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To: All
Regnum Chrisit

Christ at Home in Capernaum
U. S. A. | SPIRITUAL LIFE | SPIRITUALITY
September 2, 2014. Tuesday of Twenty-second Week in Ordinary Time



Luke 4:31-37

Jesus then went down to Capernaum, a town of Galilee. He taught them on the sabbath, and they were astonished at his teaching because he spoke with authority. In the synagogue there was a man with the spirit of an unclean demon, and he cried out in a loud voice, "Ha! What have you to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us? I know who you are -- the Holy One of God!" Jesus rebuked him and said, "Be quiet! Come out of him!" Then the demon threw the man down in front of them and came out of him without doing him any harm. They were all amazed and said to one another, "What is there about his word? For with authority and power he commands the unclean spirits, and they come out." And news of him spread everywhere in the surrounding region.

Introductory Prayer: Lord, you have looked with favor on me. You have seen in my soul fertile ground, and you have sown your word in hope of an abundant harvest. I hope never to let you down by not responding in faith. I allow you to lead me to the fullness of my vocation as your disciple.

Petition: Christ, may zeal for your friendship consume me so much that I remove all sin from my life.

1. Great Hopes: Jesus had great plans for Capernaum –– a big city, situated by the lake on the “way of the sea,” a thoroughfare open to travelers. It was an ideal hub from which to spread the Gospel. Would anyone from such a big town have interest in his message? Christ made his home there. He exercised the greater part of his public ministry in Capernaum and graced it with more than one-third of his miracles. It was quite different from Nazareth. Christ asks us to find our Capernaum –– seeking that niche, using those talents, evangelizing that audience — where we can become the most effective apostles for him. This may demand a greater love from us, but we can see how Christ blesses this effort with his presence, teaching and healing.

2. Simple Faith: Christ chooses to cure a man on the Sabbath in Capernaum and nobody raises an eyebrow! How different this is from Jerusalem! These people here have a simple faith, unconcerned about the legalities of ritualistic orthodoxy. “Here I can preach. Here I can heal. Here I can work!” Christ feels at home and welcomed. Here Christ finds vocations: Peter, Andrew, James, John, Matthew. Here Christ finds faith even among the pagans: the centurion who asks for a cure. One can sense a special predilection of Christ toward this city. From those who have been given more, more will be expected.

3. Generosity Pushed to Its Limits: Once a soul responds in generosity, Christ opportunely draws it to the fullness of its vocation. Encouraged by Capernaum’s faith, Christ asks more of it; just as he asked of the rich young man. As we see later in the Gospel, what better place than faith-filled Capernaum for Christ to reveal to the world one of his most difficult teachings: presenting himself as the Living Bread come down from heaven? In the end, the majority leave him. “Will you go away too?” The present-day ruins of Capernaum testify to the truth of Christ’s warning: “As for you, Capernaum, ‘Are you to be exalted to the skies? You shall go down to the realm of death!’ If the miracles worked in you had taken place in Sodom, it would be standing today. I assure you, it will go easier for Sodom than for you on the Day of Judgment” (Matthew 11:23-4).

Conversation with Christ: Lord, you know me and you know everything about me. Let me not become blinded by the arrogance of my own opinions and ideas. Help me to keep you always before me as the goal of my life, the pearl of great price, for which I joyfully sell all I own to possess.

Resolution:  I will use one of my talents to help somebody today.


27 posted on 09/02/2014 5:44:05 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All

Homily of the Day

September 2, 2014

Yesterday Paul contrasted the wisdom of God and the wisdom of men for
the Corinthians, indicating that his proclamation of the Lord Jesus was
presented to them not with “wise argumentation,” but with “the
convincing power of the Spirit.” In today’s reading he picks up and
develops further the difference between the wisdom of this age and the
wisdom that comes from God.

No one, he says, knows the thoughts in any person’s mind if that person
does not reveal his thoughts. How much more true is this of God! If we
are to come to know God’s thoughts, he must reveal them to us. The
instrument through which he reveals his thoughts is the Spirit. Through
the Spirit we have access to the mind of God. Paul clothes this
startling statement with even more startling words; he says, “We have
the mind of Christ!”

If the Spirit dwells within us, we look at the world with the eyes of
Christ, we see reality as he sees it, we judge issues with Christ’s
wisdom. We look, for instance, at the crucifixion, seeing not just an
utterly admirable young man wrongfully put to death by Rome at the
insistence of a group of Jewish leaders; we see God’s own Son, at his
Father’s behest remain faithful to all that is good and holy. We see
him the revelation of God’s supremacy over sin and death. At the
Eucharistic sacrifice we see and feel not only a wafer of bread on our
tongue, we recognize the presence of Jesus, crucified and risen. And we
know that these truths revealed to us by the Holy Spirit give us the
power to transform our lives.

And yet? What does God’s Spirit mean in our lives? Do we have a living
relationship with the Spirit as we do with God our Father and Christ
our brother? Do we pray to the Spirit, realizing that it is only he who
can bestow on us the mind of Christ that only he can reveal to us the
thoughts of the Father?


28 posted on 09/02/2014 5:45:29 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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