O Lord, let me know clearly that nothing will separate
me from Your love! And let me love You in return! Amen.
Rosary
Intentions
For those who are lost in their faith; Mother Mary, show them the way to
your Son.
Immaculate Heart of Mary, Pray for us who have recourse to thee! |
For those who are suffering; Dear Jesus, unite their suffering with Your
own suffering on the Cross for the poor souls in Purgatory.
Reflection
We live in
uncertainty; economic, political and social conflicts leave us scrambling for
some guarantee, or at least some lessened risk of disaster and failure. But our faith gives us one thing we can count
on, the one thing we absolutely need. In
good times and in bad, good health and sickness, celebration and grief, even
when we are inattentive to God, careless about prayer, filled with self-love
and indifferent to other people – we have always “the love of God in Christ
Jesus our Lord.” Even when most
inattentive, careless and indifferent, I trust St. Paul’s assurance that
nothing “will be able to separate us” from God’s ever-present Love. (Romans
8:31b-39)
Jesus models
exactly that faith, that trust in the Love of God ever-present to Him. (Luke
13:31-35) Warned that King Herod wished Him
to be killed, Jesus refused to be safe, to deny His mission. “I must continue on my way,” He asserted –
and headed towards death in Jerusalem – and His Resurrection, and our
salvation. Jerusalem, the actual city,
is the religious, political and cultural capital for Jesus in the first
century, and an argument could be made that the “unwilling” Jerusalem also
represents our religious, political and cultural situations in the twenty-first
century.
While we are
not living in a time or place where people may not want us physically dead (except,
of course, unwanted or ‘inconvenient’ children) there is much adversity in our
lives and cultures that makes being a Catholic difficult. I have met many
challenges to my faith. People who question, people who judge, people who see
scandals, or mistakes, or simply don’t understand the fundamental tenets of my
faith have all posed challenges and have made me ask not only why I’m Catholic,
but really what that means. And in my understanding, those questions are
answered by that final line: “Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord.”
I’ve sought
to deepen my understanding of my faith, but even on a fundamental level I’ve sought
to show people my faith through my actions. I may not need to explain teachings
or dogma for people to understand what it means to be Catholic. The goal is to
live the mission, for people to see Jesus and to see what it means to be
Catholic through me; through all of us.
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