Go to www.deaconspod.com to hear a contemporary conversation exploring the treasures our Catholic faith has to offer.
Reflection on the Mass readings from the current Sunday Catholic Lectionary Please check out deaconspod.com for a contemporary Catholic conversation exploring the treasures our faith has to offer.
Thursday, September 29, 2022
Twenty-seventh Sunday in Ordinary Time_C - I've Been Waiting for soooooo Long_100222
Thursday, September 22, 2022
Twenty-sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time_C - The Cost of Discipleship_092522
Twenty-sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year C
The Prophet Amos who speaks to us in our first reading today was a shepherd of Tekoa in Judah during the prosperous reign of King Jeroboam II from 786-746 B.C. For several weeks now we have heard him speak of the injustices against the poor and the complacency of the people of his day. Like all prophets, his messages were very unpopular. Amos told the people that there would be a day of reckoning on account of how they treated the poor. He foretold a time when God would destroy Jerusalem and send his people into exile. The fulfillment of this prophecy took place in 597 B.C., an event history records as the Babylonian Captivity.
Amos belonged to a very special group of Old Testament authors known as the Minor Prophets. Included in this genre of very irritating people are Hosea, Joel, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi. Prophets were irritating because they delivered unpopular messages. The messages they delivered were not their own, but God’s. Prophets encouraged the people to return to God and be faithful to him. Not surprisingly, these individuals also foretold the dismal consequences that awaited the people of Israel for their prideful disobedience and unfaithfulness to God. Inherent in the prophetic message, however, was always a call to turn away from sin and return to the love of God.
It has been thousands of years since the Old Testament Prophets spoke out against the evils of their times. Yet, the passage of time has not silenced the need for us today to hear and take seriously the prophetic messages being spoken to us. Fortunately, there are those among us today who continue to speak prophetically about the poor and suffering among us. They remind us that the poor are still being treated unjustly through limited access to quality education and health care; they point out that racism and discrimination still prevail in many facets of our society; they shed light where immigrants are being exploited. Prophetic voices today remind us that we, like the people of Amos’s day, or like Lazarus in today’s gospel, do not see the injustice and suffering of those around us. It seems that the real sin we all face today in our comfort and our abundance is that the poor and the needy have become invisible to us or worse yet, we have become indifferent to the “cries of the poor”. We have pushed the suffering souls to the fringes of our society so that our paths will seldom cross or our eyes will never meet.
Let us give thanks for the likes of St. Teresa of Calcutta, Nelson Mandela, Thomas Merton, Sr. Helen Prejean, Desmond Tutu, Henri Nouwen, Jean Vanier, St. John Paul II, Martin Luther King Jr., and Dorothy Day to name but a few faithful and courageous souls whose lives and witness have helped keep the embers of the prophetic tradition smoldering in our times. They have helped enlivened the spirits of so many others to continue to do the irritating work of the prophets who have gone before us.
May we listen to their words, imitate them and respond faithfully to the "cry of the poor".
Enjoy the day!
Deacon Tom
Tune into the www.deaconspod.com Podcast to hear a contemporary Catholic conversation exploring the treasures our faith has to offer.
Recommended Reading: “Beginning to pray” by Archbishop Anthony Bloom - a delightful read about mindful prayer.
Thursday, September 15, 2022
Twenty-fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time_C - The Cost of Discipleship_091822
Twenty-fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year C
We would be seriously mistaken to think that cheating the poor and stealing from the needy was a modern-day phenomenon. Sad to say that such behavior has been around for a long time. 750 years before Christ the Prophet Amos chastises those who tinkered with their scales in order to overcharge the poor and needy for their wheat and grain. The Lord has a few caustic words for them, “Never will I forget a thing they have done”!
Have you ever heard the expression, “keeping your thumb on the scale”? In whose favor does that work? In addition, those who engage in such a devious practice, as Amos writes, can’t wait for the Sabbath and the Festival of the New Moon to be over with so that they can take advantage of the poor of the land. Such behavior has gotten the Lord’s attention, says Amos, and the Lord, “will never forget a thing they have done”!
In the gospel, Jesus tells the story of a manager who has quite the way with numbers. Apparently, he was an unscrupulous steward whose deception was detected by his employer. What the steward lacked in integrity, however, he made up for with his imagination. Before he is fired, he cancels part of the debt that others owed his master. This way those whose debts he had forgiven would take care of him after he was discharged. What a fraud and so cleverly done. That’s why Jesus points him out. As deceitful as this act was, Jesus recognizes that the dishonest steward was very successful in taking very good care of himself.
Now, Jesus is not advocating deceitful means in our dealings with the world. Rather, he is suggesting that his disciples be as ingenious and imaginative in ways of building up the Kingdom of God as those who seek to acquire an inordinate share of the things of this world. If just a small token of our efforts were directed toward advancing the Kingdom of God in all our daily encounters; if we put into practice this same imaginative vision in doing God’s work, in our families and offices, where we work or go to school, where we shop or play, in the way we view the people whose ideologies, ethnicities, political views, socio-economic backgrounds differ from ours, do you not think that a more just and peaceful world would unfold before our very eyes. And if you believe that then I suspect two things would follow: one, we would realize that we are missing out on something special and two, we would be more energize to make our contribution wherever we can as best we are able.
Today’s readings prompt us to reflect on how much imagination and energy we put into bringing about God’s Kingdom as we go about our daily affairs. Do we see the poor being abused and cheated in any way today and point it out, refuse to participate, seek to put an end to unfair and unjust practices that oppress them? This is an important question for disciples of Jesus to ask themselves today and every day. And why is that? It is because those words of the Prophet Amos also apply to those who help shoulder the burdens of the poor today... the Lord says, “Never will I forget a thing they have done.”
Enjoy the day,
Deacon Tom
Visit my Blog at: www.deacontomwrites.blogspot.com
And tune into the www.deaconspod.com to hear a contemporary Catholic conversation exploring the treasures our faith has to offer.
Thursday, September 8, 2022
Twenty-fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time_C - The Cost of Discipleship_091122
John Newton wrote these words after he experienced God's unmerited favor to lost souls. They flow from a heart cleansed of its own sordid past and immersed in God’s healing graces.
Grace is part of the mystery of God’s relationship with us, the high point of his creation. God is gracious (as in God is grace), and so he bestows grace upon us and indeed all his creation. It is freely given and nothing we do can earn it. This is so because before we can even think of doing a good act, God’s grace must first stir within us the desire to do that good act. God’s grace moves us into action; that action then draws us ever deeper into a profound relationship with God.
The 20th century theologian, Karl Rahner, defined grace as “God’s personal self-communication to humankind generally and to each individual”. In other words, grace is God communicating his own personal self to us. This is an amazing reality in itself: God is always seeking to communicate with each and every one of us!
Our human existence is marked by mortality and experiences sin and guilt. Grace operates in our lives to help us desire our salvation, to help us seek out a deeper and more personal relationship with our creator, and indeed, to be in communion with him so we can be healed and forgiven. Grace is the operative principle that enables us to, “work out your salvation with fear and trembling” as St. Paul instructed the Philippians.
Most of us today are desperate for God’s healing, compassionate, sustaining, yes, amazing grace in many aspects of our lives… for physical or emotional healing, to mend broken or hurting relationships, to calm our worries, fears, and anxieties about so many things. It seems that we have found ourselves in a world where injustice, ignorance, intolerance, indifference and apathy surround us and we feel helpless to respond. Now, perhaps more than ever before, we need God’s grace to enlighten our consciences and guide us on our journey so that we may be instruments of his love, mercy, and compassion.
Today’s gospel is a reminder that we all can get lost along the way. We can easily turn our backs on God’s amazing grace to do things “My Way” in the words of Frank Sinatra. We have lost something precious and need to get busy trying to find it. We have all lost the original state of grace we had when God made us. By living in the light of Christ and cooperating with the many graces that are given to us in our lifetime, we can be confident that grace will guide us every day of our life and when life’s journey ends, “Grace will lead us home”.
Enjoy the day!
Deacon Tom
And tune into the www.deaconspod.com to hear a contemporary Catholic conversation exploring the treasures our faith has to offer.
Recommended Reading: Disciplines for Christian Living by Fr. Thomas Ryan, CSP provides helpful advice for engaging and living the spiritual life.
Thursday, September 1, 2022
Twenty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time_C - The Cost of Discipleship_090422
Image Credit: Palamas Institute
We have been listening to Luke’s gospels for a number of weeks now. He has been directing us towards a deeper relationship with Jesus by telling us to separate ourselves from the things of this world and to work for treasures that will last. Indeed, Luke urges us to set ourselves apart from all that would separate us from God.
I know that this is difficult to do. We live in the physical world and we work hard to gain the pleasures and comforts that it offers. Yet, we cannot lose focus on the spiritual realities that guide and govern our lives and lead us into the fullness of life that Christ promised us during this life no matter what state this life serves up to us. We who have been blessed with the good things of this life, like the Rich Man, cannot forget those who lack the basic necessities of life just because we are well fed and have a roof over our family. We cannot be insensitive to those who are refugees just because we are safe and sound here in our country or because we have the “right” citizenship. We cannot forget the lonely, the suffering, the addicted, and discouraged just because we are healthy, hopeful, befriended, and living the good life.
Taking up our crosses daily requires our willingness to surrender some of our creature comforts, some of our leisure time, and some of our self-centered way of thinking. We need to place an emphasis on our spiritual life and well being so that we may be sensitive to the needs of those who are less fortunate than we are. This death to self by loving and serving others as Christ did is the one sure way to begin a life in the spirit in order to grow in the awareness of the needs of those we are called to love and serve. Again, growing our spiritual lives is not an easy task but one that will have its own reward in this life and in the world to come.
Enjoy the day!
Deacon Tom
Visit my blog at: www.deacontomwrites.blogspot.com
And tune into the www.deaconspod.com to hear a contemporary Catholic conversation exploring the treasures our faith has to offer.
Recommended Reading: 50 Spiritual Classics by Tom Butler-Bowdon gives a little taste of Spiritual Classic literature in summation form. Nice read.