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Regnum Christi

July 12, 2017 – Choosing an Apostle

Wednesday of the Fourteenth Week in Ordinary Tim

Matthew 10:1-7

Jesus summoned his twelve disciples and gave them authority over unclean spirits to drive them out and to cure every disease and every illness. The names of the Twelve Apostles are these: first, Simon called Peter, and his brother Andrew; James, the son of Zebedee, and his brother John; Philip and Bartholomew, Thomas and Matthew the tax collector; James, the son of Alphaeus, and Thaddeus; Simon the Cananean, and Judas Iscariot who betrayed him. Jesus sent out these twelve after instructing them thus, “Do not go into pagan territory or enter a Samaritan town. Go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. As you go, make this proclamation: ‘The kingdom of heaven is at hand.’”

Introductory Prayer: Lord, I bring myself into your presence knowing the zeal of your heart for souls. The glory of your heavenly Father can shape my own heart. I am confident that, just as the Twelve lit the flame of their love for their mission from the furnace of your divine love, I can ignite all that is lukewarm and tepid in my own soul today. I desire to fulfill more perfectly the mission you have given me.

Petition: Lord, grant me the grace to be generous and trustful concerning your plan for me.

1. Jesus Needs Apostles: A condition for the Kingdom to grow is that it have protagonists. Christ refuses to be a one-man show. We honor and bow before the divine choice expressed in Christ’s desire to let his victory be realized through others, beginning with the Twelve. In the Twelve we find the model of every call of Christ to build his Kingdom, to spread the faith by word and deed. If there is no response to his call, there is no Kingdom. Have I meditated on my call often? Do I see it linked to my family and to my workplace? Have I responded to it?

2. The Calling: Many were on the mountain that day. Many were drawn to him and longed to be close to him, but only 12 received the explicit call to be Apostles. The sense of predilection is in every vocation and every mission from God. What we are chosen for in life, no one else can fulfill it. We are called by name, meaning that Christ knows us well when he calls, including all our defects and weaknesses. He did not ask the Twelve for their preferences, look at their SAT scores, or scrutinize their résumés. The choice of God, revealed in prayer, is sovereign and omnipotent in action. The Twelve cannot think there has been some mistake or some miscalculation. The voice of God, who neither deceives nor can be deceived, is speaking.

3. A Free Response: Christ called freely, and in freedom the Twelve responded. He did not bring down angels from heaven to overwhelm them to cooperate, he merely prayed to the Father. As Lord of the harvest, he has called each one of us. Our vocation as an apostle, is not a question of our wanting to be one. It is not a question of our talents or compelling feelings for this or that, but of our faith-driven awareness of God asking and our responding. Why are we where we are now in our vocation in life? In our particular marriage? In a particular lay movement? We can never know fully, for only God knows the depths of his own wisdom. This is the first mystery of the Kingdom that touches each one of us personally: God called, he willed it, and we said “yes.” This is the only answer an apostle must seek. Anything else slows down the mission and interrupts the dialogue of love and service to the mission.

Conversation with Christ: Lord, I want to affirm that all my work today is going to be my response to your call to be your disciple and a light to others in this world. I resolve never to doubt the special and perfect nature of your plan for me. May my heart always be confident and generous in responding to your voice.

Resolution: I will take the hardest part of my day and embrace it with greater joy out of love for the one who has called me.

26 posted on 07/12/2017 10:12:28 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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All Issues > Volume 33, Issue 4

<< Wednesday, July 12, 2017 >>
 
Genesis 41:55-57; 42:5-7, 17-24
View Readings
Psalm 33:2-3, 10-11, 18-19 Matthew 10:1-7
Similar Reflections
 

THE WORST WORLDWIDE FAMINE

 
"In fact, all the world came to Joseph to obtain rations of grain, for famine had gripped the whole world." �Genesis 41:57
 

A worldwide famine is one of the worst tragedies. It is even worse than the hundreds of millions of people, especially children, starving at this moment in our world. A worse tragedy than a worldwide famine for food is a famine "for hearing the word of the Lord. Then shall they wander from sea to sea and rove from the north to the east in search of the word of the Lord, but they shall not find it" (Am 8:11-12). We currently are in an even worse condition. We have a worldwide famine for God's Word not because God's Word is unavailable but because many people, even Christians, are spiritually anorexic. We have so stuffed ourselves with the things of the flesh that we have lost our appetite for the things of the Spirit (see Prv 13:19; Gal 5:17; 1 Pt 2:11).

We need many Josephs to feed the world. We need many Christians who are greater than Joseph (see Mt 11:11) to feed the world spiritually and break through the spiritual anorexia of Christians. When the Lord returns at the end of time, He wants to find us dispensing our "ration of grain in season" (Lk 12:42) to people who have been freed from spiritual anorexia and are "as eager for milk as newborn babies � pure milk of the Spirit" (1 Pt 2:2). In summary:

  • Repent of the sins which cause spiritual anorexia.
  • Have a healthy spiritual appetite, similar to the appetite of nursing babies.
  • Feed the starving physically and spiritually.
  • Break through spiritual anorexia by interceding, prophesying, and fasting.
 
Prayer: Father, raise up new Josephs.
Promise: "The reign of God is at hand!'' �Mt 10:7
Praise: Shirley has volunteered at her parish food pantry for years.

27 posted on 07/12/2017 10:18:41 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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