Tuesday, January 25, 2022

 

FOURTH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME – C - 2022

ü  Jesus is still in the Synagogue of Nazareth, his native town.   

ü  The admiration will turn into rage

ü  Probably they think that nothing good can come from the mouth of a simple carpenter  

THE BOOK OF JEREMIAH

Ø  Jeremiah had a profound intimacy with the Lord, to whom he talks like a friend, he complains, he curses himself, he opens completely his hurting heart to the Lord and God whom he loves with his whole heart.   

Ø  We could say many things about this book that bears his name, but here I will give only some explanations on the book’s composition, which may surprise us.

Ø  The prophetic books of the Old Testament are written in poetry, on the contrary most of the book of Jeremiah is written in prose. The autor combines also diverse literary styles

Ø  Another observation that we can make of this book is the disorder of the material that makes up the book, it does not follow a clear chronological line.

Ø  Although it is true that between the beginning - vocation of the prophet - and the end - disappearance of Jeremiah from history, on the way to Egypt, there is a biographical continuation.

Ø  All this suggests that the text has undergone different corrections, arrangements, changes, enlargements, and mutilations. The drafters endeavored to systematize the text as much as possible.  Whatever happened this book is very beautiful, all of us can understand and feel with the prophet in his love and his complaints to the God for whom he gave his life and changed his plans as he himself tells us. [1]

FIRST READING – Jer 1, 4-5. 17-19.

v  Jeremiah has received a call from the Lord, as we read in the previous verses, in this call God reveals him how he was present in his life when he was formed in his mother’s womb. 

v  This revelation fills Jeremiah of enthusiasm; a profound intimate relationship of friendship between God and the prophet begins. 

v  Now God reveals to Jeremiah what his mission will be and why has he, God, chosen him. First, to be the prophet of the nations, what does that entail? 

o   To announce, to say to those he will be sent what the Lord will tell him. God had already touched his mouth and put in it his own words.  

o   And God adds, the reason why he does not have to be afraid, because it is God who makes it a fortified city, iron column, bronze door, all realities that seem insurmountable, indestructible.

o   This will be Jeremiah, the shy man who will always be afraid but who out of love for his God and his people will transmit the truth that God will communicate to him. His life will be spent for his God and for his people, his two loves.

RESPONSORIAL PSALM                                                                       Ps 70, 1-2. 3-4a. 5-6ab. 15ab y 17

R. I will sing of your salvation.
In you, O LORD, I take refuge;
            let me never be put to shame.
In your justice rescue me, and deliver me;
            incline your ear to me, and save me.
R. I will sing of your salvation.
Be my rock of refuge,
            a stronghold to give me safety,
            for you are my rock and my fortress.
O my God, rescue me from the hand of the wicked.
R. I will sing of your salvation.
For you are my hope, O Lord;
            my trust, O God, from my youth.
On you I depend from birth;
            from my mother’s womb you are my strength.
R. I will sing of your salvation.
My mouth shall declare your justice,
            day by day your salvation.
O God, you have taught me from my youth,
            and till the present I proclaim your wondrous deeds.
R. I will sing of your salvation.

§  As we read this psalm, we seem to hear Jeremiah's voice in prayer to his God.

o   He asks for help, protection; his mission es dangerous, his life is in danger  

o   God had told him when he sent him, that he would make of him a fortified city, iron column, bronze door. The author of the psalm asks God to be for him this fortified city….  

o   As if he wanted to remind God what God himself told him, that he knew him and protected him as he was creating him in his mother’s womb.   

o   His whole life was a praise, a prayer to his God and obedience to the mission, that his God, loved more than anything else even his life, had given him when he called him. 

GOSPEL OF LUKE

v Luke’s Gospel is without doubt the most attractive. It is the first one we have to read to discover with joy Jesus, the Savior sent by God “to seek and save what had been lost.”  

v We do not know for sure the name of the author. It is traditionally attributed to a Christian physician, Paul's companion, named Luke.

v It has been written outside Palestine, probably in Rome, between the 80s and 90s.

v The author addresses readers of Greek culture, this gospel does not seem intended for a clearly identifiable community.

v  The book is dedicated to a Christian named Theophilus, to spread it among Christians converted from paganism [2] 

GOSPEL -  LUKE 4:21-30.

*                  Jesus after reading the passage from Isaiah "the Spirit of God is upon me; he has sent me..." says to the assembly of his people, "Today this prophecy is fulfilled in your presence."

*      The reaction is interesting, everyone is amazed, perhaps we would say surprised by the words so wise, so beautiful that came out of the mouth of that young carpenter of their town. All of them know him, some even before he was born, they know the story of his mother who conceived him before marrying Joseph. Anyway, they knew he couldn't know everything he knew."

*      Jesus, as if reading their thoughts, reminds them of the saying "doctor heal yourself" do here the miracles you have done elsewhere.

*      In response, he reminds them of the story of the pagan widow to whom Elijah was sent to favor her in her sufferings; also, the healing of the Syrian general Naaman whom Elisha cured of leprosy. Neither of these two prophets was sent to the people of Israel except to pagan places.

*      Here their anger reached the height, how come he told them that they were worse than the pagans? Didn't God send him to his people like he didn't send the prophets to the people of Israel...?

*      So much was their anger that they wanted to kill him. Luke ends the gospel with this phrase, "But he, passing through their midst, walked away from there.

v "Let us meditate on this reading together with the first; the liturgists have put them together because they find in them the same theme, that is, they explain one another.

v  Am I shocked when someone I consider "less educated than I" proves me with his/her actions that I am wrong? 

SECOND READING                                                                                                                  1 Cor 12: 31–13, 13

      We continue with the First Letter of Paul to the Corinthians. Today we have the last part of chapter 12 and the first of chapter 13.    

·        Last Sunday Paul speaking of the Church compared it to the human body that has many different members, but all form only one body.  

·        Today Paul will speak about love, the motor that moves this body.   

·        Paul tells us that, even if I had the gift of prophecy, the knowledge of all tongues, the willingness to give everything I have to the poor and the courage to let myself be burned if I have no love all this is worthless, only love makes our life valuable.

·        Paul gives us a list of all that love does and can do. He begins saying that love is understanding, helpful and unenvious...  

·        Love remains forever, everything else as sublime, desirable or necessary it might be, will pass away, but love will endure.    

·        Let us remember that God is love, so, our love that participates in his, because he has given it to us, will also endure forever.

·        In the last paragraph Paul tells us as our knowledge, our love is imperfect like that of a child because it needs to grow and develop. There are three virtues, faith, hope and love, and only love will  last into eternity.  

·        Faith is not needed when we see, hope is not needed when we possess what we desired, on the contrary love is needed to be like God.  

CLARETIAN CORNER

 MOTHER FOUNDRESS

          7.  “ My Lord and my God, if you do not tell me in what religious order you want me to enter so as to comply with your      command, I do not know how this will be don.” Because by all means I wanted to be a religious. “My God, perhaps do you want something new?” (I did not know what I was asking)  I asked this question by Divine inspiration because it please hid Divine Majesty to be asked with simplicity, and if this seemed an  indiscreet question, because in God there is nothing impossible, our Lord did not take it wrong, because it was not asked our of curiosity, much less of mistrust in the infinite power of God,  (Our Lord has give this readiness, that as soon as I know the will of God, there is nothing difficult to me, blessed be God for his goodness. Thus, our Lord told me with much pleasure: “Yes, my daughter, I want a new order, but not new in doctrine but new in practice.” And here (at this moment) our Lord gave me the traits of the whole order and told me that I should be called: “APOSTLES of JESUS CHRIST IN IMITATION of THE BLESSED VIRGYN MARY” 

            8. He put again before me all the religious orders and made me see the deplorable state of the universal church and told me with heartfelt words that the evils of this holy church had no other remedy that the observance of his most holy law. 

FATHER FOUNDER  

      22. I was barely six when my parents sent me to school. My first schoolmaster was a very active and religious man, Mr. Anthony Pascual. He never punished or upbraided me, but I was careful not to give him any cause for doing so. I was always punctual, always attended classes, and always prepared my lessons carefully.

      23.   I learned the catechism so well that whenever I was asked to I could recite it from beginning to end without a mistake. Three of the other boys learned it as well as I had, and the teacher presented us to the pastor, Dr. Joseph Amigo. This good man had the four of us recite the whole catechism on two consecutive Sunday nights. We did it without a single mistake before all the people in the church. As a reward he gave each of us a holy card, which we have treasured ever since.

      24.   When I had mastered the catechism, I was given Pinton's Compendium of Sacred History  to read, and between my reading and the teacher's explanations, the work was so deeply fixed in my memory that I could repeat it and discuss it with ease and without getting confused or flustered. 

 



[1] CONFERENCIA EPISCOPAL ESPANOLA – Sagrada Biblia – BAC., p. 1279-1280.

[2] PAGOLA, José Antonio, sj. EL CAMINO ABIERTO POR JESÚS-  3 Lucas. 2012. p. 9.

[3] MOTHER FOUNDRESS,  MARIA ANTONIA PARIS. Autobiography 7-8

[4]  Pascual received his bachelor's degree from the University of Cervera and was Anthony's teacher throughout his elementary schooling. (Cf. par. 45.)

[5]  Toward the end of his life the Saint was still recommending this work to the Spanish bishops assembled in Rome for Vatican I as a suitable text for minor seminarians. (Cf. Writings, p. 504.)

[6] FATHER FOUNDER. SAINT ANTHONY MARY CLARET – Autobiography 23-25.

Tuesday, January 18, 2022

 

THIRD SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME  – C – 2022

SUNDAY OF THE WORD OF GOD

 

Ø  In this third Sunday in Ordinary Time, we see Jesus in the synagogue of Nazareth reading from the prophet Isaiah and, saying openly to his listeners that, this prophecy was fulfilled in him. He is the fullness of revelation; he is the Word of the Father made flesh. 

 

Ø  On September 30, 2020 Pope Francis published an apostolic letter called Scriptura Sacrae Affectus (Love for the  Sacred Scriptures) in the occasion of the XVI centenary of  St. Jerome’s death. In this letter he stablished the celebration of the   Sunday  of the Word of God;  to be celebrated every year on the Third Sunday in Ordinary Time.  He says:

 

Ø   This led me to institute the Sunday of the Word of God  as a means of encouraging the prayerful reading of the Bible and greater familiarity with God’s word.  All other expressions of piety will thus be enriched with meaning, placed in their proper perspective and directed to the fulfilment of faith in complete adherence to the mystery of Christ.

 

THE BOOK OF NEHEMIAH

ü  In former times this book together with the book of Ezra formed a single book.  

ü  Maybe they were both part of a greater work called the Chronicles.   

ü  If we compare the end of the second book of Chronicles with thebeginning of the book of Ezra, we become aware that there is a real continuity between both texts.   

ü  The truth is that now the Chronicles form a unity in themselves, and the books of Ezra and Nehemiah are two different books.  

ü  The book of Nehemiah narrates the return of the Israelites to their homeland after the proclamation of the King of Persia, Cyrus authorizing the return of the Israelites to their homeland.  

ü  The return from Babylon brought the restauration of Jerusalem and the re-building of the Temple.  

ü  Ezra was the priest and Nehemiah the governor.   

 

FIRST READING  – Nehemiah 8:2-4ª.5-6.8-10

Ø  The seventh month is the time between mid-September to mid-October. 

Ø  The priest Ezra brings the Book of the Law of Moses, the Torah, and reads it before a large gathering of men, women, and children able to understand.   

Ø  It seems that this reading goes from very early in the morning until noon.   

Ø  It is a reading in the way we do lectio divina, they read and explain the meaning of what has been read.   

Ø  The assembly listened attentively to the reading, they even wept probably from emotion to hear the Word of God in their language and in their own homeland.  

Ø  The priest invites them to rejoice and eat well to celebrate this wonderful event.  

Ø  This reading is accompanied by gestures of respect and veneration to the Scriptures from the people.   

Ø  The reading ends with the following sentence: Do not be saddened this day, for rejoicing in the LORD must be your strength!

Ø  Is this our strength? To celebrate the Word of the Lord?  .

RESPONSORIAL PSALM – Ps 18:8.9.10.15 

R.   Your words, Lord, are Spirit and life.
The law of the LORD is perfect,
            refreshing the soul;
The decree of the LORD is trustworthy,
            giving wisdom to the simple.
R. Your words, Lord, are Spirit and life.
The precepts of the LORD are right,
            rejoicing the heart;
The command of the LORD is clear,
            enlightening the eye.
R. Your words, Lord, are Spirit and life.
The fear of the LORD is pure,
            enduring forever;
The ordinances of the LORD are true,
            all of them just.
R. Your words, Lord, are Spirit and life.
Let the words of my mouth and the thought of my heart
            find favor before you,
O LORD, my rock and my redeemer.
R. Your words, Lord, are Spirit and life. 

v  The Law, the precepts of the Lord are right and    

o   Refreshing the soul  

o   And they enlighten  the way    

v  Now the psalmist mentions the will of God, which, in some way, is the same as his precepts.   

o   Is holy

o   Is stable

v  In this last strophe the psalmist prays to God asking  

o   That his words and the desires of his heart be pleasing to God 

o   That he may always seek God because God is his refuge and salvation. 

GOSPEL:   Lc 1: 1-4; 4, 14-21

*      The gospel we will read in the Mass today begins with the first verses of the gospel of Luke

o   Luke tells us that before him others had written 

o   And that, after having done himself a careful research, he writes, to a certain Theophilus, the truth about Jesus.    

*      After this introduction, the liturgists who prepared the liturgy for today’s mass go to the 4th chapter to  the episode of Jesus in the Synagogue of Nazareth, his native town. 

*      Here they invite him to read, and he reads: 

The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me, to bring glad tidings to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, and to proclaim a year acceptable to the Lord.

 

*      John Paul II says, in apostolic letter Tertio Millennio Adveniente, about the celebrations in preparation of the millennium in nn. 11 and 12,  that  Jesus in the gospel of Luke introduces himself as the incarnation of the jubilar year in which all sins and debts were forgiven 

o   The Holy Spirit is upon him  

o   He has anointed him to  

§  Bring the good news to the poor  

§  Proclaim the liberation to all those oppressed   

§   And to proclaim the year of grace, the jubilar year, the cancellation of all the spiritual and material debts.   

*      What a beautiful way to interpret these words of Jesus.  

*       Jesus, power and wisdom of God, inspire in us a love for Sacred Scripture in which is heard the voice of the Father which enlightens, inflames, nourishes and consoles. Word of the living God, renew missionary zeal in the Church, that all peoples may come to know you, true Son of God and true son of man, the one mediator between man and God (from prayer of John Paul II for the first year of preparation for the great jubilee of the year 2000) 

SECOND READING  - 1 Cor 12:12-30 

§  Las Sunday Paul was speaking about the gifts or charisms that each one of us has received to collaborate in the building of the community.   

§  Today Paul will explain what is the Church:  

§  This reading has 4 paragrahs    

o   In the first Paul says that the body is one although it has many diverse members.   

o   In the second he begins with this same idea but takes us to a new one: all the members are needed, and no one can neither despise any of the members nor say that it is not needed.  

o   We find this same idea in paragraph 3: A member cannot despise itself considering that it is not important, according to the mind of God the members we consider to be less dignified he has surrounded with more care and respect.  

o   You are the body of Christ and each one is a member of this body  

§  Now that the Church is in the process of the celebration of the Synod on Sinnodality “For a synnodal church: communion, participation and mission,” it is the opportune time to reflect together on the meaning of:

o   Communion

o   Participation

o   Mission

 

§  That reflection looking at Jesus will lead us to the realization that the gifts, charisms, are not honors that we have owned, they are not supposed to divide us in superior and inferior classes, that the hierarchy has a service to fulfill, but a service like each one of us has its own, theirs is the service of leadership which does not give us any privilege over the rest, yes it gives one privilege, TO SERVE. 

§  This is what we hope to obtain with this synod, finally to realize our equality, that we are all brothers and sisters of Jesus, sharing with him his God filiation, that we have received because he wants to call us his brothers and sisters.   

§  There is still more, we are brothers and sisters of all the men and women created by God as Pope Francis says in his encyclical FRATELLI TUTTI. 

CLARETIAN CORNER 

            I was very attentive, overwhelmed to what was happening, and it seemed to me that I was reading the Holy Law of God, but without seeing any books nor letters; I  was seeing it written, and I was understanding it so very well, that it seemed to me it was imprinting in my soul but in a particular way the book of the Holy Gospels, which till then I had never read, neither  the Sacred Scripture (O.T). After, by God’s grace, I have read something and I have seen it written word by word, as our Lord taught it to me from the holy tree of the cross. It seems to me that the words I understood were coming out from his most holy mouth. 

            Beside what I saw in these sacred letters (without seeing anything with my bodily eyes as I have said above) an interior voice in the depths of my soul, was explaining me their meaning and the way to practice (…)  To my understanding I saw everything in Christ Crucified who, as he was teaching me the divine letters, was explaining me their meaning. As this was the first time that our Lord spoke to me, I did not understand of these things and I did not know how to comply with his commands. I was crying abundantly and I told his Divine majesty, whom I had very present, that seemed to me that I was speaking face to face with the Majesty of God and said…

 (Autobiography Mother Foundress  5 y 6).

 

The first ideas I can remember date back to when I was five years old. When I went to bed, instead of sleeping—I never have been much of a sleeper--I used to think about eternity. I would think "forever, forever, forever." I would try to imagine enormous distances and pile still more distances on these and realize that they would never come to an end. Then I would shudder and ask myself if those who were so unhappy as to go to an eternity of pain would ever see an end to their suffering. Would they have to go on suffering? Yes, forever and forever they will have to bear their pain !

This troubled me deeply, for I am by nature very compassionate. The idea of an eternity of torment made such a deep impression on me, either because of the tenderness it evoked in me or because of the many times I thought about it, that it is surely the thing that to this day I remember best. The power of this idea has made me work in the past, still makes me work, and will make me work as long as I live, in converting sinners, in preaching, in hearing confessions, in writing books, in distributing holy cards and pamphlets, and in having familiar conversations (Autobiography Fr. Founder 8-9). 

BIBLIOGRAPHY:

CONFERENCIA DE OBISPO DE ESPANA. Sagrada Biblia. Versión oficial. B.A.C. Madrid 2012

BIBLIA DE NUESTRO PUEBLO. (Biblia del Peregrino – América Latina)  Texto de Luis Alonso Schökel, Adaptación del texto y comentarios: Equipo Internacional. 2015

VATICAN – Web page:   Apostolic Letter of Pope John Paul II Tertio Millenio Advenientes 1994.  Pope Francis Scriptura Sacrae Affectus 2020.  Synod on Synodality 2021.