Deacon Tom Writes,
“God’s Mercy at work”
Today
Abraham is like the little Dutch boy whose valiant effort of placing his finger
in the hole of the dyke averts impending disaster.
Abraham’s actions are directed at averting a disaster, a spiritual one, trying
to hold back God’s wrath against the people of Sodom and Gomorrah. He knows
that the residents of these towns have racked up a pile of sins, yet he appeals
to God not to destroy the cities. Abraham cleverly invokes God’s mercy and
seeks his forbearance not to bring destruction upon the inhabitants of these
places should he find 50, no 45, AHHH 40, how about 30, 20 perhaps, OK 10
innocent people in these towns. Abraham is a gifted negotiator, a skilled plea
bargainer. And God, at least for the time being is compelled to listen to him,
withholding his punishment while Abraham seeks out the innocent. This, to me,
is a wonderful sign of God’s patience with us, his disobedient children, and his
willingness to give us every chance to get things right, even though we fail
time and time again. In today’s first reading we learn that God’s justice is
tempered by his mercy. In teachings about God’s mercy, we learn about our need
to be merciful to each other also.
As
the clock runs down on this Year of Mercy it is fitting to assess the progress
we have made in our efforts to expand the depth and horizons of our capacity to
be merciful. How we engage other
people, what we say to them, and how we say it can have a powerful impact on
them. I have found that just a few
words of kindness can reshape a stress-contorted face into a smile. If you have ever stopped and listened
to someone who wasn’t having a good day and, by doing so cheered them up, you
know it doesn’t take much to make someone’s day. If we have ever reconciled
with someone who has hurt us or offended us in any way, we know the healing and
peace that flows from God’s mercy. As little as these actions are, they are important
ways of sharing God’s grace and making his mercy visible to those around us. God
indeed has infused us with his mercy so that we may share his mercy with
others. When we act as God’s agents we are instruments of his mercy just as
Father Abraham was intermediating between the people of his day and God…And God
listens, I believe, with our ears.
Pope
Francis in his Easter Urbi et Orbi
address stressed the point that only mercy can save the world. How does God’s
mercy come into our world except through the lives and hands of those who love
him? St. Teresa of Avila (1515 – 1582) was a living testimony of this truth.
Her prayer is most fitting for us today.
She prayed, “Let nothing disturb
your. Let nothing frighten you. All things pass. God does not change. Patience
achieves everything. Whoever has God lacks nothing. God alone suffices. Christ
has no body now on earth but yours; no hands but yours; no
feet but yours; yours are the eyes thorough which the compassion
of Christ must look lout on the world. Yours are the feet with which he
is to go about doing good. Yours are the hands with which he is to bless
his people”.
There
is need for God’s Mercy all around us and no hands or feet to help but ours.
Enjoy
the day!
Deacon
Tom
Image from http://www.robparkersblog.com
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