Friday, March 27, 2009

Reflections on the Sunday Readings for 3/29/09

You can find the full Scripture Readings for this Sunday at http://www.usccb.org/nab/readings/032909a.shtml

Amen, amen, I say to you,
unless a grain of wheat falls to the ground and dies,
it remains just a grain of wheat;
but if it dies, it produces much fruit.
John 12:24

This week's reflection comes from the theologian Cyril of Alexandria (d. 444).

As the firstfruits of our renewed humanity, Christ escaped the curse of the law precisely by becoming accursed for our sake. He overcame the forces of corruption by himself becoming once more free among the dead. He trampled death under foot and came to life again, and then he ascended to the Father as an offering, the firstfruits, as it were, of the human race.

He ascended, as Scripture says, not to a sanctuary made by human hands, a mere copy of the real one, but into heaven itself to appear in God’s presence on our behalf.

He is the life-giving bread that came down from heaven, and by offering himself to God the Father as a fragrant sacrifice for our sake, he also delivers us from our sins and frees us from the faults that we commit through ignorance.

We can understand this best if we think of him as symbolized by the calf that used to be slain as a holocaust and by the goat that was sacrificed for our sins committed through ignorance. For our sake, to blot out the sins of the world, he laid down his life.

Recognized then in bread as life and the giver of life, in the calf as a holocaust offered by himself to God the Father as an appeasing fragrance, in the goat as one who became sin for our sake and was slain for our transgressions, Christ is also symbolized in another way by a sheaf of grain, as a brief explanation will show.

The human race may be compared to spikes of wheat in a field, rising, as it were, from the earth, awaiting their full growth and development, and then in time being cut down by the reaper, which is death. The comparison is apt, since Christ himself spoke of our race in this way when he said to his holy disciples: Do you not say, “Four months and it will be harvest time?” Look at the fields I tell you, they are already white and ready for harvesting. The reaper is already receiving his wages and bringing in a crop for eternal life.

Now Christ became like one of us; he sprang from the holy Virgin like a spike of wheat from the ground. Indeed, he spoke of himself as a grain of wheat when he said: I tell you truly, unless a grain of wheat falls into the ground and dies, it remains as it was, a single grain; but if it dies its yield is very great. And so, like a sheaf of grain, the firstfruits, as it were, of the earth, he offered himself to the Father for our sake.

For we do not think of a spike of wheat, any more than we do of ourselves, in isolation. We think of it rather as part of a sheaf, which is a single bundle made up of many spikes. The spikes have to be gathered into a bundle before they can be used, and this is the key to the mystery they represent, the mystery of Christ who, though one, appears in the image of a sheaf to be made up of many, as in fact he is.

Spiritually, he contains in himself all believers. As we have been raised up with him, writes Saint Paul, so we have also been enthroned with him in heaven. He is a human being like ourselves, and this has made us one body with him, the body being the bond that unites us.

We can say, therefore, that in him we are all one, and indeed he himself says to God, his heavenly Father: It is my desire that as land you are one, so they also may be one in us.

(Commentary on Numbers 2: PG 69, 617-24)


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Thursday, March 19, 2009

Reflections on the Sunday Readings for 3/22/09 by Marie

You can find the full Scripture Readings for this Sunday http://www.usccb.org/nab/readings/032209a.shtml

Brothers and sisters:
God, who is rich in mercy,
because of the great love he had for us,
even when we were dead in our transgressions,
brought us to life with Christ...
Ephesians 2:4-5

In recent days, signs of change abound. Clocks have “sprung ahead”. Days with light are lengthening. Even the light – itself – is brighter. And officially spring begins/began on Friday. Our Scripture readings also indicate change which continues today.


In the first reading, Chronicles portray nearly all Judeans as never heard or having discarded the Mosaic Law – despite the many prophets or messengers sent by God. It took the pagan king, Cyrus, to announce effectively that the kingdom of God is coming. Leave it to God to find ways to shake things up so that the Judeans began noticing what’s important!


Let’s turn to the Gospel where we find Nicodemus encountering Jesus. As a Pharisee, Nicodemus served as a Jewish leader of a group open to hearing the “Good News”. He refers to Jesus as “teacher” or “Rabbi” - the reverse of what would be expected from a temple leader. Unlike the Judeans of the Chronicles’ story, Nicodemus was receptive to hearing something new, though not yet experienced God’s transformative love. However, the potential for change is decidedly present.


In his letter to the Ephesians, Paul immediately illustrates where his priorities are. He begins with “Brothers and sisters, God who is rich in Mercy …” Paul, formerly known as Saul, persecuted Christians for following Jesus….. now acknowledges who Jesus is for him – and eagerly invited the Ephesians to experience it for themselves.


So, where are you in your Lenten journey? From these readings, who are you most like? What kind of light or gift of God do you most need to begin or to further make changes in your life?


Perhaps, a contemporary illustration can draw this reflection to a close. Recently, a friend sent an email depicting God’s gigantic hands coupling the crippled airliner floating atop the Hudson River. While the crew safely landed the plane with its many passengers, God’s Spirit guided the process. Can we risk being supported and guided by God’s transforming love and care?



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Friday, March 13, 2009

Reflections on the Sunday Readings for 3/15/09 by Ellie

You can find the full Scripture Readings for this Sunday http://www.usccb.org/nab/readings/031509a.shtml

Since the Passover of the Jews was near, Jesus went up to Jerusalem.
He found in the temple area those who sold oxen, sheep, and doves,
as well as the money-changers seated there.
He made a whip out of cords and drove them all out of the temple area,
with the sheep and oxen, and spilled the coins of the money-changers
and overturned their tables, and to those who sold doves he said,
"Take these out of here,
and stop making my Father's house a marketplace."
John 2:13-16


The reading today is full of rich foreshadowings. In one of them, Jesus entered the temple area and found it full of oxen, sheep, and the money changers. It’s one of the times in Scripture where we might say, Jesus loses it. He made a whip of chords and created a kind of chaos, scattering the animals and overturning the tables in a fury. He shouted, “Stop making my Father’s house a marketplace.” To me, his rage is saying, don’t you get it, this is my Father’s house, a place of prayer, worship, and soul-searching?

Sundays, we come to “My Father’s House” but do we understand really where we are and why we are here? It’s not the time to plan next week’s work plan, nor meals for the week, nor even rumble about the argument you had with a friend. It’s our gathering to worship to Lord, to bring our joys, our sorrows, our gratitude even our brokenness to Him. Together, we listen, we sing and we pray.

One Sunday, as I, the lector, waited in the back of the church for the processional to begin, I turned to the Celebrant and said,
“I hope someone came today who deeply needs this time with the Lord. Let’s pray for that person as we do this.”
He turned to me with a solemn look and answered,
“I certainly hope there are many more than one.”

What I heard from him was something akin to what Jesus was trying to say that morning in the temple area..
“Don’t you get? Don’t you get why we come here? This is our Father’s house.”
I felt almost as ashamed as the moneychangers might have, too. Had I lost the awareness that all of us benefit deeply from this time with the Lord? We are well reminded by this story.

The sign above the Main Street entrances to the sanctuary at St. Mary's says, “Be At Home In My Father’s House” It’s there to us remind of the lesson Jesus was teaching that morning. Sometimes I nod at the sign, a nod that says, Yes, I know, I’m entering My Father’s house. I usually add a mood statement to this, like; ‘I’m here, Lord, and I bring a grateful, ready heart.’ Be it St. Mary’s or St. Bridget's, as each of you climb the steps to the church, try to nod with meaning. Yes, I’m entering my Father’s House; acknowledge Him. Tell Him why You’ve come.


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Saturday, March 7, 2009

Reflections on the Sunday Readings for 3/08/09 by Dawn

You can find the full Scripture Readings for this Sunday at http://www.usccb.org/nab/readings/030809.shtml

Jesus took Peter, James, and John
and led them up a high mountain apart by themselves...
Then Peter said to Jesus in reply,
"Rabbi, it is good that we are here!
Let us make three tents:
one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah."
Mark 9:2, 5


Have you ever said something similar to God? Perhaps when you were on retreat, or during Eucharistic Adoration - a time when you felt so close to the Holy, to God. There have been a few times in my life that I, like Peter in today's Gospel, asked God if I could stay in that place forever. You feel so at peace, and have no need to speak, you just want to sit and be in the Presence. Thankfully God gives us those times in our life, and they are always just when we need them.

Unfortunately, though, like Peter, James and John, we have to come down from the mountain. One time I was talking about this with a friend of mine. We had just been on a retreat that was incredibly powerful. As I was whining about having to go back to real life and leave the "mountain-top high", he pointed out that when you look out in nature, there's usually not too much vegetation on the top of a mountain. It's usually sparse, and rocky, but as you go further down the mountain there starts to be more and more trees and plants, and the valleys and plains are filled with growth. It's the same for us - those times of being so close to the Holy are awesome, because there's no trees (distractions) for us we can usually see pretty far in the distance, but it's in the valleys and the plains (the ordinariness of our lives) that we grow.

Seeing as this Sunday is the Feast of the Transfiguration, many churches will be singing "'Tis Good Lord to Be Here". The last verse of this hymn is what we need to walk away with:
Tis good, Lord, to be here.
Yet we may not remain;
But since you bid us leave the mount,
Come with us to the plain.
We need to remember that when we leave those mountain tops, we, again like Peter, James and John, don't go down the mountain alone. Jesus walks down into the valleys and plains with us.



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