BEING SACRAMENT

Being Sacraments

We are sacraments for one another. When we open our hearts to welcome, appreciate, and love another person, we encounter God in them, and they encounter God in us.

However, like the disciples in today’s Gospel, when we are so full of ourselves and our own concerns for power and prestige, there’s little room for God to become present to us or to those around us.

When we interact with family, co-workers, classmates, friends, or strangers, rather than asking What can I gain from this person?, Jesus invites us to ask: How can I appreciate and love this person?

Yes, this kind of living may lead, as it did for Jesus, to suffering. But wouldn’t we rather live, rejoice, and suffer together than succeed (or fail) alone?

How can you encounter other people today as the sacrament that they are? How can you be a sacrament, revealing God to them?

25th February 2020

“Where do the conflicts and disputes among you originate? Is it not your inner cravings that make war within your members?” —James 4:1

St. James in speaking of wars, points to the root of every war – the passions and desires in our hearts! Without these, war would just not be possible. The solution he offers is twofold – to fall in love with God rather than the world and to submit to God by resisting the Devil and clinging to God. He closes with very practical advice, “Humble yourselves before God and He will exalt you”.

Jesus, “the Servant of God”, predicts His Passion

Today, we reach the second one of the three predictions of the Passion that stand for Jesus’ journey up to Jerusalem. To this teaching of the Lord, as usual, it follows the disciples defiance. Jesus fixes (us) them: The ascent of God occurs precisely in the descent to humble service, in the descent of love.

In Jesus Christ, God has revealed himself in His descending: He did not boast of His divine condition, but emptied Himself by taking on the nature of a slave until surrendering to the “death on a Cross” (cf. Phil 2,6-9). The Passion predictions reach their culmination in the statement that follows the third prediction: “the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many” (Mk 10,45).

—Jesus is the “servant” of God who suffers and dies, whom the Prophet Isaiah had foretold in his songs. “Service” is the true form of rule, and it gives us an insight into God’s way of being “Lord”.

24th February 2020

St James speaks of the two wisdoms, the heavenly kind which is pure, peaceable, gentle, compliant, full of mercy and good fruits without inconstancy and insincerity. The earthly kind, in contrast, is full of bitter jealousy, selfish ambition, boastful, false, unspiritual, demonic, full of disorder and foul practice. The litmus test, that discerns between the two, is seen by one’s works and the manner of life.

In the prayer of Jesus we perceive God’s concern for humankind

Today, we are again considering the prayer of Jesus linked to His miraculous healing action. Various situations are presented in the Gospels in which Jesus prays while He contemplates the beneficial and healing work of God the Father who acts through Him.

This is a form of prayer which, once again, demonstrates His unique relationship of knowledge and communion with the Father, while Jesus lets Himself be involved with deep human participation in the hardships of His friends or of the many poor and sick people to whom He seeks to give practical help. With His prayer, Jesus wants to lead us back to faith, to total trust in God and in His will. And He wanted to show that this God Who so loved man —to the point of sending His Only Begotten Son— is the God of life, the God who brings hope and can reverse humanly impossible situations.

—My trusting prayer as a believer is a living testimony of God’s presence in the world and of His concern for humankind.

Called to loving action

In truth, “an eye for an eye,” illustrated the “law of retaliation” in the code of the Ancient Near East. It was meant to keep retaliation in check and encourage just proportionate response to aggression. Even with this tempered understanding of the text, however, Jesus is not satisfied, and neither should we be. Jesus’ message reminds us we are called not to mere passivity when facing an adversary, but to loving action. On the eve of Lent, the Gospel counsels that in seeking understanding in disagreement, in extending mercy to one with whom we quarrel, lies the means of true “perfection.”

22nd February 2020

The Feast of the Chair of St Peter.(CATTEDRA DI SAN PIETRO, APOSTOLO)

“The Lord says to Simon Peter:
I have prayed for you that your faith may not fail, and, once you have turned back, strengthen your brothers.” (Luke 22: 32).

The feast of the ‘Cathedra Petri’ (Chair of St Peter) is celebrated annually from the earliest times, on the day of the first religious ceremony when St. Peter returned to the capital of the Christian world. The Chair of St Peter is symbolic of the highest authority in the Church, which belongs to the successors of Peter.

We celebrate today the mission of St Peter and his successors as universal teachers and pastors of the world-wide Church. Jesus Christ, Head of the Church conferred and guaranteed the stability of the office the Petrine Ministry. It is amazing that the office of the Pope, the Supreme Pontiff has not failed. Good men and bad men had been popes but the integrity of the teachings of Jesus Christ has been preserved faithfully. This is what we celebrate today.

Today’s Gospel tells of Jesus conferring on Peter the mission of guiding His Church. And the first reading tells us that Peter, in turn, instructs the elders of the Church to willingly take on their duty to be selfless and sincere in teaching and guiding God’s children.

At first it may seem that Peter may not have been the most stable rock on which the first universal Church was built, considering that he would deny Jesus three times. But in hindsight, it helps us reflect on our own weaknesses and God’s mercy, despite our infidelity.

Today is a good day to pray for political and spiritual leaders who wield power and authority.

15th February 2020

With David making Jerusalem his capital and Solomon erecting the Temple there, Jerusalem became the central point for worship, pilgrimage and sacrificial offerings.

Jeroboam, king of the Northern Kingdom was insecure and selfish. Realising that, in spite of the schism, the people remained emotionally attached to Jerusalem, he feared rebellion and the loss of his throne. So he restored the old shrines at Bethel and Dan, and erected “golden calves” there, thus leading his people to idolatry.

The multiplication of the loaves. Priority of the spiritual

Today, we consider the first multiplication of the “loaves”. It’s one of the great narratives related to the “bread” in Jesus life. What is the reason for Jesus to do something which before —also in the desert— was rejected as temptation?

The crowd had come to hear the Word of the Lord and had left everything. And so, as persons who had opened their hearts to God and to the others in reciprocity, they can receive the bread in an appropriate way. This miracle of the loaves is based on three elements:

1) the search for God, for His Word, with a correct orientation of the whole life;

2) bread should be asked God;

3) a fundamental element resides in the mutual disposition to share (listening to God turns into living with God and it leads from faith to love, to the discovery of the other).

—Jesus is not indifferent to men’s hunger, to their material needs, but places them in the adequate context and grants them the proper priority.

Some scholars seem to find rich symbolism in this text – providing food on the third day symbolises the resurrection, the fish is a symbol of Christ in the Early Church and the loaves the Eucharist.

The Eucharist is life-giving and each time we place the needs of others before our own, we become Eucharistic people.

14th February 2020

Feast of St Cyril and St Methodius.

Both readings today have symbolic actions that reveal a deeper truth.

In the first reading, Ahijah, the prophet, appears wearing a new cloak, symbolic of a new development that will soon take place for the nation of Israel. The prophet then tears up his cloak into twelve pieces (where each piece represents one of the tribes), once again symbolic of what will happen to Israel under Solomon’s reign. Ahijah’s action of handing over ten pieces of the cloak to Jeroboam (Solomon’s servant) was also symbolic of the Lord’s decision to hand over ten tribes to Jeroboam to rule after the death of Solomon.

The Gospel portrays Jesus healing a deaf-mute man using very symbolic actions – taking the man aside, touching his ears and tongue and then using the word “Ephphatha” (meaning ‘be opened’). The ears and mouth were believed to be the in-gate and out-gate of the human soul. Ephphatha is an invitation to be open to hear God’s word and speak it; something that Solomon probably stopped doing, which is what resulted in the beginning of the destruction of Israel.

Each time we listen to the Gospel and sign our forehead, mouth and heart, may we be aware that we are expressing our desire to be open to God’s word, to reflect on it and to speak it.

St Methodius (826? – 885)

He was born in Thessalonica. With his brother Cyril he went to Moravia to preach the faith. They translated liturgical texts into the Slavonic language and invented the Glagolithic and possibly also the Cyrillic alphabet. After his brother’s death he went to Pannonia, where he was assiduous in the work of evangelization. In the complicated international politics of the time he suffered much from attacks by his enemies, but he was always supported by the Popes. He died on 6 April 885.

St Cyril (827? – 869)

He was born in Thessalonica and was educated in Constantinople. With his brother Methodius he went to Moravia to preach the faith. They translated liturgical texts into the Slavonic language and invented the Glagolithic and possibly also the Cyrillic alphabet. They were called back to Rome, where Cyril died on 14 February 869.

HAPPY VALENTINE’S DAY TO YOU.

13th February 2020

Solomon’s heart was not entirely with the Lord.

“When Solomon was old his wives had turned his heart to follow other gods, and his heart was not entirely with the Lord, his God, as the heart of David his father had been.” (1 Kings 11: 4).

Thursday 13th February 2020 in the 5th Week in Ordinary Time.

We see in the first Reading today the unraveling of a great nation and the reasons and consequences of it. We studied the life of David from his days as a shepherd boy to his last Testament to Solomon on his death bed. Did Solomon learn anything from his father David’s last counsel to him?

“For everything that was written in the past was written to teach us, so that through the endurance taught in the Scriptures and the encouragement they provide we might have hope” (Romans 15: 4).

Solomon in his desire to build the greatest kingdom in the world “did not follow the Lord unreservedly as David his father had done.” (Cf 1 Kings 11: 6). The consequences were disastrous for his family and his kingdom.

Where are you tempted today to compromise with the world in spite of this clear warning:
“Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is–his good, pleasing and perfect will.” (Romans 12: 2).

Solomon succumbed to the temptation to compromise with the world. He lost the friendship of God and subsequently his kingdom was torn in two. Are you tempted to enjoy the Casinos on Saturday night and holy Mass on Sunday morning? The Sacred Scriptures are God’s love letter to His family.

Israel, first bearer of salvation for all people.

Today, we feel God’s loving preference for the chosen people (“the children”), although the incarnation of the Son of God was for the salvation of all peoples (symbolically represented in the “syrophoenician” woman). Jesus speaks to his people, to Israel, as to the “first bearer” of the promise. But in giving them the “New Law” He opens them up, in order to bring to birth a great new family of God.

A fundamental aspect of “what is new” in Christ is the universalization of the People of God, as a result of which Israel can now embrace all the peoples in the world, and the God of Israel has truly been brought to the nations, in accordance with the promises, and has now shown as the one God.

—The “flesh” —physical descent from Abraham— is no longer what matters; rather, it is the “spirit”, belonging to the heritage of Israel’s faith through communion with Jesus Christ, who “spiritualizes” the Law, and in so doing makes it the path to life for all.

NOTICE

THIS IS THE SUMMARY NEW POST-SYNODAL APOSTOLIC EXHORTATION OF POPE FRANCIS

TITLE- QUERIDA AMAZONIA…

The post-synodal apostolic exhortation Querida Amazonia

Holy Father’s ‘Four Dreams’ for the region, but steers clear of endorsing married priests or women deacons.

Through “four great dreams” for a better ecological, social, cultural and ecclesial future, Pope Francis says he wishes his new post-synodal apostolic exhortation will “awaken” the world’s “affection and concern” for the Amazon region — and help other areas of the world to confront their own challenges.

Entitled Querida Amazonia (The Beloved Amazon), his 16,000-word summary document is divided into four chapters, each dedicated to a “great dream.”

Drawing heavily on Francis’ magisterium and documents of bishops’ conferences in the region, it follows last year’s Synod of Bishops on the theme of The Amazon: New Paths for the Church and for an Integral Ecology.

The Amazonian region, the papal exhortation states, is a “great biome” shared by nine countries: Brazil, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, Surinam, Venezuela and the territory of French Guiana.

The most eagerly awaited aspect of the document — the ordination of married permanent deacons to make up for a shortage of priests in the region — is not explicitly endorsed, despite the majority of synod fathers voting for such a proposal.

The Pope does not mention the words “married priests,” “priestly celibacy” or “viri probati.” He does say a “way must be found” to ensure priests can bring the Eucharist to remote areas, but places more emphasis on giving laity a greater role while underlining the importance of the priesthood.

Also, despite the synod fathers discussing at length the possibilities of a female diaconate, he does not mention the topic, and rejects the push for holy orders for women, saying such a move would “clericalize women” and diminish their “indispensable contribution.”

He also makes no explicit mention of an Amazonian rite of the Mass, also a subject widely debated at the Synod, but he does call for greater efforts to be made to respect native “rituals, gestures and symbols” and to “inculturate the liturgy among indigenous peoples.”

  1. A Social Dream’

Francis begins his summary document by describing it as a “brief framework for reflection” and weighing it against the synod’s final document, which he says he does not intend to replace or duplicate. “I would like to officially present the final document,” he says, adding that that text sets forth the synod’s conclusions better than he can, and urging “everyone to read it in full.”

The Pope’s first chapter, entitled “A Social Dream,” focuses on raising the quality of life for the people of the Amazon, with a special emphasis on helping the poor and combating “injustice and crime.” He criticizes the damage caused by “economic actors” importing “alien” models of resource exploitation into the territories, the migration of indigenous peoples to cities, and the rise of xenophobia, sexual exploitation and drug trafficking.

“We need to feel outrage, as Moses did, as Jesus did, as God does in the face of injustice,” the Pope writes, adding that the extent of injustice and exploitation perpetrated on the Amazon region in the last century “ought to provoke profound abhorrence.”

He notes that some missionaries “did not always take the side of the oppressed,” and he humbly asks for forgiveness, while stressing it is possible to “overcome the various colonizing mentalities” and urging education for the poor. The Pope also notes that just as members of the Church have been guilty of corruption, so have the Amazonian peoples, who then became the primary victims.

The Holy Father ends the chapter by calling for dialogue, firstly with the poor, respecting them as “having a leading role to play,” and raising a “prophetic voice” on their behalf.

  1. A Cultural Dream’

In Chapter Two, entitled “A Cultural Dream,” the Pope takes a positive approach to indigenous peoples and their cultures, saying they should not be viewed as “’uncivilized’ savages.” They are “simply heirs to different cultures and other forms of civilization that in earlier times were quite developed,” he writes.

Again, he laments how indigenous peoples have been driven into the cities, severing them from their cultural roots, and says “unfair generalizations, simplistic arguments and conclusions drawn only on the basis of our own mindsets and experiences” should be avoided.

He observes how a “consumerist vision” has a “leveling effect on cultures,” says “postmodern colonization” must be combatted, and urges the young to “take charge” of their roots. For the baptized, these roots include “the history of Israel and the Church,” which, he says, can “bring joy” and inspire “noble and courageous actions.”

The Pope urges dialogue with Amazonian cultures and says an authentic identity is not preserved by “an impoverished isolation.” Concern for indigenous cultural values should therefore be “shared by everyone,” for their “richness is also our own.”

By contrast, he observes how a “globalized economy shamelessly damages” the richness of life, and that the “disintegration of families” is a result of “forced migration.” Quality of life cannot be imposed “from without,” he says, as it must be “understood within the world of symbols and customs proper to each group.”

  1. Ecological Dream’

Francis turns to the “Ecological Dream” in Chapter Three, noting that the Lord teaches us to care for each other and the environment, and recalling Benedict XVI’s teaching on “human ecology” and the link with “respect for nature.” The insistence that “everything is connected,” taken from Francis’ environment encyclical Laudato Si (Care for Our Common Home), is “particularly true” of the Amazon region, he says.

He goes on to lambast abuse of the environment and demands an end to the “destruction of mother Earth,” saying “multinationals have cut” her veins and she is “bleeding.”

Francis stresses the importance of water, refers to the Amazon River as the region’s “spinal column,” and says the “equilibrium of our planet” depends on the “health of the Amazon.” The rainforests serve as a “great filter of carbon dioxide,” he says, which prevents global warming and contain “countless resources” that could be “essential for curing diseases.”

Again he criticizes “powerful industries” and “huge global economic interests” for exploitation and for threatening the Amazon biome, but he says the answer is not found in “’internationalizing’ the Amazon region” but rather a “greater sense of responsibility” on the part of nation states.

He urges learning from the “ancestral wisdom” of indigenous peoples to know how to protect the region, and learn from the Amazonian people to “contemplate” the region, not only analyze it. “If we enter into communion with the forest, our voices will easily blend with its own and become a prayer,” the Pope writes, leading to an “interior conversion” that will “enable us to weep for the Amazon region and to join in its cry to the Lord.”

He ends the chapter by calling for “ecological education” to overcome a deeply rooted “consumerism and the culture of waste” in the region — something, he says, the Church can help with.

  1. An Ecclesial Dream’

This brings him on to the final and longest chapter, “An Ecclesial Dream,” in which the Pope focuses on the Church’s role in the region. He stresses that it’s vital to preach the Gospel and bring Christ to others if the Amazon’s problems are to be properly confronted. This must include the “great message of salvation” and to work for “the justice and dignity they deserve.” The indigenous “have a right to hear the Gospel” and to know that God loves every man and woman in Christ, “crucified for us and risen in our lives.”

Referring to the Great Commission, he says without this “great message, every ecclesial structure would just become another NGO and we would not follow the command given us by Christ: ‘Go into all the world and preach the Gospel to the whole creation.’”

He frequently stresses the importance of kerygma (proclaiming the Gospel), while also emphasizing the importance of the Church reshaping her identity “through listening and dialogue.” In this way, inculturation can take place “that rejects nothing of the goodness that already exists in Amazonian cultures, but brings it to fulfilment in the light of the Gospel.”

The Pope goes on to say that Christianity does “not have simply one cultural expression” and what is needed is “courageous openness to the novelty of the Spirit.” And again, he extols indigenous culture, saying “great riches” have been inherited from them, including an openness to God’s action, gratitude, sacredness, solidarity, shared responsibility, the importance of worship and belief in an afterlife. Their ability to be content with little “should be valued and taken up in the process of evangelization,” he says.

Perhaps in an oblique reference to the Pachamama controversy during the Synod and the apparent pagan worship in the Vatican Gardens Oct. 4, the Pope says, “Let us not be quick to describe as superstition or paganism certain religious practices that arise spontaneously from the life of peoples,” and adds: “It is possible to take up an indigenous symbol in some way, without necessarily considering it as idolatry.”

The Pope does not discuss an Amazonian rite of the Mass; instead he supports elements of indigenous culture — “song, dance, rituals, gestures and symbols” — being “taken up into the liturgy,” but notes that after 50 years, “we still have far to go along these lines.”

He expresses disapproval of a Church that “excludes and turns people away” and instead argues for a Church that must “offer understanding, comfort and acceptance” rather than imposing a “set of rules” that only leads to feeling “judged and abandoned.” But mercy, he says “can become a mere sentimental catchword unless it finds concrete expression in her pastoral outreach.”

  1. Viri Probati’

He calls for a thorough revision of priestly formation to make it more pastoral, but nowhere does he mention married priests or viri probati (the ordination to the priesthood of married men “of proven virtue”). Pope Francis does point out that in “more remote places, a way must be found” to ensure priestly ministry. “They need the celebration of the Eucharist because it ‘makes the Church,’” he says, and an accompanying footnote (no. 136) quotes canon 517 that states due to a lack of priests, a bishop can entrust “participation in the exercise of the pastoral care of a parish” to a “deacon, to another person who is not a priest, or to a community of persons.”

He goes on to say the Eucharist “requires the development” of a “rich variety” of “gifts and charisms” and that priests are necessary, but he adds: “this does not mean that permanent deacons, religious women and laypersons cannot regularly assume important responsibilities for the growth of communities, and perform those functions ever more effectively with the aid of a suitable accompaniment.”

Consequently, he says it is “not simply a question of facilitating a greater presence of ordained ministers who can celebrate the Eucharist.” That would be a “very narrow aim,” he says, if “new life in communities” were also not awakened, and he advocates greater lay involvement.

  1. The Role of Women

He extols the role of women in the Church in the Amazon, but says it would be a “reductionism” to believe that only giving women holy orders would mean they had “greater status and participation in the Church.” It would “narrow our vision,” he says, leading the Church “to clericalize women, diminish the great value of what they have already accomplished, and subtly make their indispensable contribution less effective.”

By stressing that a priest takes on the person of Christ to be Spouse to his bride, the Church, the Pope further underlines the importance of priests being male, adding that women contribute to the Church “in a way that is properly theirs, by making present the tender strength of Mary, the Mother.” He adds that in a “synodal Church,” women have a central role to play in Amazonian communities and should have access to other positions that do not entail Holy Orders.

After a brief few words on the what ecumenism and interreligious dialogue can offer the region, the Pope concludes with a prayer to Mary, calling on her to “reign in the beating heart of Amazonia” and to “touch the hearts of the powerful” so that “no one else can claim lordship over the handiwork of God.”

“We trust in you, Mother of life,” the Pope concludes. “Do not abandon us in this dark hour. Amen.”

11th February 2020

Lourdes of Our Lady – Home of Miracles.

“Listen to the petitions of your servant and of your people Israel which they offer in this place. Listen from your heavenly dwelling and grant pardon.” (1 Kings 8: 30).

Solomon acknowledges God in all His might and glory and in doing so he also acknowledges his own humanness. In his prayer, Solomon first praises God for His greatness and then requests Him to listen to the prayers of His people. He truly seeks God’s mercy for his limitations.

In the Gospel, Jesus admonishes the Pharisees for their shallow service to God. Their religious observances were no more than lip service and their sincerity was conditional.

As Solomon says in the first reading, God ‘keeps His covenant and shows loving kindness to those who walk before Him wholeheartedly’. How, then, when we profess faith and trust in Him, could we offer to God worship that is insincere?

Let us make a conscious effort to genuinely love and honour God – through our actions, our words as well as in our personal prayers.

February 11 is celebrated as World Day of the Sick. For, ever since Our Lady appeared to the 14-year-old Marie Bernadette Soubirous on this day in 1858, there have been innumerable healings and cures – both physical and spiritual – of those who have prayed at the place of the apparitions.

Lourdes is living evidence of Mary’s powerful intercessory role.

Who is Our Lady of Lourdes?

She is of course one and the same Lady we honor under the titles of Our Lady of the Rosary, Our Lady of Guadalupe, Our Lady of Mount Carmel, Our Lady of Good Counsel, etc. One Lady, many titles. “From now on all generations will call me blessed.” (Luke 1: 48).

In 1858, the Mother of the Redeemer appeared in Lourdes, France to a 14 year old girl who later became St. Bernadette. She subsequently appeared 17 other times in the same location. Today, a beautiful Basilica stands on the site to immortalize the event.

The Mother is always with the Son.
Our Lady of Lourdes pray for us.