Showing posts with label Eucharist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eucharist. Show all posts

Sunday, May 15, 2016

Reflection on the Gospel May 16, 2016


Reflection May 16, 2016

Mark is recalling an event that made an impression on him that he wants us to hear about and learn from.

When we hear the gospel today, we may think that the boy suffers from what we now call epilepsy because of the symptoms described, and that may be what it was, however, don't be fooled into explaining these stories as ancient folk tales with modern day solutions.

We, in the first world countries, tend to discount the devil as non existent and explain occurrences such as the one in the gospel we hear about today as a medical condition.  Somewhere along the line we got too smart for our own good and stopped being watchful for the devil and the lies he tells.

Here is the connection;  The birth of the church springs from the Word of God and stays with us in the person of the Holy Spirit.  The Spirit of the living God dwells with us so it is important to be fed with the sacraments that keep us in God's Grace.  We need a solid prayer life that is filled with fasting to see what the Spirit is showing us.

The apostles are baffled because they tried to drive the demon from the boy and could not do it, so Jesus comes and questions the situation to get to the unseen.  Jesus, John, Peter, and James have just come from praying on the mountain top and that is what Jesus is pointing out as the key to success when the apostles ask why they couldn't expel the demon.

What we encounter on a daily basis is not just what we see, it's what we don't see that the Spirit reveals.

There was very strong instruction that I received before going with the exorcist to his calls; Confession, prayer and fasting days prior to going and don't be afraid.

Fear of a good confession, a lazy prayer life, not fasting, and not attending Mass are sure signs your getting too smart.












Monday, May 09, 2016

We Are Never Alone





Today in the Gospel, John, recalls a moment when the disciples "got it" or so they thought.
One of the most effective ways to communicate is to keep the message simple and understandable.  One of the hardest tasks in doing that is to know your audience's ability to understand and interpret the message as it is intended.
Jesus has just finished a three year mission with his followers and today we hear they understand, finally, yet Jesus cautions them in their ability to grasp the depth of the message. 
The message of Jesus was extremely simple, Love God the Father above all things, and Love EVERYONE, as you love yourself, but the hard part was the laying aside of expectations that the followers had regarding Jesus and the mission He was sent to accomplish.
We can get caught up in the rhetoric (word game) that different human opinions and different human experiences can lead us to, unless we remember the big picture.  This "game" is the focal point of our modern life.  Just pay attention to the news, commercials, and other ads as they all, in some way or another, let us know we NEED their product or we NEED "this person" to be better.
There is the problem at the root that we encounter.
Jesus has an answer for us today and He tells us clearly and simply; 
"But I am not alone, because the Father is with me.
I have told you this so that you might have peace in me.
In the world you will have trouble,
but take courage, I have conquered the world.”
Whatever deficiencies we think we have are made perfect in the body of Christ, think about that.
As we gaze upon Jesus on the cross, in the Eucharist, in Sacred Scriptures, and in the people that we meet, remember these words;
"We remember how you loved us to Your death, 
And still we celebrate for You are with us here. 
And we believe that we will see You when you come in Your glory, Lord. 
We remember, we celebrate, we believe." 

Friday, April 15, 2016

A Heart to Heart


                                                           

What a bunch of non-sense to be heard.  The Jews think they might have to eat a finger or toe.

Jesus doesn’t let them on their own very long for this one; He drives the point home;

“Amen, amen, I say to you, unless you eat the Flesh of the Son of Man and drink his Blood, you do not have life within you.
Whoever eats my Flesh and drinks my Blood has eternal life, and I will raise him on the last day.
For my Flesh is true food, and my Blood is true drink.  Whoever eats my Flesh and drinks my Blood remains in me and I in him.
Just as the living Father sent me and I have life because of the Father, so also the one who feeds on me will have life because of me.  This is the bread that came down from heaven. Unlike your ancestors who ate and still died, whoever eats this bread will live forever.”

The word communion in its proper sense means a joining of hearts.  The intimate joining of hearts requires both and all hearts to be open.

Someone might say, “Don't open your heart up to everyone/anyone, you’ll just get hurt or be disappointed”, that person may never experience the fullness of communion in their entire lifetime.

The heart of Jesus is always open for us to be in communion with Him, so be with Him.

Monday, April 11, 2016

A Stroll On The Water


Reflection April 10th 2016

In today’s Gospel, we meet Jesus after he just fed the five thousand and His disciples saw Him walking on the sea.

For Jesus walking on water is a matter of traveling it’s not so much the issue of His divinity, He has already done that in expressing the “Bread of Life” discourse we heard about with the multiplication of the loaves and fish.

Here is the point Jesus makes very quickly

            “Amen, amen, I say to you, you are looking for me, not because you saw signs, but because you ate the loaves and were filled.”

The people were just accused of freeloading a meal.  Most of the followers were not used to having so much food that it was left over, and to apply the Divine message to the miracle was a bit overwhelming so they ask Him;

“What can we do to accomplish the works of God?”

There is no mention of the need to feed the hungry or help the poor, widowed, or orphans, that would be too limited, so He asks then to peer deeper; and there is a simple recipe that is required that accomplishes the works of God; and that is to believe in the one He sent.

Jesus was asking them to examine their movements and examine how they treat the people that are marginalized such as the lepers of the day.

How is it that we can stand together and give all glory and praise to a homeless man on Sunday and pass by one, hurriedly, any other time of the week and not see Jesus?  The way I treat my brothers and sisters is the way that I treat Jesus.

Be Jesus for all that you meet and may the gifts and fruits of His spirit be with us.


Friday, April 08, 2016

Jesus is Not Your Valet


I am the Bread of Life!

There is a real danger in miracles that stand-alone.  God may become a sort of valet to a self centered, self-made person that is able to use God to achieve a goal.  By that I mean if a person is only focused on the achievement or the outcome there is no real sense of Awe in the majesty and Love that God has for us.

In today’s gospel there are hungry people that have come to see Jesus and there is no McDonalds around to get food for the ride home.  Jesus takes a small amount of food and then we hear that there were 12 baskets left over, a universal number, that means there is enough of Him to feed the whole world.

We need to be aware of our prayer life.  We need to be aware of the times when things are going so swimmingly that we might forget how and why we have gotten to the place that we are at in life.

When times are tough we may run to church or plead with Jesus for a miracle, and that’s not a bad thing if we recognize that Jesus is with us in all moments in our life and deserves our praise at all times.

Take the worst moment in your life and see Jesus standing there with you, not as a bellboy, but as a friend and shepherd that will guide you through it and bring you out in a better place.

I am the Bread of Life means just that, He will sustain us on our journey.  I have found that when I am doing the best in my life it usually means the devil is right around the corner testing my love for God.

The most important thing I can tell you is this; in all moments give glory to the One that gave us life and will give us life forever!

Jesus, take my soul, my life and fashion it that there may be enough for the whole world.

Panis Angelicus 


Saturday, April 02, 2016

None of Your Business

Reflection for April 2, 2016



Mary Magdalene is the first one that Jesus appears to in all four gospels and in Marks’ account he mentions that Jesus cast out seven demons from her.

Jesus could have appeared to anyone first, but He chose to appear to the one whom he cast out seven demons. 

Mary tells the others and no one believed her.  The eleven don’t believe until He appears to them at dinner and Jesus rebukes them for being hard of heart.

We work in prison ministry and we have met several men that have told us they weren’t guilty of the crime they were in jail for.  Can you imagine that? 

There are reasons that Jesus appears to Mary first, and one reason may be that she is the one that has the least amount of credibility because He knows the others can’t shed their prejudices in regard to Mary’s past. 

Maybe another is that she believes in His Love so deeply and genuinely that He comes to see her first.  Maybe she doubted the most of all the followers and He knew she needed that reassurance.

Whatever the reasons may be, Jesus transformed Mary’s life so drastically that she has an encounter with the Risen Christ and tells others.

It’s none of Mary’s business whether or not the people she told believed her and it isn’t our business whether or not people believe us.  Our responsibility is to spread the Love of God and the message of Christ in our actions.

It is also none of our business what God does with our life, our business is to do it!