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Home Authors Credits La Salette

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April 2 |
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MONDAY OF HOLY WEEK John 12:1-U
"The poor you always have with you, but me you will not always have."
There is
something disturbing about the scene. Mary's profound gratitude to Jesus for
what he had done in her life led her to be extravagant. Deep and true love
does not count the cost. As the odor of the precious ointment filled the
house, so did a sense of awe at this bold act of love. But a voice pierced
this atmosphere and declared this a shocking waste, (The value of the
ointment, made in India, amounted to an ordinary worker's yearly wage,
commentators say) that the money could have been used for the poor. Perhaps
do. we ourselves silently agree. But Jesus did not agree. He
reveals what is really happening. This anointing prepares his body for the
death and burial he is facing. The poor will always be with us, and when he
is gone, they will be a privileged place for ministering to Jesus himself.
There is also a place for devotion, love, reverence, and worship. Our
challenge is to discern what, here and now, is the most appropriate response
to those myriad ways in which Jesus remains present to us.
At La
Salette Mary wore peasant garb. She spoke to two children from very poor
families. The words she spoke were jolting and disturbing. Yet she was
vested with dazzling radiance and glory. The light surrounding her served to
identify the Beautiful Lady. Its rare brilliance awakened in Maximin an
impulse to reach out and grasp some of this beauty.
Has my
faith ever found inspiration in a magnificent church building or religious
work of art? Am I able to see and help others see the faith reality behind
the extravagance?
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April 3 |
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TUESDAY OF HOLY WEEK John 13:21-33,
36-38
"Satan entered his heart. ... It was night."
The scene is the Last
Supper. Judas leaves to tell the officials where they can find and arrest
Jesus. Step by step, Judas has been walking the cold, calculated path of
betrayal. He deliberately leaves the glow of the light and plunges into the
night. Jesus tells the disciples that he must leave them now but that they
cannot follow him. Blustering, impetuous Peter immediately leaps into the
conversation: "Lord, why can I not follow you now? I will lay down my life
for you." One can almost see Jesus sadly shaking his head and telling Peter
- or is he chiding him? - that before the cock crows he will have betrayed
him three times. And so it happened. But Peter's heart, overflowing with
love for the Lord, was not a place where Satan might find a welcome. Jesus
could see the depths of Peter's heart and the love within it. It is this
love that enabled Peter to emerge from that night and confidently claim the
love of Jesus' forgiveness.
Mary's recitation of her
people's sins and neglect of God can at times seem to be a path into
darkness. As she breaks open the political reality France was then
experiencing and its consequences, we may be tempted to block our ears and
run away. That is why the light radiating from her and the crucifix on her
breast is what pushes aside the darkness. From the heart of darkness, the
suffering and death of Jesus shines as the light that will transform the
night forever.
Do I make an about-face when
my choices make me dim the guiding lights of my corridor of life? What helps
me convert what often is a "long day's journey into the night" into a "long
day's journey into the light"?
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April 4 |
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WEDNESDAY OF HOLY WEEK
Matthew 26:14-25 John 13:1-15
"Better for him if he had never been born."
It is not uncommon to be
bewildered by Judas. (The film Jesus Christ Super star includes a
scene of Judas running in the desert, huge tanks pursuing him - powerful
images of his fate, his destiny, about to destroy him.) In the divine plan,
someone was to betray Jesus. It could have been someone who did not know
Jesus personally, a Roman soldier, a member of the Sanhedrin. It ended up
being a trusted friend. And yet Jesus had chosen Judas. He had given him a
position of confidence in the group. Jesus did not shut Judas out. Even on
the night of the betrayal, he let Judas know that he was aware of what was
going on. Jesus exerted no power to stop Judas. The only power he used was
the heartfelt appeal that Judas remain a faithful disciple, a faithful
friend. To no avail. Did Judas die in despair, believing he could never be
forgiven? Was his vision so desperately closed in on himself that he neither
saw nor understood the extent of Christ's mercy and compassion? Ours is a
God of second and seemingly infinite chances! Simply by asking, Judas could
have been reborn in Christ's unconditional love. We have no idea what
happened during those seconds between the hanging and actual death (Matthew
27:5). Judas may have whispered, "I'm sorry. Please for-give me."
At La
Salette Mary's message gives us the promise that can break the chain of sin
and the consequent sufferings and dyings.
"If my people are converted
..." If is the hinge word.
If smashes "fated" or
"destined" punishment. If
is a precious reminder of our continued second chances.
If takes us beyond.
How have I experienced the Lord's powerful forgiveness?
How do I convey to others this core truth of our faith in Jesus?
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April 5 |
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HOLY
THURSDAY
"If I washed your feet, then you
must wash each other 's feet.
... As I have done so you must
do."
On this
day celebrating the institution of the Eucharist, it is surprising that the
familiar words transforming bread and wine into the body and blood of Jesus,
as recorded in the Gospels of Mark, Matthew and Luke, are not found in the
gospel for the Mass of the Lord's Supper. In John's account, Jesus provides
instead a different way of remembering him and making him present to one
an-other. It is the remembrance and presence of loving service. In washing
the feet, Jesus turns our understanding of authority and power upside down.
The Lord who holds all power and authority manifests himself as servant. His
act is an example that we are challenged to imitate and repeat in our own
culture and society, so taken with control, force, might and power. Jesus
invites us to believe in the countercultural power of humble, loving
service.
At La
Salette Mary shows the power of a weeping mother. Her apparition manifests
a kenosis (Philippians
2:7), or self-emptying, all its own. She has bent over her children just as
Jesus bent over the feet of his disciples. She does not stand aloof, but
comes near. She wants our hearts to be washed with her tears of love. And as
she came to call us to conversion, she confers that same task on us. As she
has done, so should we do.
How do I make Jesus present to others? How frequently do I engage in
"bending down" service to others?
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April 6 |
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GOOD FRIDAY JOHN 18:1 – 19:42
"For this I
came into the world, to testify to the truth. Everyone who belongs to the
truth listens to my voice."
The truth of Good Friday
shone in the glory of Jesus' suffering and death. No, we have not yet
reached the Easter moment. We are at the foot of the cross. In the words,
"It is finished," Jesus declares the astounding truth that all
that has happened is part of the Father's plan. "It," the plan, has been
brought to its fulfillment, although not in the manner messianic hopes had
imagined. In God's plan, Jesus had to undergo such pain, such vulnerability,
such darkness, such near despair. This is the truth this day challenges us
to walk in and remain in for a while. Jesus has made all of our sufferings,
and even our death, his own. All suffering and dying itself have, therefore,
been infused with meaning beyond what we can comprehend. This is the truth
that Easter has guaranteed us forever. But let us not move too quickly to
Easter. Let us stay with this day's pain and overwhelming truth. All this
suffering, and dying, "for love of me ... for love of us." There is always
the strong temptation to avoid "Good Friday moments" at all cost. It is all
part and parcel of "deny yourself, take up your cross and follow after me"
(Mark 8:34). It is an intricate part of what we sometimes glibly call the
Paschal Mystery. Good Friday's "truth" is that the "no" of death is not the
last word; its "truth" is that life ultimately conquers death; its "truth,"
by now almost a cliche, that there can be no Easter unless there is a Good
Friday.
At La Salette Mary helped us
to see the "truth" underlying the events of those crucial days. Like the
prophets, she sliced open the reality and allowed us to see an even deeper
reality beneath it. Prophets help us see the layers of truth in the world.
Mary's tears and the brilliant light surrounding this Queen of Prophets
invited us to look and see with the eyes of our hearts. The truth of love
comes to hearts alert and open.
How well do I
recognize my Good Friday experiences and my Easter experiences?
Can I name some of them?
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April 7 |
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HOLY
SATURDAY Luke 24:1-12 A Matthew 28:1-10; B Mark 16:1-8; C
"Why do you search for the Living One among the dead?
He is not here, he has been raised up.... Remember what he said to you..."
It is surprising that those
who knew Jesus and followed him closely, still didn't have a clue. The
events of Good Friday traumatized them into a numbing forgetfulness. Some
of the women go to the tomb to do what they could not do on the Sabbath -
the ritual anointing and preparation of the body. These gospel pas-sages all
begin with a sense of the finality of it all. Everything has ended in
tragedy. No great expectations. But this is quickly changed into a whirlwind
of strong emotions - fear, joy, confusion, belief, disbelief. The women have
found the tomb empty and have been told by an angel that Jesus has been
raised. Some actually see Jesus, very much alive. And thus began the
overwhelming realization that Jesus is not to be just a memory, but a
living presence with us, as he promised, to the end of time. Do we continue
to search for Jesus among the dead? We can fill our heads with all the
stories, doctrines, dogmas, and teachings of and about Jesus and yet not
have a personal encounter with him, who is very much alive.
At La
Salette Mary comes to us, her children. From the cross Jesus gave his mother
to us, and us to his mother. Her loving motherhood is accentuated at La
Salette by her tears flowing for us, her children. La Salette is a very
powerful reminder of Mary's continuing, real, maternal presence to us.
Have I
deeply experienced in my life the move from "knowing about" Jesus to
actually "knowing" Jesus? In what ways might I now be looking for the Living
One among the dead?

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April 9 |
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EASTER MONDAY Matthew 28:8-15
"Peace! Do not be afraid! Go and carry the news to my brothers..."
What an
extraordinary gift it is to have the Lord's peace that can take away our
fears. The Lord often prefaces his appearances to the disciples with the
greeting that grants this peace. Ultimately, this peace is a fruit of the
Holy Spirit and it is very much needed because fear prevents us in many ways
from being fully present,and attentive. Fear can have us cringe,
squint and look away, thus severely limiting our capacity to see and take in
the whole picture. Fear can set our heart and mind racing, searching for a
defense, looking for an escape. Fear can cause the fight or flight mechanism
to kick in. Fear can cause us to run and not stop, look and listen to what
is truly happening. This is especially true when we are dealing with a
powerful spiritual experience. And fear can be so totally absorbing that it
can make us forget. Good Friday had been so overwhelming that the women and
the disciples forgot what Jesus had said about his dying and rising. The
encounter at the empty tomb left them "half-overjoyed and half-fearful."
Did they dare hope and believe that Jesus was risen? And into this
excitement the risen Lord appears. Jesus takes their dramatically renewed
energy and sends them off to bring the good news to the others.
At La
Salette Our Lady follows the same pattern. She invites the children to come
near and not to be afraid. Her message, however, certainly could raise fear
in their hearts and leave them filled with anxiety. Along with her command
to "make this known" it would seem that Our Lady gave her confidants
a special strength allowing them
to hold steadfast to their story, even when threatened by authorities.
What fears at
times prevent me from living and sharing the Lord's gift of peace? Are there
fears that hold me back from witnessing to the Risen Lord?
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April 10 |
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EASTER TUESDAY John 20:11-18
"Why are you weeping? "
A heavy cloak of sadness is
Mary's attire this morning. Her grieving heart has tunneled her vision into
a single thought, "He is gone. He is dead. All my hopes, all that had helped
me make sense out of life, all were dashed on that horrid day. There is
nothing I can do now but give final anointing to his dead body. There is
nothing else."
It is into this
brokenheartedness that Jesus appears. Just as it is in the confusion and
disappointment of the disciples going to Emmaus that Jesus appears. Just as
it is into the fear of the disciples barricaded behind locked doors that
Jesus appears. Yes, we find and experience Jesus in moments of joy, of
love, of celebration. But often Jesus breaks into the weeping moments of
our lives - times of painful failure, unfulfilled hopes, broken plans,
unattained goals and disappointed hopes. At times Jesus breaks into the
hurting fragments of our broken commitments, commitments that can appear
irreparable, irretrievable. Times and places such as these seem to be
favorite entries for Jesus.
At La Salette no one asked
Mary why she was weeping. The children thought at first that she was a
mother from the area and that her children had beaten her. But her message
soon put the reason for her tears beyond speculation - her children were
suffering. Hers were tears of love. Love so strong that it breaks into her
"beatific state of being" and causes anguish and pain. What makes no sense
to the theologian's mind makes eminent sense to the loving heart.
Have I allowed myself to touch the roots of some of the
sadness in my life? If the Lord were to ask me "why are you weeping," how
would I answer?
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April 11 |
EASTER WEDNESDAY Luke 24:13-35
`How our chief priests and leaders delivered him up
to be condemned to death, and crucified him."
Our text is found in the
account given by the Emmaus disciples of what had recently happened in
Jerusalem. Is it farfetched to imagine that part of their pain came from a
deep sense that they had been betrayed by their religious leaders? These
disciples do not refer to "the chief priests and leaders" but to
"our chief priests and leaders." How could it all have gone
so wrong? How could the One who seemed to fulfill their messianic hopes and
dreams be destroyed by the very guardians and teachers of their faith,
including faith in the expected Christ? The two disciples welcomed a
stranger into their fear, doubts and disillusionment. Jesus the Stranger
reviews the Scripture passages relating to the Messiah and helps them to see
how the events of recent days fulfilled the predictions of the prophets.
What is more, he set their hearts on fire. They understood the deeper
meaning of those events. Their hope reborn, they rushed back to Jerusalem to
share their experience with the other disciples. Easter's living light had
now pierced the darkness of their despondent feelings of betrayal.
The La
Salette event, like other officially recognized apparitions, knew stormy
beginnings. But even before canonical approval had been given, thousands
flocked to the favored mountain and felt their hearts catch fire as the
words Mary had spoken there helped them understand the "meaning"
of contemporary events and their link to the providence of God. Many hurried
down from the mountain and shared their experience with others.
What or
who has contributed most to my own search for meaning? Has my heart ever
been "set on fire"?
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April 12 |
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EASTER THURSDAY Luke 24:35-48
"Why are you disturbed? Look at my hands and my feet; it is really I.
Touch me and see that a ghost does not have flesh and bones."
The Incarnation has a unique
continuance after the Lord has been raised from the dead. In speaking of the
post-Resurrection Christ, we stress that we are dealing with his glorified
body. That is true. But we must avoid the danger of spiritualizing too much.
At the heart of our faith is Jesus' bodily resurrection. In his Easter and
post-Easter appearances to the disciples Jesus went out of his way to have
them recognize that he was no phantom or hallucination. He invites them to
look at his hands and feet. They are signed with the wounds he suffered for
love of us and in obedience to the Father. In these appearances Jesus shows
that his glory and the cross must always remain together. We are
incarnational people. Our faith, our religion, is incarnational.
Our sacraments offer visible, tangible signs of God's grace and presence.
It's not wrong to expect or seek moments of encounter with the Lord that
will touch and move us.
At La Salette the brilliant
light surrounding Our Lady, and then embracing the children, was truly a
sign of glory. As the two herders observed, this light seemed to emanate
from the crucified Christ that Mary wore on her breast. That dark, dark
moment of Good Friday is here revealed in its ultimate reality: Glory.
How do I respond to Christ's invitation to relate to
him in the humanity he shares in with me? How do I find and relate to him in
the wounds his people bear?
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April 13 |
EASTER FRIDAY John 21:144
"I'm going
fishing'. `We will join you.' "
This
gospel passage recounts Jesus' third appearance to the disciples. As they
had been instructed, they were waiting for the Lord in Galilee. Peter
decides to go fishing. The others join him. Fishermen by trade, they
returned to what they knew best, giving us a life-goes-on feeling. After an
unsuccessful night of fishing, a man walking along the shore tells them
they should cast their nets once again. They do so and a tremendous catch of
fish results, bringing vividly to mind their very first encounter with
Jesus: "Come, follow me. I will make you fishers of men and women."
John is the first to recognize him. "It is the Lord," he says. There is
something evocative about the scene. The disciples labor in vain. When the
as yet unrecognized Lord offered direction they might have been tempted to
tell him they were seasoned at their trade, had been fishing all night, and
that if there were fish to be caught they would have caught them. As members
of our "instant everything" culture, we are quick to toss off one
single failed attempt and move on to a new try. "Been there... done that" is
a mantra of our age. Yet we often row to shore, nets empty and spirits
drooping. Perhaps our attempts need only one more try. The grace moment may
be the very next one. And when success does come, do we exclaim: "It is the
Lord!"?
At the
time of the apparition at La Salette, it took a grandmother to realize that
the Beautiful Lady was in fact the Blessed Mother. There is much "waiting"
in the hearts of our elderly. And it is in that patient waiting that an
understanding and recognition of spiritual realities become clearer. The
timeless "light on the mountain" reveals the divine presence in the events
of our time.
Can I
identify times when the Lord has transformed my seemingly fruitless efforts
into blessings? Is "waiting" something I am comfortable with in my faith
life and Christian ministry?
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April 14 |
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EASTER SATURDAY Mark 16:9-15
"He was
revealed to them completely changed in appearance."
The Easter Week gospels have
dealt with the post-Resurrection appearances of Jesus. Jesus shows his
wounds, invites the disciples to touch him, breaks bread, cooks fish and
eats with them. He is not a ghost; he is really present. But he is also able
to walk through closed doors, appear and disappear at will, and presents a
changed appearance. Sightings and encounters with him were first reported to
the apostles by some of the women and two of the disciples. Most of the
apostles did not believe them. When Jesus did appear to them by the lake, he
reprimanded them for their disbelief and the stubbornness they showed in not
putting faith in these witnesses. We are people called to believe in Jesus
as a living presence, but he is very much the Jesus of a changed appearance.
Mark, Matthew and Luke identify his presence in the bread and wine
consecrated in his memory. For John, it is a presence hidden in humble,
loving service to others and the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. The
invitation to believe and experience Jesus' presence turns the popular
saying upside down. "I'll believe it when I see it" becomes "I'll see it
when I believe it."
Mary's message at La Salette
invites us to recognize the presence of God in our everyday lives. The
passage about the wheat field at Coin reveals God's ear close to earth
hearing Mr. Giraud's expression of care and concern for his son Maximin if
the wheat crop continues to fail. The connectedness between the here and the
hereafter can be seen, if we believe.
How credible is my witness
to the presence of the living Lord? How much faith and confidence do I put
in the faith experience of others? How often have I recognized Jesus in the
unexpected?
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April 16 |
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MONDAY
OF THE SECOND WEEK OF
EASTER
John
6:1-15
"Can I return to my mother's womb and be born all over
again?"
Embracing Jesus as the
Christ means becoming an entirely new person. Such a prospect alarms
Nicodemus, the captivated yet cautious night caller. He stammers this
question, "Do you mean I must re-enter my mother's womb?" Slow-witted?
Literal-minded? Not likely. This is rather an instance of radical resistance
to the drastic change Jesus' words imply. New birth always follows upon a
death of sorts. Birth pangs in one form or another. Under these
circumstances who would not try to buy a little time?
"If the harvest is ruined,"
Mary said at La Salette, "it is only on account of your-selves. I warned you
last year. You paid no heed." Paying heed can be a tricky affair. Promptings
toward conversion can be shrugged off, or they can be put on hold. Later on
can come much sooner than we think, however. Just as the gentle, mysterious
breeze unexpectedly parts our hair and strokes our face, may God's Spirit
stir mightily in us and help us claim the stirring.
In my life when is
hesitation a grace? When is hesitation a timid shirking?
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April 17 |
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TUESDAY OF THE SECOND
WEEK OF EASTER
John 3:7-15
"How can these things be?"
Ttrustee
of the past, heir to a rich legacy, Nicodemus comes forward, willing and
wanting at least to learn about the new. That he is sincere, we discover
from the progression in
his questions about the reality, the how, and the when of this birth from
above. The questions he puts to Jesus, his surprise at the answers he gets,
suggest that, although he is thoroughly schooled in the sacred writings and
culture of his people, he has not yet discovered what it really means to be
lost or saved, to be dead or alive. The questions we puzzle over can take us
to the innermost boundaries of our yearning, to the outermost reaches of our
desire.
In living
her graced life and in fulfilling her exalted calling, Mary asked few
questions. She pondered in her heart the words and deeds of the Lord. How to
love to the point of laying down one's life, she learned, is the answer to
the most basic of life's questions. Knowing only Christ and Christ
crucified, she appears on the mountain of La Salette wearing his cross upon
her heart. "Loveliest of all," as Melanie and Maximin later delighted to
repeat, "was the Lady's cross, the source of the light that enveloped her
entirely."
What questions do I raise in
my intimate encounters with Jesus? What do these questions say about the
boundaries of my yearning?
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April 18 |
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WEDNESDAY OF THE SECOND WEEK OF EASTER John 3:16-21
"Those who act in truth come into the light."
A familiar, if not
universally welcome, sight is that of the fellow brandishing the John 3:16
placard before the TV cameras in sports arenas and stadiums. If a few people
pause a moment and think to themselves: "This is really what it all comes
down to." If several more say to themselves: "This is truly good news." If
yet others flirt with the idea of acting on this reassuring word, our man
will have proved to be a clever publicist and an effective evangelist.
Just as God had refused to
surrender the first human couple to their fear and shame, but came looking
for them, so too did the risen Jesus seek the very ones who had deserted him
and fled into the dark night. Our Lady's appearance at La Salette in a globe
of resplendent brightness, inviting the children to step into her very
light, tells us that our
salvation is nothing less than God's relentless effort to find us and lure
us out of hiding - from God and from ourselves - in order to strip us of the
evasions, pretenses and rationalizations with which we have clothed our
shame.
Am I
conscious of any locked, dark rooms in my spiritual house? "Fortunately, it
is in the nature of cover-ups to be uncovered," William Safire once wrote.
How wholeheartedly do I agree?
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April 19 |
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THURSDAY OF THE
SECOND WEEK OF EASTER John
3:31-36
"The Father loves the Son and has given all things over to him."
Today's gospel reading calls
for probing and penetrating reflection as it puts before us such profound
realities as discipleship, the community of life and the communion of love.
Jesus discloses to us here the decisive underlying pattern of our whole life
in him. The love of the Father for the Son, a love that the Son returns in
obedience, establishes a community of life between the Father and the Son
and this shared life manifests itself when the Son speaks the Father's words
and does the Father's works. The love of Jesus for the disciples, a love the
disciples return in obedience, establishes a community of love between
Jesus and them, and this shared life manifests itself whenever the disciples
proclaim his words and carry out his works. The key word here - some would
call it the problem word - is obedience.
The opening words spoken at
La Salette by the Mother of the Lord, who herself accepted with loving
submission her place and part in God's plan, keynote the entire discourse
she delivered there: "If my people refuse to submit, I will be forced to let
go the arm of my Son." This stark statement of fact contrasts sharply with
her own wholehearted commitment as the first among the disciples. The large
chain embracing her shoulders tells us we are all interlocking links in a
chain of divine life. "All things are yours," she seems to say, "and you are
Christ's, and Christ, of course, is God's" (see 1 Corinthians 3:21, 23).
Do I balk inside at the mere mention of obedience? In
what specific ways will submission to my Lord set me free?
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April 20 |
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FRIDAY OF THE SECOND WEEK OF EASTER
John 6:1-15
"Where shall we buy bread for these people to eat? "
There can be no doubt that
the early church was rather partial to the multiplication story. We find it
in all four gospels: twice in Mark, twice in Matthew, once each in Luke and
John. It focuses on a most basic and shared human reality: the need to eat.
In his gift of bread Jesus gives himself entirely, feeding our bodies and
satisfying the many hungers of the human heart. A bit of bread and a bit of
fish wondrously became a lot of bread and a lot of fish. Every year through
the good earth, the Creator makes a little barley and a little wheat into
much barley and much wheat. Enough to feed a world. In the feeding of the
multitude, God incarnate, does up close, on a smaller scale and at an
accelerated pace, in hands just like ours, what he has always done.
With touching sadness Mary
cautions at La Salette that the wheat will become scarce and that hunger
will surely follow: "If you have wheat you must not sow it. Anything you sow
the insects will eat, and whatever does come up will fall into dust when you
thresh it." To bring her poignant message home to us more vividly, she
echoes the distress and powerlessness of a father before his child's hunger:
"Child, eat some bread... I don't know who will eat any next year if the
wheat continues this way." How are we to deal with humanity's growing needs?
One lad's provision for a day out is where one should begin. The need will
never be too great for our resources, if we share them as the Lord bids us
do.
What are some of the deepest
hungers of the human spirit? How concerned am I about world hunger?
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April 21 |
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SATURDAY OF THE SECOND WEEK OF EASTER John 6:16-21
"The disciples saw Jesus walking on the sea."
From our vantage point in
time we realize that as Jesus came walking toward them on the sea, the
disciples were witnessing a miracle of the new creation. That brief glimpse
was, so to speak, a crocus miracle. Crocuses, to our delight, break through
the earth's winter crust and snow. They signal that a crucial corner has
been turned. In the walking on the waves we see the relations between spirit
and nature changed to the point where nature can be made to do whatever
spirit pleases. This new obedience of nature cannot, of course, be separated
from the obedience of the human spirit to the Creator.
"If my people are
converted," the Mother of the risen Christ promised at La Salette, "rocks
and stones will be changed into mounds of wheat and potatoes will be
self-sown in the fields." She well knew that hope must always describe a
future that few think possible or even imaginable. Queen of Prophets, she
reminds us that language about "what will be later" must necessarily
contradict language about "what is now."
Can I honestly say that hope is a favorite virtue of
mine? How do optimism and hope differ?
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April 23 |
|
MONDAY OF THE THIRD WEEK OF EASTER John 6:22-19
"You should not be working for perishable food."
Food drive sponsors are
careful to indicate whether perishable as well as nonperishable items are
acceptable. If nature abhors a vacuum, human nature deplores waste. The
ongoing project of this world's creation claims from each of
us major contributions of effort, energy and work. But our life's work must
leave room for us to become more and more the person God is calling us to
be. Six days a week we seek to master the world. 'On the seventh
day we try to master ourselves. The world has our hands but our hearts
belong to the Creator of the world.
From her mountaintop and
with the deepest concern, Our Lady of La Salette observes her children
trudging their way over life's pathways, toiling for their livelihood. "I
gave you six days to work," she says, speaking as prophets do in God's very
name, "I have kept the seventh for myself." Six days we are to work at the
creation of the world, on the seventh we are to enjoy the world of creation.
The Lord's day calls us to marvel, to praise, to wonder. "Gather together,"
it invites us, "eat and drink. Sit comfortably and relax. Rest and be
restored. The feast is prepared and ready. It awaits you: body, spirit and
soul."
One year from now which of my current concerns will I
even remember? How can what I do benefit me, if I neglect who I am?
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April 24 |
|
TUESDAY OF
THE THIRD WEEK OF EASTER John 6:30-35
"I
myself am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never be hungry."
Combative
voices in the crowd put this snide question to Jesus: "What is the work you
do?" The answer to this question, however, can only benefit those who follow
Christ. He could well have replied: "The work I do? I do the will of the
Father to whom I am totally dedicated. I make known the God no one has ever
seen. I proclaim good news to the poor and the dispossessed. I allay every
human fear. I bear witness to the truth, the truth that sets hearts free. I
speak words of pardon and peace. I bring healing and wholeness to body, mind
and spirit. I restore God's distorted image in his rebellious children. I
seek out all who have strayed. I lay down my own life for love of my
friends. I consecrate myself as a sacrifice of praise and reconciliation. In
dying I destroy death, your death."
All this Jesus admirably
summed up in the hopeful words of this day's gospel: "I myself am the bread
of your life. If you come to me you will never be hungry."
As her apparition
at La Salette teaches us, the Mother of Jesus and our Mother, places herself
"in the middle," that is, she draws the attention of her Son to our needs
and hungers, as she draws our attention to the deep need of our hearts for
her Son: "If my people will not submit, I will be forced to let go
the arm of my Son." She bids us ponder his actions, savor his words,
commune with his silences and remain expectant before his loving gaze.
Is the overriding ambition of my life
to be "someone," or to follow Christ faith-fully? Can I say that Christ is
enough for me?
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April 25 |
|
WEDNESDAY OF THE THIRD WEEK OF EASTER
John 6:35-40
"No one who comes to me will I ever reject."
Listing
the striking qualities of the love Jesus gave to his own requires no effort
at all. His love for those first disciples was affirming, compassionate,
constant, forgiving, gentle, loyal, patient, trusting, and unfailing. That
same love for his own in the world now goes on giving courage and strength;
it continues to show endless patience and understanding. Despite our
slowness to believe, our lack of spiritual understanding, our less than
prompt response, this loving Savior assures us that we are not a burden, but
rather a gift to him from the Father, whose will it is that "Jesus should
lose none of those given to him."
Seeing
his Mother in tears on the mountain of La Salette, how could we not recall
the stirring scene of Jesus weeping over Jerusalem? In each instance a
hearty and timely response to the invitation of grace is at issue. "How long
a time I have suffered for you!" Do we not too often keep the Lord waiting?
Our impulsive pride, capricious love and inordinate self-absorption put all
but ourselves and our preoccupations on hold. And the Lord does wait. "No
one who comes to me will I ever reject." He bides his time and will
patiently tell us tomorrow what we refuse to hear today.
Is Christ really my closest friend,
sharing in all I do and experience? Have I thanked the Lord lately for the
privilege of being "one of his own"?
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April 26 |
|
THURSDAY OF
THE THIRD WEEK OF EASTER John 6:44-51
"The bread I will give is my flesh for the life of the world."
This promise was fulfilled
at the Last Supper, itself the anticipation of Cal-vary. Now and then the
words "This is my body" take you by surprise, seeping quietly into that
void you had forgotten was there. You live a timeless moment as you receive
that flesh given for you and feel inwardly linked with the divine, certain
that you are looked upon with mercy and love. The person behind you steps up
to your place to receive this bread. And it's not just that one person,
there are two long lines of them. And over and over again "The Body of
Christ. This is my body given for you," until the words mean more than you.
Before you and behind you others reach out, having brought there their
flushes of fervor, their pulses of doubt, their dearest dreams and their
unspoken hopes. We are many and we are one. We are happy and we hurt. We are
much in need of grace and we hunger to hear "This is my flesh for you, for
the life of the world."
To preserve for the Lord a
people he may continue to call his own is the purpose of Mary's ministry at
La Salette: "In the summer only a few somewhat aged women go to Mass. The
rest work on Sunday all summer long." Once and for all God's love has been
given and received. The covenant has been sealed once and for all. The
church is the community sealed by this definitive gift of God to us in Jesus
Christ. When Christians gather in remembrance of their Lord and celebrate
his death until he comes again, they actualize and express their God-given
identity and fulfill their God-given mission. If their Scriptures and
consecrated signs bear fruit in humanizing love, then the world for whose
sake they witness and worship will find them eloquent indeed.
Is the Eucharist the center of my life? At Eucharist do
I look to the Word and Body of Christ to transform me?
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April 27 |
|
FRIDAY OF
THE THIRD WEEK OF EASTER John 6:52-59
"Quarreling
among themselves, they said: `How can this man give us his flesh
to eat? "
The devil offered Jesus all
the kingdoms of the world. He rejected the offer. The tempter suggested that
he change stones into bread and satisfy his hunger. Jesus refused to do so.
Earlier in this chapter of John's Gospel the enthusiastic crowd wanted to
make Jesus king. He fled. Some Pharisees warned him at some point: "Herod
wants to kill you. Leave here." That time he did not go away. "How can this
one give us his flesh to eat?" many ask here in angry disgust.
Rather than dilute his statement, as we might advise him to do, Jesus
enlarged upon it: "If you do not eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink
his blood, you have no life in you." How little inclined the Lord was to
conform to our standards of accommodation, moderation and reasonableness!
The quarreling goes on.
"In the winter when they
don't know what to do," the Mother of Christ noted, her cheeks wet with
tears, "they go to Mass just to make fun of religion." How easily we can
forget that worship is the joyous acknowledgement that we did not make
ourselves but are dependent on the One who must not be made into a guarantor
of reality as we would like it to be. A truth tailored to our own measure
would be a pitifully partial truth. A God entirely of our own making would
be a God far too small.
How
sincerely do I invite the Lord to open my understanding to his Word? Do I
usually look to Scripture for confirmation of what I am already thinking or
doing?
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April 28 |
|
SATURDAY OF THE THIRD WEEK OF EASTER John 6:60-69
"Jesus then said to the Twelve, 'Do you want to leave me too?
Pollsters report the results
of their surveys under three headings: agree, disagree, no opinion. In times
of crisis, when trying to reach a decision, we usually consider three
possibilities: for, against, undecided. God never put three choices before
the people of Israel. The alternatives were always these: "I put before you
a blessing and a curse. I set before you life and prosperity, death and
doom" (Deut. 11:16; 30:15). The choice is yours. "Fully aware that his
disciples were murmuring at what he said," Jesus at this critical point
leaves them no middle ground either. He challenges them to decide: "Will you
leave me as well?" This approach is rooted in our very freedom. Every moment
of our life we move either toward or away from our true fulfillment; we must
say "yes" or "no" to the reality that we are. There is no way to say "maybe"
or "undecided" to existence.
Recognizing in Gabriel's
words the will of the Most High, the Virgin of Nazareth entrusted herself
fully and freely to the person and work of her Child. The choice she made in
freedom on that blessed day, she would freely ratify each day of her faith
pilgrimage to the foot of the cross. It is no surprise then that her entire
message at La Salette hinges on the classical "ifs" of free choice: "IF my
people will not submit, ... IF my people are converted..."
How deeply do I share in my
Lord's risen life, a life death can no longer reach? Do I choose to yield or
to cling? to hurt or to heal?
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April 30 |
|
MONDAY OF THE FOURTH WEEK OF EASTER John 10:1-10
"He calls his own sheep by name and leads them out."
In the
Middle East it was the custom of shepherds to bring their flocks together
into a secure fold for the night. Here, while their fellow shepherds slept,
a chosen few could easily guard many flocks from predators. In the morning
each shepherd would enter the fold and call his sheep. They would respond to
the familiar voice and confidently follow it - to green pastures; to running
water, even through the valley of darkness, on to the fullness of
life. In Jesus' time sheep were raised primarily for their wool and milk,
not as a source of meat. To the shepherds they were much like domestic
animals, even pets. They had names. Shepherds didn't use sheep dogs to nip
and snap at the heels of their sheep. Called by name, each of the sheep
responded.
One of
the intriguing things about the apparition at La Salette was that the
Beautiful Lady never referred to Maximin and Melanie by name. When speaking
of prayer she asked: "Do you say your prayers well, my children?"
When inquiring about spoiled wheat: "Have you never seen wheat gone bad,
my children?" And when they gave a negative answer, she addressed
Maximin: "But you, my child, surely you have seen some..." I have
often wondered why she didn't use their names, yet she went on to recount a
very intimate moment in the life of the lad -and his father. Again at the
end of the discourse Mary says: "Well, my children, you will make
this known to all my people."
Is my God near and supportive, or distant and silent? When I
think of and pray to God, do I call him by an intimate or more impersonal
name?
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May 1 |
|
TUESDAY OF THE FOURTH WEEK OF EASTER John 10:22-30
"The sheep that belong to me listen to my voice."
Words, sounds, voices are
such a great part of our lives. From our first conscious moments, they are
our major means of expression, of communication. They take on meaning for
ourselves and for others, not because they are heard but because they are
listened to. Listening requires attention to words and to persons. It
involves discernment and leads to choices. How often Jesus felt flustered
because people heard without listening, without understanding, without
opening their hearts. His teaching was not about dogma but about
relationship with a loving God to whom we could cry, "Abba"
(Galatians 4:6). Rather than listen to his voice, so often we continue to
close our ears and cry out, "Crucify him" (Mark 15:13).
At La Salette the children
said that once they heard the voice of the Beautiful Lady their fears melted
away. They found themselves drawn into her company, standing so close that
no one could have passed between them and her. They listened attentively.
Enthralled with the person before them, they didn't always understand her
words but did grasp the urgency of her message. Their dialogue with her was
etched into their memories, into their lives. But it took time to flower, to
ripen, to mature into practice. Remember that on the day after the
apparition, Maximin didn't even attend Mass after he and Melanie had
recounted their story to Father Perrin, the parish priest.
Where have I
matured lately after listening to the gospel message? Is my heart afire when
a word in Scripture truly challenges me?
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May 2 |
|
WEDNESDAY OF THE FOURTH WEEK OF EASTER John 12:44-50
`Anyone who rejects me and refuses my word has a judge."
Coming right before the
narration of the Passion, these words reflect how Jesus might have looked at
the result of his years of teaching, preaching, working miracles, trying to
shed new light on the reality of our world. Was he a success or a failure?
Except for a few trusted friends, people didn't perceive him as a shining
light. People didn't hear his loving message of forgiveness and con-version.
People didn't believe in him but wanted to use him for what they could get
out of him. Even Judas thought he could get his 30 pieces of silver and that
Jesus would somehow get away. Jesus, however, knew that the end was near. Or
rather that a new beginning, so far removed from any miracle he had worked
till then, was at hand. Yet he had not come to judge or condemn but to
save.
At La Salette Mary tries to
help us realize the effects of our actions. "If the harvest is ruined, it
is only on account of yourselves. ... If they are converted, rocks and
stones will turn into mounds of wheat and potatoes will be self-sown in the
fields." Our pernicious choices help create a social structure that brings
ruin upon ourselves and upon others, extending over and beyond what we
imagine. We might feel distant from those who died in the great famine of
1846, but can we think of ourselves as uninvolved in what is happening in
the Balkans today? If we believe we can escape the effects of what is going
on, we are deaf to Mary's words: "It is only on account of yourselves."
Do I recognize that what I am, what I believe, and what
I do all have repercussions on my life and on that of others? What actions
should this call me to?
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May 3 |
|
THURSDAY OF THE FOURTH WEEK OF EASTER John 13:16-20
"Whoever welcomes the one I send welcomes me."
We have all heard stories
of a Jesus in disguise coming to visit a household as a beggar, a child, a
homeless person. Those who welcomed him were astonished to discover him
under the disguise. The stories are touching and the reality is even more
so. Jesus comes indirectly to us through those who touch our lives. We
shouldn't be surprised when we don't recognize him. Mary Magdalene didn't
recognize him until he spoke her name. The apostles recognized him only when
they saw his wounds. Though they walked with him for hours, looked into his
eyes and heard his voice, the disciples going to Emmaus needed to share the
bread of fellowship before they recognized him. Welcoming people means
receiving them with pleasure, satisfaction and hospitality. It means
sharing what we have. It means caring about those we receive as well as for
them.
When Maximin and Melanie
first saw the globe of dazzling light they were afraid. They would have fled
had not the globe parted to reveal the Beautiful Lady. Like her Son, Mary
came disguised. Maximin naively thought she had come up there to cry her
heart out because her children had struck her. When she stood and invited
them to come near, their fears melted. As Mary came toward them they
approached her. Each welcomed the other. She brought Christ into their
lives; first through the shining crucifix on her breast and then by the
conversion which would gradually take place in their lives. Hospitality is
considered one of the chief Christian trademarks. It calls us to welcome
disguised saints and sinners into our lives, where Jesus can have the
pleasure and satisfaction of encountering them.
What fears hold me back from welcoming Christ into my
life today? What fears hold me back from sharing the bread of fellowship
with my brothers and sisters?
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May 4 |
|
FRIDAY OF
THE FOURTH WEEK OF EASTER John 14:1-6
"I am going to prepare a place for you."
Jesus must have experienced
a whole range of feelings as he bid farewell to his disciples. Things would
never be the same. Their solidarity would be broken. Judas would betray him.
Peter would deny him. All would flee. As Son of God, he had come down from
heaven. As son of Mary, he would be going home for the first time. What
expectation, what joy! But to get home, he would have to suffer and die.
What horror, what revulsion! Though he would rise from the dead, he would no
longer be with his disciples as before. Is it any wonder that he tried to
forestall their fears. "Do not let your hearts be troubled. ... I am going
to prepare a place for you."
Many of us have experienced
that place which is special to her Missionaries and to all her devotees -
Our Lady's shrine in the French Alps. This conjures up a blend of physical,
psychological and spiritual attitudes, feelings, judgments and memories. For
some La Salette is a picturesque place of prayer, for others it means a
barren wilderness of sorts. Some felt at home, while others have been there
and known desolation. For those who minister there week after week, routine
can set in; whereas for first-time visitors, feelings of anxiety before the
unfamiliar could arise. However we view this mountain sanctuary of La
Salette, it is a stepping stone in the spiritual lives of countless
pilgrims. After her visit to earth on this mountain, Mary returned to
heaven. We can echo Maximin's words: "We should have asked her to take us
with her." Hopefully, one day she will.
What range of feelings surges in me when I think of
going home to Jesus? Is mine a peaceful confidence that I shall indeed
follow where Jesus has gone?
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May 5 |
|
SATURDAY
OF THE FOURTH WEEK OF EASTER John 14:7-14
"To have seen me is to have seen the Father."
The word Father
appears ten times in this short passage. When I predicate a word, a name, or
idea of God my understanding is colored by my own experience. What
relationship did I have with my father? What influence did he have in
shaping my life? Was he a stem taskmaster, a soft touch, a mentor at play
and work, or one who made me feel like a klutz? Did he challenge me,
encourage me? Was he present when I needed him or was he always too busy? Or
did I completely lack a father figure because of death, divorce,
separation, or abandonment? All these shape my understanding of God as
Father. Shape it, yes; limit it, no. Jesus, God-become-flesh-for-me, gave me
another way of knowing God as Father. His human experience of God has become
mine, opening up my heart and soul to this revelation of the heavenly
Father.
A Father who cares
intensely for his children sent Mary to La Salette. My under-standing of him
through her words will be colored by my human experience and by my life of
faith. The incident of Maximin with his father in the field at Coin can
surely show how much God the Father cares for me, provides for me. "Here, my
child, eat some bread this year while we still have some. I don't know who
will eat any next year if the wheat continues like that." Mr. Giraud's words
bring to mind other words I so often speak to my Father: "Give us this day
our daily bread" (Matthew 6:11). And we recall Jesus' tribute to the concern
parents have for their children: "Is there anyone among you who, if your
child asks for bread, will offer a stone?" (Luke 11:11).
How do I envisage God as my Father? Is there still a
shadow of the punitive parent over my personal image of God?
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May 7 |
|
MONDAY OF THE FIFTH WEEK OF EASTER
John 14:21-26
"Those
who love me will keep my word, and my Father will love them,
and we will come to them and make our dwelling with them."
Dwelling with us is what
Jesus is all about. "And the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us." The
Incarnation is more than cohabitation. Jesus came to share every aspect,
every fiber of our humanity. He tells us that through the loving observance
of his commandments we can share in his divine life. What an exchange! We
know how difficult it is to dwell together, to form community. All community
is based on perceived needs. Not to perceive needs keeps the community from
developing. There are many things that thwart human community:
individualism, unwillingness to forgive, aggression, indifference. One thing
that fosters community is love, which is why Jesus says he will be found
dwelling in those who love.
Of Mahatma Gandhi, Pandit
Nehru said: "Where he sits is a temple and where he walks is holy ground."
We can say that of each other, because Christ promised to make us his home,
his temple, his dwelling place. Dwelling together in community has always
been an integral part of the La Salette Missionary life. This was
demonstrated in the document shared with us by our young religious brothers
who gathered at La Salette in December 1998-January 1999 to prepare for
their perpetual profession of vows. Based on solid foundations (Scripture,
the convictions of our founders, our present Constitutions, Pope John Paul
II's apostolic letter Vita Consecrata ), community calls us to more
than cohabitation, namely: "private and community prayer, especially the
Eucharist, interdependence, discernment, dialogue, openness and sharing,
respect for others, hospitality, attentiveness to the needs of others,
co-responsibility, forgiveness, an active obedience, and sharing in those
moments together that manifest human relationship and joy in community."
How do I
perceive these elements as helps to the deepening of my loving commitment
to my religious community? to my family? my parish family? my God?
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May 8 |
|
TUESDAY OF THE FIFTH
WEEK OF EASTER
John 14:27-31
"Peace I leave with you; peace is my farewell gift to you."
The gift of peace is echoed
in every Mass yet it so often eludes us. When it is experienced it exudes
wholeness, a reconciliation, a sense of union with all of creation and
beyond. Could that be why Jesus left it to us as his farewell gift? He was
about to reconcile the world to himself, to join again the created and the
Uncreated in a special relationship. The result would be that peace which he
alone could give, a joy for which all of creation had been groaning (Romans
8:22). St. Augustine was possibly describing it when he said that a
Christian should be alleluia from head to toe. We are an Easter
people and, with that fare-well gift in our hearts, alleluia is our
song.
When
we first hear of La Salette there seems to be no echo of peace and joy.
Rather we find a continual flow of tears, we hear of suffering, of God's
arm grown heavy, people swearing, human beings behaving like dogs, famine,
worm-eaten crops, children dying. Hardly a reason to sing alleluia!
But as we look deeper into the meaning of the tears and the message we can
distinguish the call to conversion, to reconciliation, to joy and peace. We
come to understand the meaning of the word if that Mary spoke. Christ
left us his farewell peace as a gift that must be received, not as something
foisted upon us. He said that we have his life in us, that salvation, peace
and joy are ours, "If you love me." Anyone who has experienced the
grace of reconciliation knows the profound peace that comes when the if
changes to yes .
What would it take for me
to experience a deeper sense of Jesus' farewell gift of peace? How expectant
and trusting is my relationship with him?
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May 9 |
|
WEDNESDAY
OF THE FIFTH WEEK OF EASTER John 15:1-8
"Whoever does not remain in me will be thrown out like a branch and
wither;
such branches are gathered and thrown into the fire and burned."
Chapter 15 of John's Gospel
is a richly constructed monologue in which Jesus goes far beyond a farewell
to his disciples. The imagery of the first part is clear - no life in
branches separated from the vine, abundant fruit when branches are trimmed.
One way or another some part of the vine is going to be trimmed, cut, pruned
with branches separated from the stem. These branches will be placed on the
vineyard wall to dry, then used for firewood. I remember being in a
vine-yard once where such precious branches were removed from their drying
place and used to make a very hot fire over which to roast our dinner of
shellfish. I have also seen them used to kindle a fire in an outdoor oven
for baking bread. Even these seemingly no-good twigs are precious and
useful.
The La Salette event often
reminds me of these separated branches. When Mary spoke to the children she
was directing her words primarily to people who were like severed twigs -
abandoning church, not observing the Lord's Day, swearing, neglecting
private and communal prayer. They were surely cut off. Yet there still must
have been some life in them. They were precious enough for her to come and
plead for their return. A desperate situation surely, but not a hopeless
one. It seems that an incision had to be made into the vine that it might
receive as a graft those not completely withered branches. La Salette, then,
is a miracle of hope. Mary was willing to let us see her sorrow, her tears,
her maternal solicitude for us when we stray. Perhaps it is because of her
tears falling on us that we retain some spark of life and are kept from
withering and dying.
What have I done lately to
thank the Lord for not allowing me to wither and die spiritually? To what
extent have I made the moral and spiritual values of Christian life
inwardly my own?
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May 10 |
|
THURSDAY OF THE FIFTH WEEK OF
EASTER John 15:9-11
"1 have kept my
Father's commandments and remain in his love."
Fidelity is not a quality
particularly required, sought after or cherished in today's society. This is
true in business dealings, in interpersonal relationships, in marriage and
in religious life. To Jesus, however, it was essential. He was faithful to
his Father, to his mission, to his word, to his disciples and friends. His
joy came from being loyal and faithful, in loving and being loved. His
obedience was loyalty to his Father. His fidelity was loyalty to himself.
Abiding by them both brought Jesus to his death, yes and death on the cross.
It also paved the way for his resurrection - new life for him and for us.
Sharing that joy, sharing that life, sharing that fidelity, will bring us
completeness.
I marvel at the
faithfulness of Melanie and Maximin to what they witnessed at La Salette.
These two uneducated children, Maximin a scatterbrain, Melanie an
introvert, had to undergo personal scrutiny, long hours of questioning,
buffeting by family and friends, scorn from churchmen. They remained
faithful. I find Maximin's last testament a marvelous declaration of
fidelity. "I firmly believe, even were it to cost the shedding of my blood,
in the renowned apparition of the Blessed Virgin on the holy mountain of La
Salette, September 19, 1846, the apparition to which I have testified in
words, in writings, and in suffering. After my death let no one assert that
he has heard me make any retraction concerning the great event of La Salette,
for in lying to the world he would be lying to himself. With these
sentiments I give my heart to Our Lady of La Salette."
How has fidelity been part
of my life? To what and to whom do I feel most firmly attached?
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May 11 |
FRIDAY OF THE FIFTH WEEK OF EASTER John 15:12-17
"It was not you who chose me,
but I who chose you."
Perhaps the word that best describes the thirst of
society today is freedom - freedom of assembly, freedom of choice, freedom
of speech, freedom from restraints of all kinds, especially authority.
Freedom of choice is foremost. It generally implies the liberty to choose
whom and what I want, when and how I want it. It is often said that you
can't choose family but you do choose friends. In choosing us to be his
friends, though, Jesus puts a damper on freedom. "You are my
friends if you do what I command you." Does the price of friendship mean
taking orders? Now that's countercultural! The friendship he offers,
however, is not based on one-to-one equality. "It was not you who chose me,
but I who chose you and appointed you to go and bear fruit that will
remain."
Maximin and Melanie were
chosen and given a mission. As wonderful as it may have been to be chosen to
witness the apparition, they paid a price. Their lives were disrupted. From
obscure, uneventful lifestyles they were thrown first into the path of
belligerent critics only to become objects of excessive adulation later on.
Free-spirited Maximin was hemmed in too quickly by the walls of the
semi-nary classroom when all he desired was the freedom of the mountain
slopes. Taciturn, melancholy Melanie was soon caressed by fame and a
following; her chances of living a simple, hidden religious life thus
permanently damaged.
How often do I stop and think about the call and mission the Lord has chosen
to give me? What countercultural efforts can I expect to make, if I choose
to be Jesus' friend in this day and age?
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May 12 |
|
SATURDAY OF THE FIFTH WEEK OF EASTER John 15:18-21
.. on account of my name."
Every
name is sacred, yours and mine included. Shakespeare asked, "What's
in a name?" Some names still instill fear, some inspire awe, some foster
tenderness, others ooze with hate, some leave us indifferent and unmoved.
For most people God's name, be it Yahweh, Allah, Jesus or Zeus, carries a
special reverence. In God's name people have sacrificed their lives for
others just as Jesus did for all humankind. In the name of God, wars were
waged; infidels, heretics, and innocent people were tortured and put to
death; the gospel was preached far and wide; grace was dispensed;
innumerable prayers and sacrifices were offered; saints were canonized.
Jesus knew his name would be reverenced, cursed, defiled and invoked as a
panacea for every ill, and often by the same person - me.
At La
Salette, Mary underlines the irreverence people have for God's name. It
comes in the form of swearing and is also. seen in indifference to what God
asks through the commandments, the laws of the church, the requirements of
sacra-mental life. That attitude was not limited to 1846. I have only to
consider the extent to which I accept and live the reality of the
post-Vatican Council II world and church to realize the necessity of voicing
my present-day mea culpa. But do I? "And as for you, you pay no
heed." I know my indifference touches Jesus deeply, because Mary accented it
as "one of the two things that make the arm of her Son so heavy."
When I pray in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Spirit how do I come into the presence of my God? Does my prayer continue to
have an influence in my life long after the words have passed my lips?
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May 14 |
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MONDAY OF
THE SIXTH WEEK OF EASTER John 15:26 - 16:4
"You have been with me from the beginning."
Cradle Catholics" often
speak of having been "born Catholic." Tertullian, one of the early North
African Church Fathers, offered this corrective: "Christians are made, not
born." If it is true that we Christians are not born, but made, then how is
it that we are made? In the same way that Peter, Mary of Bethany, James,
Mary Magdalene, John, Martha, Andrew, and the rest were made like Christ: by
dwelling with him, by following him. We become his disciples, we are
not born so. It is something we must choose daily. Those of us who
have been with him from a time shortly after our birth do sometimes take our
Catholic Christian faith for granted. But the Risen Lord comes to stir us
out of complacency and into a more mature responsibility for our faith as
adults.
Because of Christianity's
early history in France, the country is sometimes referred to as "the
eldest daughter of the Church." Unfortunately today, there is much
indifference and some hostility to the Christian faith in this ancient
cradle of Catholicism. Mary, Mother of the Church and Mother of La Salette,
went to the people of this eldest daughter in order to rouse them from their
sleep, to bring their faith to life again in the name of Jesus her Son. Her
words apply still to the Church throughout the world. For the renewal Mary
sought to bring to "all her people" to be effective, we must
continually grow in our faith, coming to a more mature level of trust in her
Son.
In
what ways do I take my faith for granted and fail to truly appreciate this
gift of God to me? Have I thought to pray for the children and adults who
were baptized in my parish this Easter Season?
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May 15 |
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TUESDAY OF THE SIXTH WEEK OF EASTER John 16:5-11
"When he comes, the Paraclete will show the world how wrong it was."
We don't usually think of
advocates as those who tell us what we have done wrong. We think of them as
those who stand up for us and fight for us to the last. The Holy Spirit, our
promised Paraclete before the Father, shows us the ways in which we have
betrayed ourselves, the ways in which we have contradicted our true selves,
the ways in which we have done wrong. We, who are flesh and spirit, must
learn from the divine Spirit how to be human. It is the Spirit who leads us
to recognize how wrong we are about our sins. The Spirit calls us away from
both these extremes: our sins either don't matter at all or they are too
great to be forgiven. As this Paraclete helps us to see how wrong we have
been he also shows us how right with God, self and others we can be.
Mary's message often seems
stern to me. That sternness is tempered, however, when I recall that it was
spoken by a mother. The image I have of a stern mother always includes that
of a child who has just done something to hurt a friend, or him- or herself.
"Why did you hit Bobby?" "Get away from that stove now! You'll get burned!"
"Go to bed. You need your rest." "If my people will not repent, I will be
forced to let go the arm of my Son," said Mary at La Salette. Reading
between the lines, I am tempted to insert, "I'm warning you. It's for your
own good."
What warnings have I heard
that I do not heed? Do I take the counsel of others seriously, or am I a
spiritual individualist, insisting on learning only from my own
experience of God, rather than trusting in the experience of others, like
the saints, and my brothers and sisters in the Lord?
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May 16 |
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WEDNESDAY OF THE SIXTH WEEK OF EASTER
John 16:12-15
"The Spirit of truth will announce to you the things to come."
A pocalypticism is all
around us. There is much talk about the end of the world out there these
days because of the new millennium. In light of this we might be tempted to
think about the end of the world when Jesus tells his disciples that the
Spirit will reveal what is to come. When we look for the magic formula that
gives us the day on which the world will end and Jesus will come in glory,
we risk forgetting to welcome him into our life this very day, this very
moment. Perhaps those "things to come" refer not to the end of the world,
but to this world's evolution toward God's Kingdom and the revelation of
God's will for us, our calling and direction in life. Some go through life
aimlessly wandering, never sure of their steps, yet hoping to stumble into
the right direction. With the Spirit as our guide, however, our steps are
sure, and we walk the straight and narrow path of Christ (Matthew 7:14), not
out of fear, but out of faith.
Mary's message at La
Salette is apocalyptic in the truest sense of the word. Apocalypse means
revelation. Mary's message manifested the divine disappointment over the way
things had gone (rotting crops) and also the divine hope that things would
be much improved (self-sown seeds). Just as the earth sometimes seems to
withhold a harvest from us, so too our hearts sometimes withhold justice
from each other, obedience and worship from God. At other times, though, our
response seems generous, pure, spontaneous, full of good will. At La
Salette Mary calls us to such Spirit-led spontaneity.
When is it
easy for me to bear good fruit in following the Lord? When is it difficult?
How can I persevere in the hard times, and show my gratitude in the good
times?
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