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6th Sunday of Year C – 2022

Poverty, hunger, sadness, hatred from others – who would dare say that these will bring happiness?
Someone has dared to say so – Jesus did when speaking to the crowds eager to listen to him (Luke 6:17,20-26).

I wonder how they reacted, all those listening to him on that day…
As they walked back home, they must have been puzzled, wondering about such an unusual message.

I ask myself: ‘Nowadays, how many people are listening to these words, listening and being ready to accept the message given – such a challenging message!’…

Possessions and prestige, this is what people are looking for, not poverty and hunger.
Enjoying life and all the pleasures it can offer, this is what appeals to people, not suffering and sadness.

Of course, there is the promise – the promise of the kingdom of God, of future satisfaction and joy, a reward waiting in heaven.
But precisely, this is all to come… in the future.
This perspective has not much interest for people living in what has been qualified as a time of instant gratification!
Enjoying life now, not in what seems to many as a doubtful future.

We, each one of us, are faced with a choice, a challenge: accepting Jesus’ message and following him, or…
Or, following our own path, searching, and searching, never really finding what we are longing for…

In the 1st reading, the prophet Jeremiah says (Jeremiah 17:5-8):

“Blessed is the one who trusts in the Lord, whose hope is the Lord”.

Trust and hope: relying on someone who cannot disappoint our search – this is the option offered to us.
Instead of a constant search leading to… a dead end.

 

Note: Another reflection on a different theme is available in French at: https://image-i-nations.com/6e-dimanche-de-lannee-c-2022/

 

Source: Image: historyandthenews.wordpress

Good Friday, Year A

Looking at the cross, not just a wooden piece or a silver cross, but beholding Jesus crucified, so many thoughts and feelings can come to us.
Taking part in the celebration of Good Friday, we respond with prayers, songs, and gestures, trying to express something of what we experience.

Pondering over the words used by the prophet Isaiah and those of the gospel text, is somehow… overwhelming:
“Disfigured, despised, rejected, pierced through, crushed, burdened, struck.  »
« A man of sorrows,” is the way Isaiah summarizes his description (Is.52:13 – 53:12).
 
“Betrayed, arrested, denied, abandoned, arrested, put on trial, scourged, crowned with thorns and… crucified,”  is the multi-faceted picture the four accounts of the gospel present us with.

He was innocent, the victim of those in power, religious leaders as much as – if not more than – political rulers craving for the prestige and privileges that were theirs and fearing to lose them.

I pause and think of the news bulletin bombarding us with… similar pictures in some way…
The war victims subjected to nerve gas, the starving children, the helpless mothers mourning so many deaths, the men innocent by-standers tortured and beheaded…
The pictures follow one another, shocking, appalling, exposing our helplessness, if not… our indifference.

They, too, are innocent people suffering from an unjust political system whose power is that of selfish tyrants craving for domination.

 The question arises: What is the difference?

HE DID IT FOR US…

Source: Image: virtual-independence.blogspot.com

22nd Sunday of the Year, C

yoke of JesusAll kinds of books, documents, archives and, of course, nowadays, articles on the web, tell us much about the religions of the world. We can gather detailed information from the earliest stages when human beings started to turn to Someone they believed to be great and powerful and whom they called God.

From all that I researched, read, studied, I never came across a text similar to the one we find in today’s Alleluia verse (22nd Sunday, year C – Mt.11:29): “Shoulder my yoke and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart.”

The words are amazing, the thought staggering, as for the reality, it is so astonishing… it is difficult to believe!
Were it not for the fact that it is Jesus himself who speaks these words, it could qualify as unreal! The Son of God, God himself, says he is humble!

And, he asks us to learn from him and become as he is. This is, in fact, the message of this Sunday. The example used by Jesus in the gospel (Lk.14:1,7-14) gives us a vivid picture of what this can mean in practice. And there are many other examples, plenty of situations where his teaching can be put in practice.

But… it goes against our natural inclination – that of looking for praise, prestige, power, personal recognition. Who wants to be humble? Who really strives to become so?… The true disciples of the Lord. And I know well I should be among them…


Source: Image: www.slideshare.net