03/29/2010
MONDAY OF HOLY WEEK
Readings: Isaiah 42:1-7;
 John 12:1-11
 
 Scripture:
 
 "Then she dried his feet with her
 hair, and the house was filled with
 the ointment's fragrance." (John 12:3)
 
 Reflection:
 
 We usually take great pains to prepare
 for big occasions. The greater the occasion,
 the more personal preparation time we
 need. Brides take all day to prepare for
 their weddings; a teenager spends the
 afternoon dressing for the prom; the coroner
 spends a day dressing and perfuming a body
 for viewing. During Holy Week, we watch
 Jesus face the greatest events in His
 ministry--His Passion, death, and resurrection.
 In our gospel today, Jesus allows Mary to
 begin His preparation. The costly perfume
 she uses to anoint Jesus symbolizes her
 love and the love of His friends who will stay
 with Jesus through the tumultuous week
 ahead. For Judas, who has no love or
 intention to stay with Jesus, the perfume
 becomes a sign of conflict.
 
 As this Holy Week begins, who will we be?
 Will we be Mary, who has a passionate love
 for Jesus and respects His mysterious personality?
 Can we, like Mary, take the expensive perfume
 of our lives and lay it at the feet of Jesus? Can we
 choose to love Jesus with all of our being (using
 even our very hair to dry His feet)? This is the love
 Jesus will display to us through this week!
 
 Or will we be Judas? Will we be concerned about
 all the exterior things? Will we worry about how
 our money is used and what others will say?
 Will we avoid the journeys through suffering and
 death, eventually living more in the dark than in
 the day?
 
 Renew this day your passionate love for the Lord.
 Choose to stay with the Lord and with yourself
 through the sufferings of the week.
 
 Prayer:
 
 All-powerful God, by the suffering and death
 of your Son, strengthen and protect us in our
 weakness. We ask this through our Lord Jesus
 Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you
 and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.
 Amen.
20:21 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)
03/27/2010
THE PALMS
Like that of the prophets of old, this was
 an overt act designed to drive home the
 truth of the whole matter: a king bent on
 war rode a horse, but one seeking peace
 rode an ass. John’s crowd was remembering
 another triumphal entry, one that Simon had
 decreed would be marked annually as a
 Jewish independence day. Jesus’ mind,
 however, was on something else:
 
 Scripture:
 
 Rejoice greatly, 0 daughter of Zion!
 Shout aloud, 0 daughter of Jerusalem!
 Lo, your king comes to you;
 triumphant and victorious is he,
 humble and riding on an ass,
 on a colt the foal of an ass [Zech. 9:9].
 
 Reflection:
 
 The palm wavers rightly see triumph in
 Jesus, but they don’t understand it. Jesus
 has come to conquer not Rome but the
 world. He comes to the holy city not to
 deal death or to sidestep death, but to
 meet death head-on. He will conquer the
 world and death itself by dying. Just after
 his triumphal entry, according to John,
 Jesus makes it clear how he will win:
 "Now is the judgment of this world, now
 shall the ruler of this world be cast out;
 and I, when I am lifted up from the earth,
 will draw all men to myself" (12:31-32) His
 being lifted up to glory is at once his being
 lifted up on the cross.
 
 We confess our misunderstanding. We, too,
 come to the city gate, agendas in hand, amid
 crowds lined up as though Santa Claus were
 coming to town. In a world that routinely places
 ultimate value on less than ultimate things, even
 the faithful are tempted to come with their want
 lists. Our nationalistic or consumeristic religions
 preach that to keep the rest of the world scared
 or guessing while satisfying our seemingly
 endless material desires is to be not far from
 the Kingdom of heaven.
 
 The palms say that such an approach has been
 taken before, but has been found wanting. Glory
 worthy of the name, the glory that is promised,
 will not be found in a new hero, system or political
 movement. "My kingship is not of this world,"
 says the Johannine Jesus (18:36) -- who also says
 of his followers, "they are not of the world" (17:14)
 Jesus’ glorification comes through an act of self-
 sacrificing love. Life of eternal dimensions is the
 here-and-now gift to those who believe that this
 self-sacrificial One is the Son of God. The waving
 branches say that we misunderstand as did his
 disciples. Our hopes and dreams are too much
 occupied by the ultimately doomed and dead.
 And as in the case of the disciples, only Jesus’
 death and resurrection will clear up our
 misunderstanding.
 
 by Byron L. Rohrig
 
 Prayer:
 
 Lord, you entered Jerusalem with peace in your
 heart. Be our vision that we too can live as people
 of peace in the face of the world’s many conflicts.
 May we hold your vision of justice and peace ever
 before us.
17:27 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)
03/25/2010
ALL WE HAVE TO FEAR IS FEAR ITSELF
Scripture:
 
 Matthew 28:18-21 (New International Version)
 
 18Then Jesus came to them and said,
 "All authority in heaven and on earth has
 been given to me. 19Therefore go and make
 disciples of all nations, baptizing them in[a]
 the name of the Father and of the Son and
 of the Holy Spirit, 20and teaching them to
 obey everything I have commanded you.
 And surely I am with you always, to the
 very end of the age."
 
 Reflection:
 
 When i accepted Jesus Christ into my heart
 and into my life, I was excited, I mean really
 excited.  I don't think there was a person
 alive that I didn't tell about my experience of
 Christ as my personal savior. This experience
 changed my entire life and I simply wanted
 everyone know about it.
 But something happened, something that
 caused me to stop talking to others about
 Christ.
 I began to permit fear to enter my life.  I began
 to fear the consequences of my testamony.
 I was afraid of the ridicule, the laughter, the
 weird looks, the under the breath comments,
 the anger that I would receive.  I was affraid
 of persecution.  
 I looked to the Holy Scriptures for an answer
 to my fear.  The first verses I read was
 Matthew 28: 18-21.  I suddenly realized
 that I had chosen to follow Jesus Christ who
 had all the authority of heaven and earth.
 That power had been given to Him by our
 Father in heaven.  With His power behind
 me there was no reason to fear!  And as a further
 reward, Jesus Christ will be with me forever.
 WITH THAT KIND OF AUTHORITY WITH ME
 THERE IS NO REASON TO FEAR!
 
 Prayer:
 
 Father God thank You for Jesus Christ Your
 Son Who You gave all power and authority
 in heaven and on earth. With You by my side I
 need not fear.
 AMEN
22:09 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)

