mary. Although brief, it rings true as an exchange between a Jewish mother and her son. When Mary asks Jesus to provide more wine, his initial response appears rather tetchy. “What concern is that to you and me?” Jews, says the Talmud, often have their feet in the dust but their heads in the stars.
According to St. Augustine (Explaining John’s Gospel, 8.9), Mary is the mother of Jesus’ weakness, not his strength. He makes it clear he will do the miracle but not because of her – his divinity has its own aims, connected with the hour of death to which he steers under the Father’s guidance. She is not privy to that higher mission. The Father controls Jesus’ hour, and Jesus is obedient to him. “Before he does perform this sign, Jesus must make clear his refusal of Mary’s intervention; she cannot have any role in his ministry; his signs must reflect his Father’s sovereignty and not a human or family agency” (Raymond Brown, The Gospel according to John, Vol. I, p. 109).
            However, Jesus, like most Jewish sons, fulfils the biblical command to respect his mother, and obeys her. The wine appears, justifying Mary’s faith in him when she tells the servants the hauntingly unforgettable line: “Do whatever he tells you.”
            Our lives are to sparkle and dance and lure others into the arms of God. Mary’s faith life is a dance to imitate, but the steps are ours to learn, and no dance is the same. What is more important is to grow up, walk on our own two feet, and run after the Spirit’s gifts. A mother’s love stretches us and makes us imitate the love we have been given so graciously. Mother Mary saw that “the Child grew in stature and strength.”
Mary is the Virgin daughter of Israel who bears a Son, who says “Yes” to the God who calls her to carry God’s own Son and birth him in our world. She the lowly handmaid who will be called “Blessed” by succeeding generations, she has the Faith. Her will is to do “the command of the eternal God (Rom 16, 26), even if it means walking the hard road from Nazareth of Galilee to the place of the Skull outside Jerusalem. She saw her Son heading for disaster, but by faith and steadfast loyalty she walked by his side. From the “maid of Nazareth” she will become the “woman on the hill.” And we, men and women of faith, will walk with her from Bethlehem to Calvary. We shall stand and contemplate this magnificent woman on the hill, the woman of faith who replied to the angel Gabriel: “Be it done unto me according to your word.” Rest your eyes upon this brave Mother standing by her crucified Son.
She remembers saying to herself, when he was twelve and already about his Father’s business, “He’s not my little boy anymore.”

Rivulets of blood beading the earth beneath the Cross.
Deep down inside she knew that her little boy was born to die.
Why should she be there?
But this was hers. This cross upon the hill. He had not sheltered her from pain nor ever asked that she not be free to learn anguish. She had learned that.
He had not been fretful or concerned to throw around her soft protection, guarding her against a share in him. He’d spoken truth to her. He’d not been reticent or sparing.
He’d not held her unadmitted to the full acceptance, never.
She had heard what Simeon could say, and at the moment when she’d found the Child that had been lost, he had not consoled her with a gentle paraphrase of futures, eased away from what the days should be. And he’d not softened any loneliness when Nazareth was ended.
She was free to sorrow and not withheld. She could be eager, insistent, insatiate, for this was hers to take, her own. And by a long inclusion granted her, she’d known she’d need not ever turn from grief
Of all the spreading earth this was the one place she might stand with him.
She could be near. He would not deny her now; he’d not forbid her come here.
This was hers, her life, her dignity, her choice, the essence of her heart’s significance, the sum and substance of her existence, the end of her being.
She bore the right to be here, standing under the claim of being the “Woman.”
She could penetrate to this, this small and inner-concentrated anguish.
She could stand here. This was hers.
And he would only look, expecting her.
“Woman, here is your son.”
“Son, your mother.”
Love never looked like this.                      

The woman of the hill has become the woman of our hearts. As the Beloved disciple John took Mary into his own, we too take her home and give her pride of place, even though we humbly admit that our home is not always in order. The brokenness of sin, the evil of destructive attitudes towards through neighbour, and the lust of the flesh; all these destroy our homes and make them unfit for our Blessed Mother to live in. But today we shall offer our brokenness to Mary, the Mother of Health, trusting that she will transform it into something beautiful for God. For health does not mean physical fitness of muscular power;        rather, in the mind of Mary it means the capacity of surrendering our whole selves to God, whatever be our state of health, whether we lie on a bed of pain, or handicapped by injury or ailment or mental torture, we can offer ourselves to God through Mary. That is health. And those who can surrender selves to God are, indeed, in very good health.

 

                                                                                              
        Prayer: O gracious Lady, beloved Mother of God and our loving Mother, from where shall we learn Faith if not from you, sweet Maiden who said “Yes” to God’s invitation to carry the Saviour in your virginal womb, and nurse him at your breast? You followed him with a mother’s concern right through his ministry, accompanied him on his cross-laden ascent to Calvary, and became the sorrowing woman on the hill. Through faith and steadfast loyalty you treasured the mysteries of Jesus in your heart, and have made them ours, so that whatever happened to you and Jesus must happen to us: a holy life and happy death in God and community in him forever. Amen.
{composed by me on 11th. August 2012}