Saturday, November 15, 2014

XXXIII SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME


Ø  In a commentary on next Sunday’s Gospel there are four sentences which may help us in our meditation:   Do not burry the life, awaken responsibility, fear to face danger and,  what does Jesus say about  conservatism.  

FIRST READING  – Prv 31:10-13, 19-20, 30-31
Ø  This book belongs to the   “wisdom literature.” 

Ø  They collect the wisdom  that people get from life, and they offer rules and reflections to live a better life, with less problems.  

Ø  In the book of Proverbs the reader is surprised not to find the common themes present in the books of the Old Testament. The first impression that we get from this book is that it is the most secular of all the wisdom books.  

Ø  It is an ensemble of writings from different authors from different times. 

Ø  Many of these books were attributed to King Solomon, considered the wisest king of all. 

Ø  Although there are many different themes in the book, we may summarize all in two rules of behavior or two ways: the road that leads to   self-fulfilment  and the road to self-destruction.  

Ø  Wisdom and moral go hand in hand, since the one who chooses the behavior which leads to self-fulfilment is wise, on the contrary the one who chooses a behavior that leads to self-destruction is a fool.  

Ø  There is a  correspondence between wisdom/justice and happiness on one hand and 

Foolishness/wickedness and misfortune on the other hand. 

Let us reflect on the message for this Sunday

v  The author commends the good life through the example of a woman, a wife.   

v  He who finds a worthy wife, finds a treasure  

v  What are the virtues of this wise woman, this exemplary wife 

o   She brings good and not evil to those who surround her, especially her husband. 

o   She works tirelessly, for what? For the good of her own and of those who need her.   

o   Her hands, her arms are help and protection to the needy. 

o   In a word she is a strong woman who lives for the good of others and does not think about herself.  

v  The author says that charm is deceptive and beauty fleeting, however the inner beauty which comes from the fear of God is worthy of praise.  

v  Her works are her recompense and her praise.  

v  What a wonderful description of a woman! As we listen to the words of the author of the book of Proverbs the image of so many humble and wise mothers and wives comes to our mind. Women that are looked for counsel and support. Even women whose life might not be seen right to our eyes  are so many times wise and unselfish.  How wonderful is the work of our God in the heart of these women. 

  RESPONSORIAL PSALM – Ps 128: 1-2,3,4-5 

BLESSED ARE THOSE WHO FEAR THE LORD
Blessed are you who fear the Lord
Who walk in his way
For you shall eat the fruit of your handwork
Blessed shall you be and favored. 

Your wife shall be like a fruitful vine
In the recesses of your home
Your children like olive plants
Around your table. 

Behold, thus is the man blessed
Who fears the Lord
The Lord bless you form Zion
May you see the prosperity of Jerusalem
  the days of your life.  

*      The blessing of the man who fears the Lord, the just man, the wise man is: 

o   His work which provides food  for him  

o   His wife who gives him children, and with whom he shares his life “around the table.”  

o   The table around which we not only share the food, but also   love,   tenderness in a word life. 

*      The blessing which we want for this person is that God continues to bless his life, and that he may be able to contemplate the peace of Jerusalem, the one below and the one above which is the abode of God.    

GOSPEL  Mt 25:14-30
v  As we approach the end of the liturgical year, the Church puts for our consideration the eternal life, the life beyond, the consequences of our actions.  

v  Today’s parable calls us to look at the gifts we have received, what do we do with them, how do we live our life: do we try to develop what we have received and make it grow? Or on the contrary do we remain  idle doing nothing.      

v  A man goes on a trip and entrusts to his employees part of his material goods, giving to each one according to his capacity. He hopes they will use the goods they have received from him.

v  After a long time the owner comes back and his employees give him an account of their administration;

o   One had five and now he has five more, another had two and now he has two more, they put to work what they had received. 

o   But the third one who had one had decided not to do anything.  

v  What is the reaction of the boss who gave them the talents, the money? He is satisfied with the first two but angry with the third one. 

v  What is the meaning of all of this for us

v  God when he creates us gives us gifts, very often we live our life without even trying to discover what these gifts are. Many times it is true we do not know how, but very often we are like this lazy employee, we do nothing.  

v  The gifts that God gives to us are to put them at the service of others, and in so doing they are also doing good to us, they help us to develop as persons.  

v  An infinite horizon opens up before us, full of richness and inner freedom, but also at the same time full of work and of self-giving. Eventually we discover that this is the reason that the gifts were given to us, to make of us co-creators with our God and Father. 

v  This thought is fascinating, God starts the process of creation, not in the past but in the present, God is always present. This process is continuous and God invites us every day, at every moment of our life to be his cooperators, these are the gifts we receive today.    

v  Together with the gifts we receive the call to put them to work, and make them fruitful, we receive what we call our vocation= our call.    

SECOND READING  1 Tes 5:1-6
ü  Paul writes to the community of Thessalonica and tells them that they do not need to know either the day  or the hour of the Lord’s second coming. 

ü  Why? Because they already live a life  waiting for the Lord, they are preparing themselves day by day for it. 

ü  Because they already know that the coming of the Lord will be like the coming of the thief in the night. 

ü   Yes the Lord comes into our life, many times without even realizing it, and the Lord will come to take us with him in his home for all eternity, and he will come without being aware on our part, it will be a surprise. 

ü  But Paull says to his community that they do not have to be worried about this reality,  because  they are sons and daughters of light and not of darkness.  

ü  He exhorts them, exhorts us, not to be sleepy but alert.  

ü  Sometimes all this conversation about our final encounter with the Lord fills us with fear and sadness, but it should not be so, because the Lord is already present, he comes to us continuously and he always brings with him love and kindness.  

ü  All that he does for us is always blessing and tenderness.  

CLARETIAN CORNER  

Just after drinking this first gulp (the bitterest for me), the withdrawal of the Archbishop, after very few days in the same moth, our Lord deigned to visit me again with another trial not less sensible and painful. It was to suffer the most painful blow of the sad separation of my beloved companion, Sr. Florentina who got fatally ill on the 14th of September without the doctor discovering her serious condition, was snatched away by death on September 20.

Only the one, who knows the mutual sympathy of two hearts united by God for himself in the same spirit, can understand the pain that filled my soul in this most sad occasion. My suffering was equal to the love I had for her, because it was no less than a love fashioned by God, and I loved her as a part of my soul. So, I felt such pain with this separation as if my soul would be separated from my body. How many things afflicted my soul at the same time. Her irremediable loss! In an unknown country! My loneliness was complete!!! Because, even though I still had the three young sisters, they were still so tender in the practice of virtues they were in need of all my valor and efforts not to be discouraged in their good purpose. Oh, impenetrable design of God. He promised me, this creature to help me: He called her to follow me, she obeyed faithfully his divine call…and when we set foot at the place of our call, He took her to Himself, undoubtedly to reward her burning zeal, and leaves me again alone as on the day He called me. Venerable María Antonia París, Foundress of the Claretian Missionary Sisters  179-180. 

I remember that in my second year on the island I wanted to go overland to Baracoa because the sea wasn't fit, and I took off with my companions. We took along a cook, both because the places we were going to were few and far between and because the inhabitants of the few outlying houses had abandoned them in their flight from the cholera epidemic. Our good cook fell behind because his pack-mule couldn't walk; so the rest of us went on ahead, arriving very late that night at a house where we could find nothing to eat but a small and really tough piece of hardtack, which we broke into four pieces, one for each priest. Next morning we had to start out, fasting, on the worst road I've ever traveled in my whole life.
We had to cross the river Jojo 35 times because it zigzags between two high mountain ridges, and the traveler has no course open to him other than to cross it. After we made it past the river, we had to climb a stretch of mountains called the Knives of Baracoa. The name fits them perfectly because they really are like a row of knives. A road runs along the crest of the mountains, and there are stretches of it as tortuous as a chambered nautilus. These are divided, so that anyone descending can avoid ascending traffic. Otherwise, if two horses confronted each other, one would have to back up because the road is too narrow to turn around in. The mountains run along the spine of the island for about four leagues, and they are so high that you can see the ocean on both sides. We had to climb and cross these mountains fasting, and the road is so steep that on the way down I slipped and fell twice, although I wasn't badly hurt, thank God. Saint Anthony Mary Claret, Founder of the Claretian Missionary Sisters, Autobiography, 540-41.

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