At the End of Life Monday of the Twenty-Seventh Week in Ordinary Time Luke 10:25-37 Introductory Prayer: I thank you for granting me this private audience with you. I have come to praise and adore you. I know that you have longed for this moment because you have something you want to share with me. Speak Lord, for your servant listens. Petition: Lord, grant me conversion of heart so that my life might be more pleasing to you. 1. A Sense of the Essential. Even though these scholars are asking a trick question, they have gone to the core of human life by asking about salvation. There is no doubt that this is a most important issue in life: What must I do to get to heaven? Jesus will state the matter in more definitive terms by declaring, What profit would there be for one to gain the whole world and forfeit his life? Or what can one give in exchange for his life (Matthew 16:26)? 2. The Only Thing That Remains A very rich man passed away and everyone was speculating how much money he had left to give to his son. Some were speculating about two hundred million; others said a-half-a-billion; still others imagined that he had possessed a couple of billions. Then a wise elder spoke up, I know how much he left behind . He left it all! He didnt take a single penny with him. Riches cannot buy us a ticket into heaven. At the end of our lives, the only thing that counts is the good we have done for God and for our fellowmen. 3. No Escape. Jesus leaves no room for doubts. When pressed for further explanations about the meaning of the term neighbor, he spells it all out in detail. We can try to justify ourselves like the priest of the parable. His knowledge of the Law reminded him that touching a dead man would make him unclean for seven days and unable to exercise his turn of duty in the Temple. In the end, ceremonies were more important for him than charity. Or we can try and justify ourselves like the Levite who might have suspected that the body was just the bandits decoy. One of their number would act the part of a wounded man; and when some unsuspecting traveler stopped to help, the others would rush upon and overpower him. His motto was safety first. Only the Samaritan who treated him with mercy was a true neighbor to the victim. There are no other valid excuses. Go and do likewise, Jesus tells us. Dialogue with Christ: Lord Jesus, it is so easy to invent excuses and leave aside my commitment to true charity. I always find an escape. Then I hear your voice in my heart: Whatever you do to the least of my brothers, that you do unto me. Help me to discover you in each person I meet this day and show you the mercy and kindness that you so deserve. Resolution: Today I will treat others kindly, knowing that Jesus is in them. |
Gal 1:6-12 / Lk 10:25-37 As we grow a little older and have been around long enough to notice the evolution of fashions, theres something basically humorous about the relative speed with which womens skirts move up and down and mens ties run the gamut from one to six inches in width. As they say, just hold onto your old clothes and theyll be high fashion again before you know it. Our passion for the latest fashion is part of a larger picture, our generally low threshold of boredom and our eternal fascination with the new. This was old news when Henry David Thoreau wrote about it nearly two centuries ago on the banks of Walden Pond. Our fascination with the new can make for some interesting fashions, foods, buildings and automobiles, but it can be an archenemy to the truth. Too many things that ought to be cherished get discarded simply because theyve been around awhile. St. Paul warns us about this in todays epistle. The core of the message that we have received from Jesus Christ is very old but it remains valid and true for all ages. Dont get distracted by side issues, but hear what the apostles heard. Listen to the inside of Jesuss teaching, the core and essence of it, and let it bring you life. As Paul says, there is no other. |