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Homily of the Day

Making Do Isn’t Enough for Your Spirit!

January 19th, 2009 by Monsignor Dennis Clark, Ph.D.

Heb 5:1-10 / Mk 2:18-22

Making do is an admirable and most practical skill that can at times mean the difference between survival and disaster.  Many is the family that avoided starvation by discovering how to make do with whatever was at hand.  Indeed, many gourmet dishes, sweetbreads for example, have their origins with impoverished peasants who found a way to convert disgusting throwaways into succulent morsels.  In more instances than one could count, the habit of making do is a manifestation of both courage and character.  It says to the world, “We will survive, we will not be destroyed.”

There are, however, limits to the virtues of making do. It can skew our perspective and cause us to settle for too little: Sometimes just surviving isn’t enough. Sometimes what appears to be survival isn’t that at all, but just a long, slow death. That’s what Jesus had in mind when He said that trying to put new wine into old wineskins doesn’t work.

There are times when we need to start afresh, and that is especially true when it comes to our inner lives. Simple patchwork, just holding things together, isn’t good enough. We need, as Jesus said, to be born again, not physically, but spiritually. For each of us that rebirth will take a somewhat different shape, because our personal histories are different. But in every case, the rebirth will involve a radical opening of our spirits to the Holy Spirit of God.

When it comes to what you’re really about, don’t settle for just making do. Open your heart to the Spirit and get a whole new life!


28 posted on 01/19/2009 4:31:39 PM PST by Salvation ( †With God all things are possible.†)
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To: All
One Bread, One Body

One Bread, One Body


<< Monday, January 19, 2009 >>
Saint of the Day
 
Hebrews 5:1-10
View Readings
Psalm 110 Mark 2:18-22
 

ON TIME

 
"People came to Jesus with the objection, 'Why do John's disciples and those of the Pharisees fast while Yours do not?' " —Mark 2:18
 

The people in today's Gospel reading thought it was time to fast, although it was time to feast. They had the right idea but the wrong time. You may be doing something appropriate to the way things were twenty years ago but inadequate for the present. For example, if you send your children to the school you attended in your own youth, you may be making a big mistake. That school had its time, but its time is not now, if you want your children to be followers of Jesus.

If you talk to your children about sexual temptations as little as your parents talked to you, you will find that what worked for your parents may not work for you. Times have changed. If you pray with your children as little as your parents prayed with you, your family may suffer much more from its lack of prayer than the family you grew up in.

In our time, prayer has become more and more our only hope. "There is an appointed time for everything, and a time for every affair under the heavens" (Eccl 3:1). Are you on time or out of sync with God's present unfolding of His plan of salvation?

 
Prayer: Jesus, be Lord of my time and timing.
Promise: "In the days when He was in the flesh, He offered prayers and supplications with loud cries and tears to God, Who was able to save Him from death, and He was heard because of His reverence." —Heb 5:7
Praise: From the Church-required minimum of fasting, Robert has now practiced fasting two or three days a week and has seen an amazing growth in his spiritual life.
 

29 posted on 01/19/2009 5:03:13 PM PST by Salvation ( †With God all things are possible.†)
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