Lectio Divina March 2025
Lectio Divina March 2025
1
By Guido Reni - Web Gallery of Art: Image Info about artwork, Public
Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=15397339
2
Saturday, March 1, 2025
Ordinary Time
Opening Prayer
Father, keep before us the wisdom and love You have revealed in Your Son.
Help us to be like Him in word and deed, for He lives and reigns with You and
the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Reflection
The Gospel of two days ago indicated the advice of Jesus concerning the
relationship of the adults with little ones and with the excluded (Mk 9: 41-50).
Yesterday’s Gospel indicated the advice on the relationship between man and
woman, husband and wife (Mk 10: 1-12). Today’s Gospel indicates the advice on the
relationship between parents and sons. Jesus asked for the greatest acceptance for
the little ones and the excluded. In the relationship man-woman, He asked for the
greatest equality. Now, with the sons and their mother, He asks for the greatest
tenderness.
• Mark 10: 13-16 - Receive the Kingdom like a child. People brought little children
to Him, for Him to touch them. The disciples wanted to prevent this. Why?
The text does not say it. Perhaps because according to the ritual norms of the
time, the small children with their mothers lived almost constantly the legal
impurity. To touch them meant to become impure! If they touched Jesus, He
would become impure! But Jesus does not feel uncomfortable with this ritual
norm of legal purity. He corrects the disciples and welcomes the mothers with
the children. He touches them, embraces them saying: “Let the little children
come to me, do not stop them: for it is to such as these that the Kingdom of God
belongs.” And He comments: “In truth I tell you, anyone who does not accept
the Kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it.” And then Jesus
embraces the children and blesses them and laid His hands on them. What
does this phrase mean? (a) The children receive everything from their
parents. They cannot merit what they receive but live from gratuitous love. (b)
The parents receive the children as a gift from God and take care of them with
the greatest possible love. The concern of the parents is not to dominate the
children, but to love them, educate them in a way in which they can grow and
be fulfilled! This is the relationship we have with our Father in Heaven! We
must be just like these children.
3
• A sign of the Kingdom - To welcome the little ones and the excluded. There
are many signs of the acting presence of the Kingdom in the life and the
activity of Jesus. One of these is the way of welcoming, of accepting the little
ones and the children:
• To welcome them and not scandalize them. One of the hardest words of
Jesus was against those who cause scandal to the little ones, that is, who
are the reason so that the little ones no longer believe in God. For them it
is better to have a millstone hung round their neck and be thrown into
the sea (Mk 9: 42; Lk 17: 2; Mt 18: 6).
• To identify oneself with the little ones. Jesus embraces the little ones and
identifies Himself with them. Anyone who receives a child, “receives Me”
(Mk 9: 37). “And as long as you did this to one of the least of these brothers
of mine, you did it to Me.” (Mt 25: 40).
• To become like children. Jesus asks the disciples to become like children
and to accept the Kingdom as they do. Otherwise, it is not possible to
enter into the Kingdom (Mk 10: 15; Mt 18: 3; Lk 9:4 6-48). He makes the
children teachers of adults! And that is not normal. Generally, we do the
contrary.
• To defend the right that children have to shout and yell. When Jesus,
entering into the Temple, turned over the tables of the money changers,
the children were those who shouted the most: “Hosanna to the Son of
David!” (Mt 21: 15). Criticized by the high priests and by the Scribes, Jesus
defends them and in defending them He recalls the Scriptures (Mt 21: 16).
• To be pleasing for the Kingdom present in little children. Jesus’ joy is great,
when He perceives that the children, the little ones, understand the
things of the Kingdom which He announced to the people.“ “I bless you,
Father!” (Mt 11: 25-26). Jesus recognizes that the little ones understand the
things of the Kingdom better than the doctors!
• To welcome, accept and take care. Many are the little children and the
young whom Jesus accepts, takes care of and raises from the death: the
daughter of Jairus who was 12 years old (Mk 5: 41-42), the daughter of the
Canaanite woman (Mk 7: 29-30), the son of the widow of Nain (Lk 7: 14-15),
the epileptic boy (Mk 9: 25-26), the son of the Centurion (Lk 7: 9-10), the
son of the public officer (Jn 4: 50), the boy with the five loaves of bread
and two fish (Jn 6: 9).
Personal Questions
• In our society and in our community, who are the little ones and the
excluded? How do we welcome and accept them?
• What have I learned in my life from children concerning the Kingdom of God?
• There are so many ways modern adults are not like children. What can I do to
become more child-like for the Father and in relation to my peers; imitative,
obedient, humble, grateful, innocent? Do I even want to?
4
• I place myself as innocent, obedient, humble, and grateful into my world of
friends, my business, recreation and my responsibilities. What happens? How
am I perceived by the world around me? If I continue to be this way, how
would this make a better world?
Concluding Prayer
Yahweh, I am calling, hurry to Me, listen to my voice when I call to You. May my prayer
be like incense in Your presence, my uplifted hands like the evening sacrifice. (Ps 141: 1-
2)
Opening Prayer
God our Father, You redeem us and make us Your children in Christ. Look upon
us, give us true freedom and bring us to the inheritance You promised. We ask
this through our Lord Jesus Christ, Your Son, who lives and reigns with You and
the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.
Amen.
Reflection
Today’s Gospel gives us some of the passages of the discourse which Jesus
pronounced on the plain after having spent the night in prayer (Lk 6: 12) and
after He had called the twelve to be His apostles (Lk 6: 13-14). Many of the
sayings in this discourse had already been pronounced on other occasions, but
Luke, imitating Matthew, puts them together in this Sermon on the Plain.
• Luke 6: 39: The parable of the blind man who guides another blind man. Jesus
tells a parable to the disciples: “Can a blind man guide another blind man?
Will not both of them fall into a hole?” A parable of one line, quite similar to
the warnings which, in Matthew’s Gospel, are addressed to the Pharisees:
“Alas for you, blind guides!” (Mt 23: 16-17, 19, 24, 26) Here in the context of the
Gospel of Luke, this parable is addressed to the animators of the communities
5
who consider themselves the masters of truth, superior to others and because
of this, they are blind guides.
• Luke 6: 40: Disciple – Master. “The disciple is not greater than the teacher, but
the well-prepared disciple will be like the teacher” Jesus is the Master, not the
professor. The professor in class teaches different subjects but does not live
with the pupils. The Master or Lord does not teach lessons; he lives with the
pupils. His subject matter is himself, his life witness, his way of living the things
that he teaches. Living together with the Master, the Lord has three aspects:
(1) the Master is the model or example to be imitated (cf. Jn 13: 13-15).
(2) The disciple not only contemplates and imitates, he commits himself
to the same destiny of the Master, with his temptations (Lk 22: 28), his
persecution (Mt 10: 24-25), his death (Jn 11: 16);
(3) He not only imitates the model, he not only assumes the commitment,
but arrives at identifying himself with Him: “I live, but it is not I who live,
but Christ lives in me!” (Gal 2: 20). This third aspect is the mystical
dimension of the following of Jesus, fruit of the action of the Spirit.
• Luke 6: 41-42: The splinter in the brother’s eye. “Why do you observe the
splinter in your brother’s eye and never notice the great log in your own? How
can you say to your brother: ‘Brother, let me take out that splinter in your eye,
when you cannot see the great log in your own? Hypocrite! Take the log out
of your own eye first, and then you will see clearly enough to take out the
splinter in your brother’s eye.” In the Sermon on the Mount, Matthew treats
the same theme and explains a bit better the parable of the splinter in the
eye. Jesus asks for a creative attitude which will make us capable of going and
encountering others without judging them, without preconceptions and
rationalizing, but accepting the brother (Mt 7: 1-5). This total openness toward
others considering them as brothers/sisters will arise in us only when we are
capable of relating to God with total trust as His children (Mt 7: 7-11).
Personal Questions
• Splinter and log in the eye. How do I relate with others at home and in my
family, in work and with my colleagues, in community and with the
brothers and sisters?
• Master and disciple. How am I a disciple of Jesus?
Concluding Prayer
Lord, how blessed are those who live in Your house; they shall praise You
continually. Blessed those who find their strength in You, whose hearts are set
on pilgrimage. (Ps 84: 4-5)
6
Opening Prayer
Lord, guide the course of world events and give Your Church the joy and peace
of serving You in freedom. You live and reign with the Father and the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Reflection
The Gospel today narrates two events: (a) it tells the story of a rich man who asks how
to obtain eternal life (Mk 10: 17-22), and (b) Jesus warns on the danger of riches (Mk 10:
23-27). The rich man does not accept the proposal of Jesus because he was very rich. A
rich person believes he is protected by the security which is given to him by his riches.
He has difficulty opening his hand and detaching himself from this security. He seizes
the advantage of his goods and lives being concerned about defending his own
interests. A poor person is not accustomed with this concern. But there may also be
some poor people who have the mentality of the rich. Then, the desire for riches
creates in them dependence and makes them become slaves of consumerism. They
have no time to dedicate themselves to the service of neighbor. Keeping these
problems in mind, problems of persons and of countries, let us read and meditate on
the text of the rich man.
• Mark 10: 17-19 - The observance of the commandments and eternal life. A
person came up to Jesus and asked: “Good Master, what must I do to inherit
eternal life?” The Gospel of Matthew tells us that it was the case of a young
man (Mt 19: 20-22). Jesus responds abruptly: “Why do you call Me good? No
one is good but God alone!” Jesus takes away the attention from Himself to
direct it toward God, because what is important is to do God’s will, to reveal
the Father’s plan. Then Jesus affirms: “You know the commandments: You
7
shall not kill. You shall not commit adultery. You shall not steal. You shall not
give false witness. You shall not defraud. Honor your father and mother.” It is
important to always observe the response of Jesus. The young man had asked
something concerning eternal life. He wanted to live together with God. But
Jesus does not mention the first three commandments which define our
relationship with God! He mentioned only those which indicate respect for
the life lived together with others. According to Jesus, we can only be well
with God if we know how to be well with our neighbor. It serves nothing to
deceive ourselves. The door to reach God is our neighbor.
• Mark 10: 20 - What good is it to observe the commandments? The young man
answered that he observed the commandments since his earliest days. What
is strange is what follows. He wanted to know which was the way to eternal
life. Now, the way of life was, and continues to be, to do God’s will expressed
in the commandments. It means that he observed the commandments
without knowing for what purpose. Otherwise, he would not have asked any
questions. This is what can happen today to many Catholics: they do not know
what it means to be Catholic. “I was born in a Catholic country; this is why I
am Catholic!” It is mindless!
• Mark 10: 21-22 - To share the goods with the poor and to follow Jesus. Hearing
the response of the young man, “Jesus looked at him and was full of love for
him and said: You need to do one more thing: go and sell what you own and
give the money to the poor and you will have a treasure in heaven, then come,
follow Me!” The observance of the commandments is only the first step of a
stairway that goes higher. Jesus asks more! The observance of the
commandments prepares the person for the total gift of self on behalf of
neighbor. Jesus asks for much, but he asks it with much love. The rich young
man does not accept the proposal of Jesus and goes away not just because
he was a man of great wealth, but because he valued that wealth above all
others.
• Mark 10: 23-27 - The camel and the eye of the needle. After the young man
left, Jesus commented on His decision: “How hard it is for those who have
riches to enter the kingdom of God!” The disciples were astounded. Jesus
repeats the same phrase and adds: “It is easier that a camel passes through
the eye of a needle than for someone rich to enter the kingdom of God!”
• The expression “enter the kingdom” not only indicates in the first-place
entrance into heaven after death, but also and above all, the entrance into the
community around Jesus. The community is and should be a model of the
Kingdom. The reference to the impossibility for a camel to pass through the
eye of a needle comes from a popular proverb of the time used by the people
to say that a thing was, humanly speaking, impossible and unfeasible.
The disciples were astounded by hearing this and they ask themselves: “Then
who can be saved?” This is a sign that they had not understood the response
of Jesus to the young rich man: “Go, sell all you all you own and give the
money to the poor and then come follow me.”
The young man had observed the commandments since his earliest days, but
8
without understanding the reason for this observance. Something similar
was happening to the disciples. They had already abandoned all their goods
as Jesus had asked the young rich man, but without understanding the
reason, the why of this abandonment. If they had understood, they would not
have been astounded at the demands of Jesus. When riches, or the desire for
riches, occupies the heart and the gaze, the person cannot perceive the sense
of the Gospel. Only God can help! Jesus looks at the disciples and says:
“Impossible for man but not for God. For God everything is possible.”
Personal Questions
• Can someone who lives constantly concerned about her wealth, or who lives
always wanting to buy all the things the television advertises, free herself from
everything to follow Jesus and live in peace in a Christian community? Is it
possible? How do you do it and what are the steps?
• Do you know somebody who has succeeded in abandoning everything for
the sake of the Kingdom? What does it mean for us today: “Go, sell all you
own, and give the money to the poor”? How can we understand and practice
this?
• Does this instruct communities as well, or just individuals? How would a
community “abandon everything” and still carry on its mission?
Concluding Prayer
I give thanks to Yahweh with all my heart, in the meeting-place of honest
people, in the assembly. Great are the deeds of Yahweh, to be pondered by all
who delight in them. (Ps 111: 1-2) to the living God. (Ps 84: 2)
Opening Prayer
Lord,
guide the course of world events
and give Your Church the joy and peaceof serving You in freedom.
You live and reign with the Father and the Holy Spirit,one God, for ever and ever.
Amen.
Reflection
• In yesterday’s Gospel, Jesus spoke about the conversation among the
disciples about material goods: to get away from things, to sell everything, to
give it to the poor and tofollow Jesus. Or rather, like Jesus, they should live in
total gratuity, placing their own life in the hands of God, serving the brothers
and sisters (Mk 10: 17-27). In today’s Gospel, Jesus explains how this life of
gratuity and service of those who abandon everything for Him, for Jesus and
for the Gospel, should be (Mk 10: 28-31).
• Mark 10: 28-31: A hundred times as much, as well as persecutions too. Peter
observes:“We have left everything and followed You.” It is like saying: “We have
done what the Lord asked of the young rich man. We have abandoned
everything, and we have followed You. Explain to us how our life should be.”
Peter wants Jesus to explain more of the new way of living in service and
gratuity. The response from Jesus is beautiful, profound, and symbolic: “In
truth there is no one who has left house, brothers, sisters, mother, father,
children or land for My sake and for the sake of the Gospel whowill not receive
a hundred times as much, houses, brothers, sisters, mothers, children and
land, with persecutions too, now in the present time and in the world to come.
Manywho are first will be last and the last, first.” The type of life which springs
from the giftof everything is an example of the Kingdom which Jesus wants to
establish (a) to extend the family and to create community; it increases a
hundred times the number of brothersand sisters. (b) It produces the sharing
of goods because all will have a hundred times more houses and land. Divine
Providence incarnates itself and passes through the fraternal organization,
where everything belongs to everyone and there are no longer persons who
are in need. They put into practice the Law of God which asks, “that there be
no poor among you” (Dt 15: 4-11). This was what the first Christians did (Acts 2:
42-45). It is the perfect living out of service and gratuity. (c) They should not
expect any privilege in return, no security, no type of promotion. Rather, in
this life they will haveall this, but with persecutions. Because in this world,
organized on ego and the special interests of groups and people, those who
want to live a gratuitous love and the gift of self will be crucified as Jesus was.
(d) They will be persecuted in this world, but in the future world they will have
eternal life, which the rich young man spoke about.
• Jesus is the choice of the poor. A two-fold slavery characterized the situation
of the people of the time of Jesus: the slavery from the politics of Herod
supported by the Roman Empire and maintained by a well-organized system
of exploitation and repression, and the slavery of the official religion,
maintained by the religious authorityof the time. This is why the clan, the family,
the community, were all being disintegrated, and a great number of the people
were excluded, marginalized, homeless, and having no place in religion or in
society. This is why several movements arose which were seeking a new way
of living in community: the Essene, the Pharisees, and later on, the Zealots. In
10
the community of Jesus there was something new which made it different
from other groups. It was the attitude toward the poor and the excluded. The
communities of the Pharisees lived separated. The word “Pharisee” means
“separated.” They lived separated from impure people. Many Pharisees
considered people ignorant and cursed (Jn 7: 49), and in sin (Jo 9: 34). Jesus
and His community, on the contrary, lived together with these excluded
persons who were considered impure: publicans, sinners, prostitutes, and
lepers (Mk 2: 16; 1: 41; Lk 7: 37). Jesus recognizes the richness and the values
which the poor possess (Mt 11: 25-26; Lk 21: 1-4). He proclaims them blessed,
because the Kingdom is theirs - it belongs to the poor (Lk 6: 20; Mt 5: 3). He
defines His mission: “to proclaim the Good News to the poor” (Lk 4: 18). He
himself lives as a poor person. He possesses nothing for Himself, not even a
rock where to lay His head (Lk 9: 58). And to those who want to follow Him to
share His life, He tells them to choose: God or money! (Mt 6: 24). He orders that
they choose in favor of the poor! (Mk 10: 21). The poverty which characterized
the life of Jesus and the disciples also characterized the mission. Contrary to
other missionaries (Mt 23: 15), the disciplesof Jesus could take nothing with
them, neither gold, nor money, nor two tunics, nor purse, nor sandals (Mt 10:9-
10). They had to trust in the hospitality offered to them (Lk9: 4; 10: 5-6). If they
would be accepted by the people, they should work like everybodyelse and
live from what they would receive as wages for their work (Lk 10: 7-8). They
should take care of the sick and those in need (Lk 10: 9; Mt 10: 8). Now they
could tell the people: “The Kingdom of God is very near to you!” (Lk 10: 9).
Personal questions
• In your life, how do you practice as Peter did: “We have left everything and
have followed you”?
• Gratuitous sharing, service, acceptance to the excluded, are signs of the
Kingdom. What do I do to live this? When do I do it? Can there be more?
• Look inside. What is the real motivation? Is it from love, or for gain? Is it a
“transaction,” gaining extra “credits” for the next life? Is pride involved? Are there
other reasons?
• Worldy wisdom teaches one has to be powerful, a “mover and shaker,” to
influence others. How does one influence others when they have given away
everything and in the world’s eyes are poor? At what point, or in what way,
would one’s poverty speak louder and be more influential?
Concluding Prayer
The whole wide world has seenthe saving power of our God.
Acclaim Yahweh, all the earth, burst into shouts of joy! (Ps 98: 3-4)
11
Opening Prayer
Lord Jesus, send Your Spirit to help us to read the Scriptures with the same
mind that You read them to the disciples on the way to Emmaus. In the light of
the Word, writtenin the Bible, You helped them to discover the presence of God
in the disturbing eventsof Your sentence and death. Thus, the cross that seemed
to be the end of all hope became for them the source of life and of resurrection.
Create in us silence so that we may listen to Your voice in creation and in the
Scriptures,in events and in people, above all in the poor and suffering. May Your
word guide us so that we, too, like the two disciples on the way to Emmaus, may
experience the forceof Your resurrection and witness to others that You are
alive in our midst as source of fraternity, justice, and peace. We ask this of You,
Jesus, Son of Mary, who revealed to us the Father and sent us Your Spirit. Amen.
The Gospel of Ash Wednesday is taken from the Sermon on the Mount and
offers us help in understanding the practice of the three works of mercy: prayer,
almsgiving andfasting and the way to spend the time of Lent well. The manner
of practicing these three works has changed over the centuries, according to
the culture and customs of people and their state of health. Old people today
still remember when there was a strict and compulsory fast of forty days
throughout Lent. In spite of changes in the practice of theworks of mercy, there
still is the human and Christian obligation (i) to share our goodswith the poor
(almsgiving), (ii) to live in contact with the Creator (prayer) and (iii) to be able to
control our urges and desires (fasting). The words of Jesus on which we
meditate can give us the necessary creativity to find new forms of living these
three practices so important in the life of Christians.
A Division of the Text to Assist in the Reading:
Jesus said to his disciples: "Take care not to perform righteous deeds in order that
people may see them; otherwise, you will have no recompense from your
heavenly Father. When you give alms, do not blow a trumpet before you, as the
hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets to win the praise of others.
Amen, I say to you, they have received their reward. But when you give alms, do
12
not let your left hand know what your right is doing, so that your almsgiving
may be secret. And your Father who sees in secret will repay you. "When you
pray, do not be like the hypocrites, who love to stand and pray in the
synagogues and on street corners so that others may see them. Amen, I say to
you, they have received their reward. But when you pray, go to your inner room,
close the door, and pray to your Father in secret. And your Father who sees in
secret will repay you. "When you fast, do not look gloomy like the hypocrites.
Theyneglect t ir appearance, so that they may appear to others to be fasting.
Amen, I say he to you, they have received their reward. But when you fast,
anoint your head and wash your face, so that you may not appear to be fasting,
except to your Father who is hidden. And your Father who sees what is hidden
will repay you."
Some Questions
to help us in our personal reflection.
Jesus speaks of three things: almsgiving (Mt 6: 1-6), prayer (Mt 6: 5-15) and fasting
(Mt6: 16-18). These were the three works of mercy of the Jews. Jesus criticizes the
fact thatthey practice these works to be seen by others (Mt 6: 1). He will not
allow that the practice of justice and mercy be used as a means to social
promotion within the community (Mt 6: 2, 5, 16). In the words of Jesus there
comes to light a new kind of relationship with God that is revealed to us. He
says, “Your Father who sees all that is done in secret will reward you" (Mt 6: 4),”
Your Father knows what you need before you ask Him” (Mt 6: 8), “If you forgive
others their failings, your heavenly Father will forgive you yours” (Mt 6: 14). Jesus
presents us with a new way of approaching the heart of God. A meditation on His
words concerning the works of mercy may help us discover this new way.
A Commentary on the Text:
14
you. Maybe before others you may even seem to be a person who does not
pray. This does not matter! Evenof Jesus it was said, “He is not God!” That is
because Jesus often prayed at night and did not care what others thought.
What matters is to have one’s conscience at peace andto know that God is the
Father who welcomes me, not because of what I do for God orbecause of the
satisfaction that I seek in the eyes of others, who appreciate me as one who
is pious and prays.
Further information:
Matthew’s Gospel was written for a community of converted Jews who were
experiencing a deep crisis of identity in relation to their past. After their
conversion to Jesus, they continued to live according to their old traditions and
frequented the synagogue, together with their relatives and friends, just as
before. But they suffered because of the strong pressure from their Jewish
friends who did not accept Jesus as theMessiah. This tension grew after the year
70 AD. When in 66 AD the revolt of the Jewsagainst Rome broke out, two groups
refused to take part, the Pharisees and the Jewish Christians. Both groups held
that going against Rome had nothing to do with the comingof the Messiah, as
some thought. After the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans in the year 70,
all the other Jewish groups disappeared. Only the Pharisees and the Jewish
Christians remained. Both groups claimed to be the heirs of the promise of the
prophetsand, thus, the tension grew between brothers, because of the
inheritance. The Phariseesreorganized the rest of the people and took an ever-
stronger position against the Christians, who ended by being excommunicated
from the synagogues. This excommunication rekindled the whole problem of
identity. Now the Christians were officially and formally separated from the
people of the promise. They could no longerfrequent their synagogue, their
rabbis. And they asked themselves, “Who are the real people of God: they or us?
On whose side is God? Is Jesus really the Messiah?”
15
Thus, Matthew writes his Gospel (1) for this group of Christians, as a Gospel of
consolation for those who had been excommunicated and persecuted by the
Jews, helping them to overcome the trauma of breaking away; (2) as a Gospel of
revelation, showing that Jesus is the true Messiah, the new Moses, who fulfills
the promises; (3) asa Gospel of the new practice, showing how they must
achieve true justice, greater thanthe justice of the Pharisees.
A Key to the Sermon on the Mount
The Sermon on the Mount is the first of five sermons in Matthew’s Gospel. It
describesthe conditions that will allow a person to enter the Kingdom of God:
the way in, the new reading of the law, the new way of looking at and practicing
the works of mercy; the new way of living in community. In a word, in the
Sermon on the Mount, Jesus communicates the new way of looking at the
things of Life and the Kingdom. The following is a division that serves as a key to
reading:
• Mt 5: 1-16: The way in
• Mt 5: 1-10: The eight Beatitudes help us to see where the kingdom is already
present (among the poor and persecuted) and where it will be soon (among
the other six groups).
• Mt 5: 12-16: Jesus addresses His words of consolation to His disciples and warns
that anyone who lives the beatitudes will be persecuted (Mt 5:11-12), but his or
her life will have meaning because he/she will be the salt of the earth (Mt 5:13)
and the light of theworld (Mt 5: 14-16).
• Mt 5: 17-to-6: 18: The new relationship with God: A new Justice
• Mt 5: 17-48: The new justice must be greater than that of the Pharisees
Jesus radicalizes the law, that is, He brings it back to its roots, to its main and
ultimate purpose which is to serve life, justice, love and truth. The
commandments of the law point to a new way of life, avoided by the
Pharisees (Mt 5: 17-20).
• Mt 6: 1-18: The new justice must not seek reward or merit (This is the Gospel of
this Ash Wednesday).
• Mt 6: 19-34: The new relationship to the goods of this world: a new vision of
creation
Jesus comes to grips with the primary needs of life: food, clothing, house and
health. This is the part of life that causes most anxiety in people. Jesus teaches
how to relate to material goods and to the riches of the world: do not
accumulate goods (Mt 6: 19-21); do not look at the world with sad eyes (Mt 6:
22-23); do not serve God and money at thesame time (Mt 6: 24); do not worry
about food and drink (Mt 6: 23-34).
Final Prayer
17
Lord Jesus, we thank for the word that has enabled us to understand better the
will of the Father. May Your Spirit enlighten our actions and grant us the
strength to practice what Your Word has revealed to us. May we, like Mary, Your
mother, not only listen to but also practice the Word. You who live and reign
with the Father in the unity of theHoly Spirit forever and ever. Amen.
Opening Prayer
Lord our God,
You love us and You invite us
to share in Your own life and joy,through a personal decision.
Help us to choose You and lifeand to remain ever loyal
to this basic option
by the power of Jesus Christ, Your Son,
who was loyal to You and to us, now and forever.
Reflection
Yesterday we entered into the season of Lent. Up until now the daily Liturgy
followed the Gospel of Mark, step by step. Beginning yesterday until Easter, the
sequence of thereadings of the day will be dictated by the ancient tradition of
Lent and of preparation for Easter. From the very first day, the perspective is
that of the Passion, Death and Resurrection and of the meaning which this
mystery has for our life. This is what is proposed in the rather brief text of today’s
Gospel. The text speaks of the Passion, Deathand Resurrection of Jesus and
affirms that the following of Jesus presupposes that we carry our cross after
Jesus.
Before, in Luke 9: 18-21, Jesus asks, “Who do the crowds say that I am?” They
answered giving different opinions: John the Baptist, Elijah or one of the ancient
prophets. After having heard the opinions of others, Jesus asks, “Who do you say I
am?” Peter answers,“The Christ of God!” that is, the Lord is the one awaited by
the people! Jesus agrees with Peter, but He orders and charges them not to say
this to anyone. Why did Jesus forbid this? Because at that time everybody was
expecting the Messiah, but each one according to his own mind: some as king,
others as priest, doctor, warrior, judge, or prophet! Jesus thinks in a different way.
18
He identifies Himself with the Messiah, servant and suffering, announced by
Isaiah (42: 1-9; 52: 13-53: 12)
The first announcement of the Passion. Jesus begins to teach that He is the
Messiah, theServant and affirms that, as Messiah, the Servant announced by
Isaiah, soon He will beput to death in the carrying out of His mission of justice (Is
49: 4-9; 53: 1-12). Luke usually follows the Gospel of Mark, but here he omits the
reaction of Peter, who advised Jesus against or tried to dissuade Him from
thinking of the suffering Messiah and he also omits the hard response: “Far
from me, Satan! Because you do not think as God, but as men!” Satan is a
Hebrew word which means accuser, the one who draws others far away from
the path of God. Jesus does not allow Peter to get Him away from His mission.
Conditions to follow Jesus. Jesus draws conclusions valid even until now: “If
anyone wants to follow Me, let him deny himself, take up his cross every day
and follow Me.”At that time the cross was the death penalty which the Roman
Empire gave tomarginalized criminals. To take up the cross and to carry it
following Jesus was the same as accepting to be marginalized by the unjust
system which legitimized injustices.It was the same as to break away from the
system. As St. Paul says in the letter to the Galatians, “The world has been
crucified for Me and I to the world” (Gal 6: 14). The cross is not fatalism, neither is
it an exigency from the Father. The Cross is the consequence of the
commitment freely assumed by Jesus to reveal the Good News thatGod is
Father, and that, therefore, we all should be accepted and treated as brothers
andsisters. Because of this revolutionary announcement, He was persecuted,
and He was not afraid to deliver His own life. There is no greater proof of love
than to give one’s life for one’s brother or sister.
Personal Questions
• Everybody was waiting for the Messiah, each one in his/her own way. Which
is the Messiah whom I await and whom people today await?
• The condition to follow Jesus is the cross. How do I react before the crosses of
life?
Concluding Prayer
How blessed is anyone who rejects the advice of the wickedand does not take a
stand in the path that sinners tread,
nor a seat in company with cynics,
but who delights in the law of Yahweh
and murmurs His law, day and night. (Ps 1: 1-2)
Opening Prayer
19
Lord of the Covenant,
we have not to fear Your judgment if like You we become rich in mercy and full
of compassion for our neighbor. May we not only know that You ask us but
practice with sincere hearts to share our food with the hungry and to loosen the
bonds of injustice, that through us Your light may shine and Your healing
spread far and wide. Be with us in Your goodness.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Reflection
Today's Gospel is a brief version of the Gospel which we already meditated on in
January, when the same theme of fasting was proposed to us (Mk 2: 18-22), but
there isa small difference. Today, the Liturgy omits the whole discourse of the
new piece of cloth on an old cloak and the new wine in an old skin (Mt 9: 16-17)
and concentrates itsattention on fasting.
Jesus does not insist on the practice of fasting. Fasting is a very ancient practice
and done in almost all religions. Jesus Himself practiced it during the forty days
(Mt 4: 2). But He did not insist His disciples do the same. He leaves them free.
For this reason, the disciples of John the Baptist and of the Pharisees, who were
obliged to fast, want toknow why Jesus does not insist on fasting.
While the bridegroom is with them, they do not need to fast. Jesus responds
with a comparison. When the bridegroom is with the friends of the spouse, that
is, during the wedding feast, it is not necessary for them to fast. Jesus considers
Himself the spouse. The disciples are the friends of the spouse. The time which
Jesus is with the disciples is the wedding feast. The day will come in which the
spouse will no longer be there. Then,they can fast if they so desire. In this phrase
Jesus refers to His death. He knows and Hebecomes aware that if He continues
along this path of freedom the religious authority will want to kill Him.
Fasting and abstinence from meat are universal practices. The Muslims have
fasting during Ramadan, during which they don’t eat until the rising of the sun.
For diverse reasons, people impose upon themselves some form of fasting.
Fasting is an importantmeans to control oneself and this exists in almost all
religions. It is also appreciated bythose who are health conscious.
The Bible has many references to fasting. It was a way of making penance and
of attaining conversion. Through the practice of fasting, Christians imitated
Jesus who fasted for forty days. Fasting helps to attain the freedom of mind,
self-control, and perhaps a critical vision of reality. It is an instrument to free our
mind and not allow oneto be transported by any breeze. It is a means to take
better care of health. Fasting can be a form of identification with the poor who
are obliged to fast the whole year and eatmeat very rarely. There are also those
who fast in order to protest.
20
Even if fasting and abstinence are no longer observed today, the basic objective
of thispractice continues to remain unchanged and is a force which should
animate our life: toparticipate in the Passion, Death and Resurrection of Jesus.
Surrender one’s own life in order to be able to possess it in God. Become aware
or conscious of the fact that the commitment to the Gospel is a one-way
journey, without returning, which demands losing one’s life in order to be able
to possess and find all things in full liberty.
Personal Questions
• What form of fasting do you practice? And if you do not practice any, what is
the formwhich you could practice?
• How can fasting help me to better prepare for the celebration of Easter?
Concluding Prayer
Have mercy on me, O God, in Your faithful love,in Your great tenderness wipe
away my offenses; wash me clean from my guilt, purify me from my sin. (Ps 51: 1-
2)
Opening Prayer
Lord our God, merciful Father, when You call us to repentance,you want us to
turn to people and to build up peace and justice among us all. According to
Your promise, let us become, with Your strength,
lights for those in darkness,water for those who thirst, re-builders of hope and
happiness for all.
May we thus become living signs of Your love and loyalty, for You are our God for
ever.
Reflection
21
Today s Gospel presents the same theme which we reflected upon in January in
the Gospel of Mark (Mk 2: 13-17). This time, it is only the Gospel of Luke which
speaks and the text is much shorter, concentrating its attention on the principal
supper which isthe call and conversion of Levi, and what the conversion implies
for us who are enteringinto the time of Lent.
Jesus calls a sinner to be His disciple. Jesus calls Levi, a tax collector, and he
immediately left everything, follows Jesus, and begins to form part of the group
of thedisciples. Luke says that Levi had prepared a great banquet in his house.
In the Gospelof Mark, it seemed that the banquet was in Jesus’ house. What is
important here is the insistence on the communion of Jesus with sinners,
around the table, which was a forbidden thing.
Jesus did not come for the just, but for sinners. This gesture of Jesus causes
great angeramong the religious authorities. It was forbidden to sit at table with
tax collectors and sinners, because to sit at table with someone meant to treat
him as a brother! With His way of doing things, Jesus was accepting the excluded
and was treating them as brothers of the same family of God. Instead of speaking
directly with Jesus, the of the Pharisees speak with the disciples: Why do You
eat and drink with tax collectors and sinners? Jesus answers: It is not those that
are well who need the doctor; I have come to call notthe upright, but sinners, to
repentance! His consciousness of His mission helps Jesus tofind the response to
indicate the way for the announcement of the Good News of God. He has come
to unite the dispersed people, to reintegrate those who are excluded, to reveal
that God is not a severe judge who condemns and expels, but rather He is
Father who accepts and embraces.
Personal Questions
• Jesus accepts and includes people. What is my way of accepting people?
• Jesus’ gesture reveals the experience that He has of God the Father. What is
the imageof God which I bear and express to others through my behavior?
Concluding Prayer
Listen to me, Yahweh, answer me,for I am poor and needy.
Guard me, for I am faithful,
save Your servant who relies on You. (Ps 86: 1-2)
Lectio
Initial Prayer
Oh Lord, at the beginning of this Lenten time You invite me to meditate, once
more, onthe account of the temptations, so that I may discover the heart of the
spiritual struggleand, above all, so that I may experience victory over evil.
22
Holy Spirit, “visit our minds” because frequently, many thoughts proliferate in our
mindwhich make us feel that we are in the power of the uproar of many voices.
The fire of love also purifies our senses and our heart so that they may be docile
and available to the voice of Your Word. Enlighten us (accende lumen sensibus,
infunde amorem cordibus) so that our senses may be ready to dialogue with
You. If the fire of Your loveblazes up in our heart, over and above our aridity, it
can flood the true life, which is fullness of joy.
Reading of the Gospel: Luke 4: 1-13
Filled with the Holy Spirit, Jesus returned from the Jordan and was led by the
Spirit into the desert for forty days, to be tempted by the devil. He ate nothing
during those days, and when they were over he was hungry. The devil said to
him, "If you are the Son of God, command this stone to become bread." Jesus
answered him, "It is written, One does not live on bread alone." Then he took
him up and showed him all the kingdoms of the world in a single instant. The
devil said to him, "I shall give to you all this power and glory; for it has been
handed over to me, and I may give it to whomever I wish. All this will be yours, if
you worship me." Jesus said to him in reply, "It is written: You shall worship the
Lord, your God, and him alone shall you serve." Then he led him to Jerusalem,
made him stand on the parapet of the temple, and said to him, "If you are the
Son of God, throw yourself down from here, for it is written: He will command
his angels concerning you, to guard you, and: With their hands they will support
you, lest you dash your foot against a stone." Jesus said to him in reply, "It also
says, You shall not put the Lord, your God, to the test." When the devil had
finished every temptation, he departed from him for a time.
Moment of Prayerful Silence:
To listen, silence is necessary: of the soul, of the spirit, of the senses, and also
exteriorsilence, with the purpose of listening to what the Word of God intends to
communicate.
Meditatio
Key for the Reading:
Luke, with the refinement of a narrator, mentions in 4: 1-44 some aspects of the
ministryof Jesus after His baptism, among them the temptations of the devil. In
fact, he says thatJesus, “Filled with the Holy Spirit, left the Jordan and was led by
the Spirit into the desert, for forty days” (Lk 4: 1-2). Such an episode in the life of
Jesus is something preliminary to His ministry, but it can also be understood as
the moment of transition from the ministry of John the Baptist to that of Jesus.
In Mark such an account of the temptations is more generic. In Matthew, it is
said that Jesus “was led by the Spirit intothe desert to be tempted by the devil”
(Mt 4: 1), these last words attribute the experienceof the temptations to an
influence which is at the same time heavenly and diabolical. The Lukan account
modifies Matthew’s text in such a way as to show that Jesus, “filledwith the Holy
Spirit,” leaves the Jordan on His own initiative and is led by the Spirit into the
desert for forty days, where “He is tempted by the devil” (4: 2). The meaning
which Luke wants to give to the temptations of Jesus is that those were an
23
initiative of the devil and not a programmed experience of the Holy Spirit (S.
Brown). It is as if Luke wanted to keep clearly distinct the person of the devil
from the person of the HolySpirit.
Another element to be kept in mind is the order in which Luke places the
temptations: desert – sight of the kingdoms of the world – pinnacle of Jerusalem.
In Matthew, instead,the order varies: desert – pinnacle – high mountain.
Exegetes discuss which is the original disposition, but they have not arrived at a
unanimous opinion. The difference could be explained beginning with the third
temptation (the culminating one): for Matthew the “mountain” is the summit of
the temptation because in his Gospel he places all his interest on the theme of the
mountain (we just have to remember the Sermon onthe Mount, the
presentation of Jesus as “the new Moses”); for Luke, instead, the last temptation
takes place on the pinnacle of the temple of Jerusalem because one of the
great interests of his Gospel is the city of Jerusalem (Jesus in Luke’s account is
on the way toward Jerusalem where salvation is definitively fulfilled) (Fitzmyer).
The reader can legitimately ask himself, “In Luke, just as in Matthew, were there
possible witnesses to the temptations of Jesus?” The answer is certainly
negative. Fromthe account of Luke it appears clearly that Jesus and the devil
are completely alone. Jesus’ answers to the devil are taken from Sacred
Scripture; they are quotations from the Old Testament. Jesus faces the
temptations, and particularly that of the worship which the devil intends from
Jesus Himself, having recourse to the Word of God as bread of life, as protection
from God. The recourse to the Word of God contained in thebook of
Deuteronomy, considered by exegetes as a long meditation on the law, shows
Luke’s intention to recall this episode in the life of Jesus with God’s plan, who
wishesto save the human race.
Did these temptations take place historically? Why do some, among believers
and non-believers, hold that such temptations are only some fantasy about
Jesus, some inventionof a story? Such questions are extremely important.
Certainly, it is not possible to givea literal and unsophisticated explanation, or
perhaps to think that these could have happened in an external way. Dupont’s
explanation seems to offer an alternative: “Jesusspeaks about an experience
which He has lived, but translated into a figurative language, adapted to strike the
minds of His listeners” (Les Tentations de Jesus au Desert, 128). More than
considering them as an external fact, the temptations are considered as a
concrete experience in the life of Jesus. It seems to me that this is the principal
reason which has guided Luke and the other evangelists in transmitting those
scenes. The opinions of those who hold that the temptations of Jesus are
fictitious or invented are deprived of foundation, neither is it possible to share
the opinion of Dupont himself, when he says that these were “a purely spiritual
dialogue that Jesus had with the devil” (Dupont, 125). Looking within the New
Testament (Jn 6: 26-34; 7: 1-4; Heb 4: 15; 5: 2; 2: 17a) it is clear that the temptations
were an evident truth in the life of Jesus.The explanation of Raymond Brown is
interesting and can be shared: “Matthew and Luke would have done no injustice
to historical reality by dramatizing such temptationswithin a scene, and by
masking the true tempter by placing this provocation on his lips”(The Gospel
According to John, 308). In synthesis we could say that the historicity of the
temptations of Jesus or the taking root of these in the experience of Jesus
might be described with a “figurative language” (Dupont) or “dramatized”
24
(Raymond Brown). One must distinguish the content (the temptations in the
experience of Jesus) from its container (the figurative or dramatized language).
It is possible that these two interpretations are much more correct than those
which interpret them in a purely literalsense.
An Additional Key to the Reading:
25
accept his (Satan's) proposals. In his address to new bishops in missionary
territories in 2016, Pope Francisadvised: "Divisions are the weapon that the devil
has most at hand to destroy the Church from within.” These divisions are at play
today once we move our understanding of gospel events from faith to
rationalism or pragmatism.
Cardinal Raniero Cantalamessa, OFM Cap, the Pontifical Household preacher,
puts it wellin his 1st Lenten homily in 2008: If many people find belief in demons
absurd, it is because they take their beliefs from books, they pass their lives in
libraries and at desks... How could a person know anything about Satan if he has
never encountered thereality of Satan, but only the idea of Satan in cultural,
religious and ethnological traditions? They treat this question with great
certainty and a feeling of superiority, doing away with it all as so much
"medieval obscurantism." But it is a false certainty.
It is like someone who brags about not being afraid of lions and proves this by
pointingout that he has seen many paintings and pictures of lions and was
never frightened by them. On the other hand, it is entirely normal and consistent
for those who do not believein God to not believe in the devil. The episode of
Jesus’ temptations in the desert that is read on the First Sunday of Lent helps us
to have some clarity on this subject.
First of all, do demons exist? That is, does the word “demon” truly indicate some
personal being with intelligence and will, or is it simply a symbol, a manner of
speakingthat refers to the sum of the world’s moral evil, the collective
unconscious, collective alienation, etc.? Many intellectuals do not believe in
demons in the first sense. But it must be noted that many great writers, such as
Goethe and Dostoyevsky, took Satan’s existence very seriously. Baudelaire, who
was certainly no angel, said that “the demon’s greatest trick is to make people
believe that he does not exist.” - Translation by Joseph G. Trabbic.
St Teresa, who battled Satan, and St John of the Cross, firmly believed in Satan
as a being, as did Pope Paul VI: "one of the greatest needs is the defense from that
evil whichis called the Devil. Evil is not merely a lack of something but an effective
agent, a livingspiritual being, perverted and perverting. A terrible reality,
mysterious and frightening..."
Thus, we don't have to abandon a literal or historical view of these events merely
because it defies our modernist senses. Moreover, it would be overly
presumptive to redefine Luke's narrative, of an interaction between the Son of
God and the Prince of Evil, as something that must have occurred on merely
human terms or in the imagination.
Luke intends to remind us in these scenes that the temptations were addressed
to Jesusby an external agent. They are not the result of a psychological crisis or
because He finds Himself in a personal conflict with someone. The temptations,
rather, lead back to the “temptations” which Jesus experienced in His ministry:
hostility, opposition, rejection. Such “temptations” were real and concrete in His
life. He had no recourse toHis divine power to solve them. These trials were a
form of “diabolical seducing” (Fitzmyer), a provocation to use His divine power
to change the stones into bread and to manifest Himself in eccentric ways.
The temptations end with this expression: “Having exhausted every way of
putting Himto the test, the devil left Jesus (4: 13). Therefore, the three scenes
which contain the temptations are to be considered as the expression of all
temptations or trials which Jesus had to face. But the fundamental point is that
26
Jesus, insofar as He is the Son, facedand overcame the “temptation.”
Furthermore, He was tested and tried in His fidelity tothe Father and was found
to be faithful.
A last consideration regarding the third temptation. In the first two temptations
the devilprovoked Jesus to use His divine Sonship to deny His human finiteness,
to avoid providing for Himself bread like all men, requiring from Him an illusory
omnipotence.In both of these, Jesus does not respond, saying, “I do not want
to!” but appeals to thelaw of God, His Father: “It is written… it has been said…” A
wonderful lesson. But thedevil does not give in and presents a third provocation,
the strongest of all: to save Himself from death. In one word, to throw Himself
down from the pinnacle meant a sure death. The devil quotes scripture, Psalm
91, to invite Jesus to the magic and spectacular use of divine protection, and in
the last instance, to the denial of death. Thispassage in the Gospel of Luke
launches a strong warning: the erroneous use of the Wordof God can be the
occasion of temptations. How is that? My way of relating myself to the Bible is
placed in crisis especially when I use it only to give moral teachings to others
who are in difficulty or in a state of crisis. We refer to certain pseudo-spiritual
discourses which are addressed to those who are in difficulty: “Are you
anguished? There is nothing else you can do but pray and everything will be
solved.” This means to ignore the consistency of the anguish which a person has
and which frequently stemsfrom a biochemical fact or a psycho-social difficulty,
or a mistaken way of placing oneself before God. It would be more coherent to
say: Pray and ask the Lord to guide you in having recourse to the human
mediation of the doctor or of a wise andknowledgeable friend so that they can
help you in lessening or curing you of your anguish. One cannot propose biblical
phrases, in a magic way, to others, neglecting to use the human mediation. “The
frequent temptation is that of making a bible of one’s own moral, instead of
listening to the moral teachings of the Bible.” (X. Thévenot).
An Additional Key to the Reading:
However, both sides of this argument tend to be too simplistic, and just as it
would be mistaken to advise a hungry person to just pray for a meal to appear,
it is just as erroneous to reduce St John of the Cross' Dark Night to a mere
psycho-social difficulty,as well as St Terese's visions, or St Paul of the Cross
or St Teresa of Calcutta's difficulties. We are then left with the task of
discerning between these two recourses. StIgnatius of Loyola, who himself
experienced suffering on both physical and spiritual levels, offers much
guidance on discernment in these matters. A spiritual director can also help.
Satan uses division to separate us from God, and Gnosticism, pragmatism,
rationalism, and empiricism all have elements that drive us to decide "this I can
do" and"this other maybe God could help," letting us decide, in a typically ever
growing circle,that we can do without God, and relegating Him out of our lives.
The contemporary world expects God to come like earthquakes and thunder,
rolling into fix things. If that were so, there would be no opportunity for faith
and no free will. God speaks as in a small whispering sound (1 Kings 19: 11-12), and
when we don't hearit, we think He hasn't answered. Even more relevant would
be to pray for guidance on where help or consolation is to be found, whether it
be spiritual or physical, including recourse to the sacraments, Eucharistic
Adoration, or the Rosary as well as finding a friend. Every hardship can be an
27
opportunity to increase one's faith, even if it means doing some of the work
oneself. "Amen, I say to you, if you have faith the size of a mustard seed, you will
say to this mountain, 'Move from here to there,' and it will move.Nothing will be
impossible for you" (Mt 17: 20).
In this time of Lent I am invited to get close to the Word of God with the
following attitude: a tireless and prayerful devotion to the Word of God, reading
it with a constantbond of union with the great traditions of the Church, and in
dialogue with the problems of humanity today.
Oratio
Psalm 119:
How blessed are those whose way is blameless, who walk in the law of Yahweh!
Blessed are those who observe His instructions,who seek Him with all their
hearts,
Let us renew ourselves in the SpiritAnd put on the new man
Jesus Christ, our Lord,
in justice and in true sanctity. (St. Paul).
and, doing no evil, who walk in His ways.
You lay down Your precepts to be carefully kept.
Let us follow Jesus Christ and serve Him
with a pure heart and good conscience. (Rule of Carmel)
May my ways be steady in doing Your will.
Then I shall not be shamed,
if my gaze is fixed on Your commandments.
Let us follow Jesus Christand serve Him
with a pure heart and good conscience. (Rule of Carmel)
I thank You with a sincere heart
for teaching me Your upright judgments. I shall do Your will;
do not ever abandon me wholly.
Let us renew ourselves in the Spirit And put on the new man
Christ Jesus, our Lord,
created according to God the Father
in justice and in true sanctity. Amen (St. Paul).
Final Prayer:
Lord, we look for You and we desire to see Your face, grant us that one day,
removingthe veil, we may be able to contemplate it.
We seek You in Scripture which speaks to us of You and under the veil of
wisdom, the fruit of human searching.
We look for You in the radiant faces of our brothers and sisters, in the marks of
YourPassion in the bodies of the suffering.
Every creature is signed by Your mark, everything reveals a ray of Your
invisiblebeauty.
You are revealed in the service of the brother, You revealed Yourself to the
brother bythe faithful love which never diminishes.
Not the eyes but the heart has a vision of You, with simplicity and truth we try to
speakwith You.
28
Contemplatio
To prolong our meditation we suggest a reflection of Benedict XVI:
“Lent is the privileged time of an interior pilgrimage toward the One who is the
sourceof mercy. It is a pilgrimage in which He Himself accompanies us through
the desert ofour poverty, supporting us on the way toward the intense joy of
Easter. Even in the “dark valley” of which the Psalmist speaks (Psalm 23: 4),
while the tempter suggests that we be dispersed or proposes an illusory hope in
the work of our hands, God takes care of us and supports us. […] Lent wants to
lead us in view of the victory of Christ over every evil which oppresses man. In
turning to the Divine Master, in converting ourselves to Him, in experiencing His
mercy, we discover a “look” which penetrates inthe depth of ourselves and
which can encourage each one of us.”
Opening Prayer
Lord, holy God, loving Father,
you give us the task to love one anotherbecause You are holy
and You have loved us before we could love You.
Give us the ability to recognize Your Sonin our brothers and sisters far and near.
Make us witnesses that love exists and is aliveand that You, the God of love,
exist and are alive now forever.
29
stranger or naked or ill or in prison, and not minister to yourneeds?' He will
answer them, 'Amen, I say to you, what you did not do for one of theseleast
ones, you did not do for me.' And these will go off to eternal punishment, but
the righteous to eternal life."
Reflection
• The Gospel of Matthew presents Jesus as the New Messiah. Like Moses, Jesus
also promulgates the Law of God. As with the ancient law, the new one, given
by Jesus, also contains five books or discourses. The Sermon on the Mountain
(Mt 5: 1 to 7: 27), the first discourse, opens with eight Beatitudes. The discourse
on vigilance (Mt 2: 4, 1 to 25, 46), the fifth discourse, contains the description
of the Last Judgment. The Beatitudes describe the door of entrance into the
Kingdom, enumerating eight categories of people: the poor in spirit, the
meek, the afflicted, those who hunger and thirst for justice, the merciful, the
pure of heart, the peacemakers and the persecuted because of justice (Mt 5:
3-10). The parable of the Last Judgment tells us what we should do in order to
possess the Kingdom: accept the hungry, the thirsty, the foreigners, the
naked, the sick and the prisoners (Mt 25: 35-36): At the beginning, as well as
at the end of the New Law, there are the excluded and the marginalized.
• Matthew 25: 31-33: Opening of the Last Judgment. The Son of Man gathers
together around Him the nations of the world. He separates people as the
shepherd does with the sheep and the goats. The shepherd knows how to
discern. He does not make a mistake; sheep on the right, goats on the left.
Jesus does not make a mistake. Jesus does not judge nor condemn. (cfr. Jn 3:
17; 12: 47). He does not separate alone. It is the person himself/herself who
judges and condemns because of the way in which he/she behaves toward
the little ones and the excluded.
• Matthew 25: 34-36: The sentence for those who are at the right hand of the
Judge. Those who are at the right hand of the judge are called Blessed of my
Father! That is, they receive the blessing which God promised to Abraham
and to his descendants (Gen 12: 3). They are invited to take possession of the
Kingdom, prepared for them from the foundation of the world. The reason for
the sentence is the following: I was hungry, a foreigner, naked, sick and
prisoner, and you accepted me and helped me! This sentence makes us
understand who are the sheep. They are the persons who accepted the Judge
when he was hungry, thirsty, a foreigner, naked, sick and prisoner. Because of
the way of speaking about my Father and the Son of Man, we can know that
the Judge is precisely Jesus Himself. He identifies Himself with the little ones!
• Matthew 25: 37-40: A request for clarification and the response of the Judge:
Those who accept the excluded are called just. That means that the justice of
the Kingdom is not attained by observing norms and prescriptions, but rather
by accepting those in need. But it is strange that the just do not even know
themselves when they accepted Jesus in need. Jesus responds: Every time
that you have done this to one of my brothers, you have done it to me. Who
are these little brothers of mine? In other passages of the Gospel of Matthew,
30
the expression “my brothers” indicates the disciples (Mt 12: 48-50; 28: 10). This
also indicates the members of the community who are more abandoned and
neglected who have no place and are not well received (Mt 10: 40). Jesus
identifies Himself with them. In the broader context of the last parable, the
expression “my smallest brothers” is extended and includes all those who
have no place in society. It indicates all the poor. The just and the blessed by
my Father are all the persons from all nations who accept and welcome
others with total gratuity, independently of the fact that they are Christians
or not.
• Matthew 25: 41-43: The sentence for those who were at the left-hand side.
Those who were on the other side of the Judge are called cursed and they are
destined to go to the eternal fire, prepared by the devil and his friends. Jesus
uses a symbolic language common at that time to say that these persons will
not enter into the Kingdom. And here, also, their is only one reason: they did
not accept or welcome Jesus as one who is hungry, thirsty, a foreigner, naked,
sick and/or a prisoner. It is not that Jesus prevents them from entering into
the Kingdom, rather it is our way of acting that is our blindness which
prevents us from seeing Jesus in the little ones.
• Matthew 25: 44-46: A request for clarification and the response of the Judge.
The request for clarification indicates that it is a question of people who have
behaved well, people who have their conscience in peace. They are certain to
have always practiced what God asked from them. For this reason they were
surprised when the Judge says that they did not accept Him, did not welcome
Him. The Judge responds: Every time that you have not done these things to
one of my brothers, the little ones, you did not do it to me. It is the omission!
They did not do anything extra. They only missed practicing good towards the
little ones and the excluded. This is the way the fifth Book of the New Law
ends!
In the saints and Church Fathers we have a lot to learn about virtues and vices.
It is not enough to just avoid vice, or sin, but to also work toward attaining
virtue and virtuous behavior. To do no harm is not the same as to help. This is
what we are called to do: to not just avoid doing wrong or harm, but to go out
of our way to do good as well.
Personal Questions
• What struck you the most in this parable of the Last Judgment?
• Do I focus my life more on avoiding harm or on doing good for others?
• Stop and think: if the Last Judgment would take place today, would you be
on the sideof the sheep or on the side of the goats?
Concluding Prayer
The precepts of Yahweh are honest, joy for the heart;
the commandment of Yahweh is pure,light for the eyes. (Ps 19: 8)
31
Tuesday, March 11, 2025
Season of Lent
Opening Prayer
Lord God,
You speak Your mighty word to us, but we cannot hear it
unless it stirs our lives
and is spoken in human terms.
Keep speaking Your word to us, Lord, and open our hearts to it,
that it may bear fruit in uswhen we do Your will
and carry out what we are sent to do.
We ask You this through Your living Word, Jesus Christ our Lord.
Reflection
There are two versions of the Our Father: Luke (Lk 11: 1-4) and Matthew (Mt 6: 7-
13). In Luke, the Our Father is shorter. Luke writes for the communities which
came from Paganism. In Matthew the Our Father is found in the Discourse on
the Mountain, in the part where Jesus orientates the disciples in the practice of
the three works of piety: alms (Mt 6: 1-4), prayer (Mt 6: 5-15) and fasting (Mt 6: 16-
18). The Our Father forms part of acatechesis for the converted Jews. They were
accustomed to pray, but had some vices which Matthew tries to correct.
• Matthew 6: 7-8: The faults to be corrected. Jesus criticizes the people for
whom prayerwas a repetition of a magic formula, strong words addressed to
God to oblige Him to respond to our needs. The acceptance of our prayer by
God does not depend on the repetition of words, but on God’s goodness, on
God who is love and mercy. He wants our good and knows our needs even
before we pray to Him.
• Matthew 6: 9a: The first words: Our Father, Abba Father, is the name which
Jesus usesto address Himself to God. It reveals the new relationship with God
that should characterize the life of the communities (Ga 4: 6; Rm 8: 15). We say
Our Father and not My Father. The adjective places the accent on the
awareness or knowledge that we allbelong to the great human family of all
32
races and creeds. To pray to the Father is to enter in intimacy with Him. It also
means to be sensitive to the cry of all the brothers and sisters who cry for their
daily bread. It means to seek in the first place the Kingdom of God. The
experience of God as our Father is the foundation of universal fraternity.
• Matthew 6: 9b-10: Three requests for the cause of God: The Name, the
Kingdom, the Will. In the first part we ask that our relationship with God may
be re-established again.To sanctify His name: The name JAHVE means I am
with you! God knows. In this name He makes Himself known (Ex 3: 11-15). The
name of God is sanctified when it isused with faith and not with magic; when
it is used according to its true objective, not for oppression but for the liberty
or freedom of the people and for the construction of the Kingdom. The
coming of the Kingdom: The only Lord and King of life is God (Is 45: 21; 46: 9).
The coming of the Kingdom is the fulfillment of all the hopes and promises. It
is life in plenitude, the overcoming of frustration suffered with human kings
and governments. This Kingdom will come when the Will of God will be fully,
accomplished. To do His will: The will of God is expressed in His Law. His will
be done on earth as it is in Heaven. In Heaven the sun and the stars obey the
laws of their orbit and create the order of the universe (Is 48: 12-13). The
observance of the law of God will be a source of order and well-being for
human life.
• Matthew 6: 11-13: Four petitions for the cause of the brothers: Bread, Pardon,
Victory, Liberty. In the second part of the Our Father we ask that the
relationship among persons may be restored. The four requests show how
necessary it is to transform or change thestructures of the community and
society in order that all the sons and daughters of Godmay have the same
dignity. The daily bread. In Exodus the people received the manna in the
desert every day (Ex 16: 35). Divine Providence passed through the fraternal
organization, the sharing. Jesus invites us to live a new Exodus, a new fraternal
way ofliving together which will guarantee the daily bread for all (Mt 6: 34-44;
Jo 6: 48-51). Forgive us our debts: Every 50 years, the Jubilee Year obliged
people to forgive their debts. It was a new beginning (Lv 25: 8-55). Jesus
announces a new Jubilee Year, a yearof grace from the Lord (Lk 4: 19). The
Gospel wants to begin everything anew! Do notlead us into temptation, do
not put us to the test: In Exodus, people were tempted and fell (Dt 9: 6-12). The
people complained and wanted to go back (Ex 16: 3; 17: 3). In the new Exodus,
the temptation will be overcome by the strength which people receive from God
(I Co 10: 12-13). Deliver us from evil: The Evil One is Satan, who draws away from
God and is a cause of scandal. He succeeds in entering in Peter (Mt 16: 23) and
to tempt Jesus in the desert. Jesus overcomes him (Mt 4: 1-11). He tells us:
Courage, I have conquered the world! (Jn 16: 33).
• Matthew 6: 14-15: Anyone who does not forgive will not be forgiven. In praying
the Our Father, we pronounce the phrase which condemns us or absolves us.
We say: Forgive our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass us (Mt 6: 12).
We offer God themeasure of pardon that we want. If we forgive very much, He
will forgive us very much. If we forgive little, He will forgive little. If we do not
forgive, He will not forgive us.
33
Personal Questions
• Jesus prayer says forgive our debts. In some countries it is translated as
forgive our offenses. What is easier to forgive, the offenses or to forgive the
debts?
• Christian nations of the Northern Hemisphere (Europe and USA) pray
everyday: Forgive our debts as we forgive those who are in debt to us! But
they do not forgive the external debt of poor countries of the Third World.
How can we explain this terrible contradiction, source of impoverishment of
millions of people?
• Debt, in the context of society, is not only money. In fact, in referring to people
who have served time in jail we say “they have paid their debt to society.” Do
we accept these people back into society? Not only have they paid their
“debt,” they are often treated as having not been forgiven.
• How do we forgive others in terms of immigration, documented or not, and
accept them into our communities?
Concluding Prayer
Proclaim with me the greatness of Yahweh,let us acclaim His name together.
I seek Yahweh and He answers me, frees me from all my fears. (Ps 34: 3-4)
Opening Prayer
Forgiving, merciful God,
we pray to You for a good measureof humility and honesty
to acknowledge before You and people
that we are weak and fallible men and women, who often try to turn a blind eye
to our shortcomings and our sins.
Strong with the grace won in the hard way by Your Son on the cross,
we beg You for the courage to seek Your forgiveness
and to turn and return wholeheartedly to You and to serve You and people.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
34
of the earth tohear the wisdom of Solomon, and there is something greater
than Solomon here. At the judgment the men of Nineveh will arise with this
generation and condemn it, because at the preaching of Jonah they repented,
and there is something greater than Jonah here.”
Reflection
We are in Lent. The Liturgy presents texts which can help us to convert
ourselves and to change our life. What helps more in conversion are the facts of
the history of the People of God. In today’s Gospel, Jesus presents two episodes
of the past: Jonah and the Queen of the South and transforms this into a mirror
in such a way that one can discover God’s call to conversion.
• Luke 11: 29: The evil generation which asks for a sign. Jesus calls the generation
evil because it does not want to believe in Jesus and continues to ask for signs
which can indicate that Jesus has been sent by the Father. But Jesus refuses
to present these signs, because if they ask for a sign it is because they do not
believe. The only sign which willbe given is that of Jonah.
• Luke 11: 30: The sign of Jonah. The sign of Jonah has two different aspects. The
first one is what the text of Luke affirms in today’s Gospel. Jonah was a sign,
through his preaching, for the people of Nineveh. Listening to Jonah, the
people were converted. Inthe same way, the preaching of Jesus was a sign for
His people, but the people did not show any sign of conversion. The other
aspect is that which the Gospel of Matthew affirms when he quotes the same
episode: For as Jonah remained in the belly of the sea-monster for three days
and three nights, so will the Son of man be in the heart of the earth for three
days and three nights (Mt 12: 40). When the fish vomited Jonah into the dry
land, he went to announce the Word of God to the people of Nineveh. In the
same way, after the death and resurrection on the third day, the Good News
will be announcedto the people of Judah.
• Luke 11: 31: The Queen of the South. Following this, Jesus recalls the story of the
Queenof the South, who came from the ends of the earth to meet Solomon,
and to learn fromhis wisdom (cfr. I Kg 10: 1-10). Twice Jesus affirms: Look, there
is something greater than Solomon here, and look, there is something much
greater than Jonah here .
A very important point in the discussion between Jesus and the leaders of His
people is the way in which Jesus and His enemies place themselves before God.
The Book of Jonah is a parable which criticizes the mentality of those who
wanted God only for the Jews. In the story of Jonah, the pagans were converted
listening to the preaching of Jonah and God accepts them in His goodness and
does not destroy the city. When Jonah sees that God accepts the people of
Nineveh and does not destroy the city Jonah became very indignant. He fell into
a rage. He prayed to the Lord: Lord, is not this what I said would happen when I
was still in my own country? That was why I first tried to flee to Tarshish, since I
knew You were a tender, compassionate God, slow to anger, rich in faithful love,
who relents about inflicting disaster. So now, Lord, please take my life, for I
might as well be dead as go on living!. (Jon 4: 1-3). For this reason, Jonah was a
sign for the Jews of the time of Jesus and it continues to be for us Christians. He
35
wants for all to be disciples (Mt 28: 19), that is, that they be persons who, like
Him, radiate and announce the Good News of the love of God for all peoples (Mk
16: 15).
Personal Questions
• Lent, the time for conversion. What has to change in the image of God that I
have? Am I like Jonah or like Jesus?
• On what is my faith based, founded? In signs or in the Word of Jesus?
Concluding Prayer
God, create in me a clean heart, renew within me a resolute spirit,
do not thrust me away from Your presence,
do not take away from me Your spirit of holiness. (Ps 51: 10-11)
Opening prayer
Lord, our God,
You are a generous Father, who give us what is good for ussimply because You
love us.
Give us grateful hearts, Lord,that we may learn from You
to give and share without counting the costbut simply with love and joy,
as Jesus, Your Son, did among us,
who lives with You and the Holy Spirit forever.
Reflection
The Gospel today gives a part of the Sermon on the Mount, the new law of God
whichhas been revealed to us by Jesus. The Sermon on the Mount has the
following structure:
36
• Mathew 5: 1-16: The entrance door: the Beatitudes (Mt 5:1-10) and the mission
of thedisciples: to be the salt of the earth and the light of the world (Mt 5: 12-
16).
• Mathew 5: 17-18: The new relationship with God: The new justice (Mt 5:17-48)
which does not expect a reward for practicing almsgiving, for praying and
fasting (Mt 6: 1-18).
• Mathew 6: 19-34: The new relationship with the goods of the earth (Mt 6: 19-
21), donot look at the world with a jaundiced eye (Mt 6: 22-23), do not serve
God and money (Mt 6: 24), do not be concerned about food and drink (Mt 6:
23-34).
• Mathew 7: 1-23: The new relationship with other people: do not look for the
splinterin your brother’s eye (Mt 7: 1-5); do not throw your pearls in front of pigs
(Mt 7: 6); theGospel today: do not be afraid to ask things from God (Mt 7: 7-11);
and the Golden Rule(Mt 7: 12); choose the hard and narrow roads (Mt 7: 13-14),
beware of false prophets (Mt 7: 15-20).
• Mathew 7: 21-29: Conclusion: do not only speak but also practice (Mt 7: 21-23);
the community built on this basis will resist the storm (Mt 7: 24-27). The result
of these words is a new conscience before the scribes and the doctors (Mt 7:
28-29).
• Mathew 7: 7-8: Jesus’ three recommendations: to ask, to seek and to knock:
“Ask and you shall receive; seek and you shall find; knock and it shall be
opened to you!” A person is asked. The response depends both on the person
as well as on the insistence with which it is asked (cf Lk 18: 1-7). The seeking is
defined by some criteria. The better the criteria, the more certainty one can
have of finding what one is looking for. To knock at the door is done with the
hope that there will be someone on the other side of the door at home. Jesus
completes the recommendation, offering the certainty of the response: “Ask
and you shall receive; seek and you shall find; knock and it will be opened;
because anyone who asks receives, and anyone who seeks will find and to
anyone who knocks the door will be opened.” That means that when we ask
God, He listens to our petition. When we seek God, He allows Himself to be
found (Isa 5: 5-6). When we knock on the door of God’s house, He opens the
door for us.
• Mathew 7: 9-11: Jesus’ question to the people. “Is there anyone among you
who would hand his son a stone when he asked for bread? Or would hand
him a snake when he asked for a fish?” Here appears the simple and direct
way which Jesus has for teaching the things of God to the people. Speaking
to the parents, He connects Himself to the daily experience. Between the lines
of the question one can guess the response the people yelled out: “No!”
because nobody gives a stone to a son who asks for bread. There is no father
and no mother who would give a snake to their son when he asks for a fish.
And Jesus draws the conclusion: “If you, then, evil as you are, know how to
give your children what is good, how much more will your Father in heaven
give good things to those who ask Him!” Jesus calls us evil to stress the
certainty of being listened to by God when we ask Him for something. And
37
this, because if we who are not saints, know how to give good things to our
children, how much more is the Father in heaven. This comparison has as its
objective to take away from our heart any doubt concerning the prayer
addressed to God with trust. God will listen! Luke adds that God will give the
Holy Spirit (Lk 11: 13).
• Mathew 7: 12: The Golden Rule. "So always treat others as you would like them
to treat you; that is the law and the prophets.” This is the summary of the
entire Old Testament, of the law and the prophets. And this is the summary
of everything which God wants to tell us, the summary of all the teaching of
Jesus. This Golden Rule is not found only in the teaching of Jesus, but also, in
one way or other, in all religions. This responds to the most profound and
more universal sentiment of humanity.
Personal Questions
• Ask, seek, knock on the door: How do you pray and speak with God?
• Are you persistent in what you ask for, as the widow in Lk 18: 1-7 was, or do you
give up after not getting results immediately? Would you pray persistently
(and insistently) for years, or just months, or just a week?
• How are your wants aligned with what God would want for you?
• How do you live the Golden Rule?
Concluding Prayer
Lord I praise Your name for Your faithful love and Your constancy; Your promises
surpass even Your fame.
You heard me on the day when I called,
and You gave new strength to my heart. (Ps 138: 2-3)
Opening Prayer
God of mercy and compassion,
you challenge us to be responsible
for the good and the evil we do
and You call us to conversion.
God, help us to face ourselves
that we may not use flimsy excuses
for covering up our wrongs.
Make us honest with ourselves,
and aware that we can always count on Jesus Christ
to be our guide and strength on the road to You,
now and for ever.
38
Gospel Reading - Matthew 5: 20-26
Jesus said to his disciples: "I tell you, unless your righteousness surpasses that of
the scribes and Pharisees, you will not enter into the Kingdom of heaven. You
have heard that it was said to your ancestors, You shall not kill; and whoever kills
will be liable to judgment. But I say to you, whoever is angry with his brother will
be liable to judgment, and whoever says to his brother, raqa, will be answerable
to the Sanhedrin, and whoever says, 'You fool,' will be liable to fiery Gehenna.
Therefore, if you bring your gift to the altar, and there recall that your brother
has anything against you, leave your gift there at the altar, go first and be
reconciled with your brother, and then come and offer your gift. Settle with your
opponent quickly while on the way to court. Otherwise your opponent will hand
you over to the judge, and the judge will hand you over to the guard, and you
will be thrown into prison. Amen, I say to you, you will not be released until you
have paid the last penny."
Reflection
The text of today s Gospel forms part of a broader or more extensive whole: Mt 5:
20 up to Mt 5: 48. In these passages Matthew tells us how Jesus interprets and
explains the Law of God. Five times He repeats the phrase: You have heard how
it was said to our ancestors, in truth I tell you! (Mt 5: 21, 27, 33, 38, 43). Before, He
had said: Do not imagine that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets;
no, I have come not to abolish, but to complete them (Mt 5: 17). The attitude of
Jesus before the Law is, at the same time, one of breaking and of continuity. He
breaks away from the erroneous interpretations, but maintains firm the
objective which the Law should attain: the practice of a greater justice, which is
Love.
• Matthew 5: 20: An uprightness which surpasses that of the Pharisees. This first
verse presents the general key of everything which follows in Matthew 5: 20-
48. The word Justice never appears in the Gospel of Mark, and it appears
seven times in that of Matthew (Mt 3: 15; 5: 6, 10, 20; 6: 1, 33; 21:32). This has
something to do with the situation of the communities for which Mark wrote.
The religious ideal of the Jews of the time was to be just before God. The
Pharisees taught: people attain justice before God when they succeed to
observe all the norms of the law in all its details! This teaching generated a
legalistic oppression and caused great anguish in the people because it was
very difficult to be able to observe all the norms (cfr. Rm 7: 21-24). This is why
Matthew takes the words of Jesus on justice to show that it has to surpass the
justice of the Pharisees (Mt. 5: 20). According to Jesus, justice does not come
from what I do for God in observing the law, but rather from what God does
for me, accepting me as His son or as His daughter. The new ideal which Jesus
proposes is the following: therefore, be perfect as is your Heavenly Father! (Mt
5: 48). That means: you will be just before God when you try to accept and
forgive people as God accepts and pardons me, in spite of my defects and
sins.
By means of these five very concrete examples, Jesus shows us what to do in
order to attain this greater justice which surpasses the justice of the and the
Pharisees. As we can see, today’s Gospel takes the example of the new
39
interpretation of the fifth commandment: You shall not kill! Jesus has
revealed what God wanted when He gave this commandment to Moses.
• Matthew 5: 21-22: The law says: You shall not kill! (Ex 20: 13). In order to observe
fully this commandment it is not sufficient to avoid murdering. It is necessary
to uproot from within everything which, in one way or another, can lead to
murder, for example, anger, hatred, the desire to revenge, insult, and
exploitation, etc.
• Matthew 5: 23-24. The perfect worship which God wants. In order to be
accepted by God and to remain united to Him, it is necessary to reconcile
oneself with brother and sister. Before the destruction of the Temple, in the
year 70, when the Christian Jews participated in the pilgrimages in Jerusalem
to present their offerings at the altar and to pay their promises, they always
remembered this phrase of Jesus. In the year 80, at the time when Matthew
wrote, the Temple and the Altar no longer existed. They had been destroyed
by the Romans. The community and the communitarian celebration became
the Temple and the Altar of God
• Matthew 5: 25-26: To reconcile oneself. One of the points on which the Gospel
of Matthew exists the most is reconciliation. That indicates that in the
communities of that time, there were many tensions among the radical
groups with diverse tendencies and sometimes even opposing ones. Nobody
wanted to cede to the other. There was no dialogue. Matthew enlightens this
situation with the words of Jesus on reconciliation which demands
acceptance and understanding. The only sin that God does not forgive is our
lack of pardon toward others (Mt 6: 14). That is why one should try to reconcile
yourself before it is too late!
Personal Questions
• Today there are many people who cry out for justice! What meaning does
evangelical justice have for me?
• How do I behave before those who do not accept me as I am? How did Jesus
behave before those who did not accept Him
Concluding Prayer
From the depths I call to You, Yahweh:
Lord, hear my cry.
Listen attentively to the sound of my pleading! (Ps 130: 1-2)
Opening Prayer
40
Lord God, from You comes the initiative of love.You seek us out and You tell us:
I am your God; you are my people. You love us in Jesus Christ, Your Son.
God, may our response of love go far beyond the demands of any law. May we
seek You and commune with Youin the deepest of our being and may we
express our gratitude to You by going to our neighbor with a love that is
spontaneous like Yours.We ask You this through Christ our Lord.
Reflection
In today’s Gospel we see how Jesus has interpreted the commandment “You
shall not kill” in such a way that its observance leads to the practice of love.
Besides saying “You shall not kill” (Mt 5: 21), Jesus quoted four other
commandments of the ancient law: you shall not commit adultery (Mt 5: 27), you
shall not bear false witness (Mt 5: 33), eye for eye, and tooth for tooth (Mt 5: 38)
and, in today’s Gospel, you shall love your neighbor and will hate your enemy (Mt
5: 43), five times, Jesus criticizes and completesthe ancient way of observing
these commandments and indicates the new way to attainthe objective of the
law, which is the practice of love (Mt 5: 22-26; 5: 28-32; 5: 34-37; 5: 39-42; 5: 44-48).
Love your enemies. In today's Gospel Jesus quotes the ancient law which says:
You will love your neighbor and hate your enemy. This text is not found like this
in the Old Testament. It is more a question of the mentality of the time,
according to which there was no problem if a person hated his enemy. Jesus
was not in agreement and says: ButI tell you: if you love those who love you,
what reward will you get? Do not even the tax collectors do as much? And if
you save your greetings for your brothers, are you doing anything exceptional?
Do not even the gentiles do as much? You must, therefore,set no bounds to your
love, just as your heavenly Father sets none to His. And Jesus gives us the proof.
At the hour of His death He observed that which He preached.
Father, forgive them, they do not know what they are doing. A soldier takes the
wrist of Jesus and places it on the arm of the cross, places a nail and begins to
hammer it in. Several times. The blood was flowing down. The body of Jesus
contorted with pain. The soldier, a mercenary, ignorant, far from knowing what
he was doing, and of what was happening around him, continued to hammer
as if it were a piece of the wall of hishouse and he had to put up a picture. At
that moment Jesus prays for the soldier who tortures Him and addresses His
prayer to the Father: Father, forgive them! They know not what they are doing!
He loved the soldier who killed Him. Even wanting it with alltheir strength, the
lack of humanity did not succeed to kill in Jesus His humanity and love! He will
41
be imprisoned, they will spit on Him, will laugh and make fun of Him, they will
make of Him a false king crowning Him with a crown of thorns, they will torture
Him, will oblige Him to go through the streets like a criminal hearing the insults
of the religious authority. On Calvary they will leave Him completely naked in the
sightof all. But the poison of this lack of humanity did not succeed in
suppressing the sourceof love and humanity which sprang from within Jesus.
The water of the love which sprang from within was stronger than the poison of
hatred which was coming from without. Looking at that soldier, Jesus felt sorrow
and prayed for him and for all: Father,forgive them! They know not what they are
doing! Jesus, in solidarity, almost excuses those who were ill-treating and
torturing Him. He was like a brother who goes with hismurderous brothers
before the judge and he, the victim of his own brothers, says to the judge: They
are my brothers, you know they are ignorant. Forgive them! They will become
better! He loved the enemy!
Be perfect as is your Father who is in Heaven. Jesus does not want to frighten,
becausethis would be useless. He wants to change the system of human living
altogether. The notion which He constructs comes from the new experience He
has from God the Father, full of tenderness and who accepts all! The words of
threat against the rich cannot be an occasion of revenge on the part of the poor.
Jesus orders that we have a contrary attitude: Love your enemies! True love
cannot depend on what one receives from others. Love should want the good of
others independently of what they do for me. This is the way God s love is for us.
Personal Questions
• Am I capable to love my enemies?
• Contemplate Jesus, in silence, who at the hour of His death, loved the enemy
who killed Him.
Concluding Prayer
How blessed are those whose way is blameless, who walk in the Law of Yahweh!
Blessed are those who observe His instructions, who seek Him with all their
hearts (Ps 119: 1-2)
Opening Prayer
Lord Jesus, send Your Spirit to help us read the scriptures with the same mind
that You read them to the disciples on the way to Emmaus. In the light of the
Word, written in the bible, You helped them to discover the presence of God in
the disturbing events of Your sentence and death. Thus, the cross that seemed
to be the end of all hope became for them the source of life and of resurrection.
42
Create silence in us so that we may listen to Your voice in creation and in the
scriptures, in events and in people, above all, in the poor and suffering. May Your
word guide us so that we too, like the two disciples on the way to Emmaus, may
experience the force of Your resurrection and witness to others that You are
alive in our midst as source of fraternity, justice, and peace. We ask this of You,
Jesus, son of Mary, who revealed the Father to us and sent us Your Spirit. Amen.
A few days earlier, Jesus had said that He, the Son of Man, had to be tried and
crucifiedby the authorities (Lk 9: 22; Mk 8: 31). According to the information in
the gospels of Mark and Matthew, the disciples, especially Peter, did not
understand what Jesus had said and were scandalized by the news (Mt 16: 22;
Mk 8: 32). Jesus reacted strongly andturned to Peter calling him Satan (Mt 16: 23;
Mk 8: 33). This was because Jesus’ wordsdid not correspond with the ideal of the
glorious Messiah whom they imagined. Luke does not mention Peter’s reaction
and Jesus’ strong reply, but he does describe, as do the other Evangelists, the
episode of the Transfiguration. Luke sees the Transfigurationas an aid to the
disciples so that they may be able to get over the scandal and change their idea
of the Messiah (Lk 9: 28-36). Taking the three disciples with Him, Jesus goesup
the mountain to pray, and while He is praying, is transfigured. As we read the
text, it is good to note what follows: “Who appears with Jesus on the mountain
to converse with Him? What is the theme of their conversation? What is the
disciples’ attitude?”
A Division of the Text as an Aid to the Reading:
Jesus took Peter, John, and James and went up the mountain to pray. While he
was praying his face changed in appearance and his clothing became dazzling
white. And behold, two men were conversing with him, Moses and Elijah, who
appeared in glory and spoke of his exodus that he was going to accomplish in
Jerusalem. Peter and his companions had been overcome by sleep, but
becoming fully awake, they saw his glory and the two men standing with him.
As they were about to part from him, Peter said to Jesus, "Master, it is good that
we are here; let us make three tents, one for you,one for Moses, and one for
Elijah." But he did not know what he was saying. While he was still speaking, a
cloud came and cast a shadow over them, and they became frightened when
they entered the cloud. Then from the cloud came a voice that said, "This is my
43
chosen Son; listen to him." After the voice had spoken, Jesus was found alone.
They fell silent and did not at that time tell anyone what they had seen.
A Moment of Prayerful Silence
so that the Word of God may penetrate and enlighten our life.
Some Questions
to help us in our personal reflection.
• What did you like most in this episode of the Transfiguration? Why?
• Who are those who go to the mountain with Jesus? Why do they go?
• Moses and Elijah appear on the mountain next to Jesus. What is the
significance of these two people from the Old Testament for Jesus, for the
disciples, for the communityin the 80s and for us today?
• Which prophecy from the Old Testament is fulfilled in the words of the Father
concerning Jesus?
• What is the disciples’ attitude during this episode?
• Has there been a transfiguration in your life? How have such experiences of
transfiguration helped you to fulfill your mission better?
• Compare Luke’s description of the Transfiguration of Jesus (Lk 9: 28-36) with
his description of the agony of Jesus in the Garden (Lk 22: 39-46). Try to see
whether there are any similarities. What is the significance of these
similarities?
In the two previous chapters of Luke’s Gospel, the innovation brought by Jesus
highlights the tensions between the New and the Old Testaments. In the end,
Jesus realized that no one had understood His meaning, much less His person.
People thoughtthat He was like John the Baptist, Elijah or some other prophet
(Lk 9: 18-19). The disciples accepted Him as the Messiah, but a glorious Messiah,
according to the expectations issued by the government and the official
religion of the temple (Lk 9: 20-21). Jesus tried to explain to His disciples that the
journey foreseen by the prophets wasone of suffering because of its
commitment to the excluded, and that a disciple could only be a disciple if
he/she took up his/her cross (Lk 9: 22-26). But Jesus did not meet with much
success. It is in such a context of crisis that the Transfiguration takes place.In the
30s, the experience of the Transfiguration had a very important significance in
the life of Jesus and the disciples. It helped them overcome the crisis of faith
and to change their ideals concerning the Messiah. In the 80s, when Luke was
44
writing for the Christian communities in Greece, the meaning of the
Transfiguration had already beendeepened and broadened. In the light of
Jesus’ resurrection and of the spread of the Good News among the pagans in
almost every country, from Palestine to Italy, the experience of the
Transfiguration began to be seen as a confirmation of the faith of theChristian
communities in Jesus, Son of God. The two meanings are present in the
description and interpretation of the Transfiguration in Luke’s Gospel.
A Commentary on the Text:
• Luke 9: 29: The change that takes place during the prayer.
As soon as Jesus starts praying, His appearance changes and He appears
glorious. His face changes and His clothes become white and shining. It is the
glory that the disciples imagined for the Messiah. This transformation told
them clearly that Jesus was indeed the Messiah expected by all. But what
follows the episode of the Transfiguration will point out that the way to glory
is quite different from what they imagined. The Transfiguration will be a call
to conversion.
45
• Luke 9: 32-34: The disciples’ reaction.
The disciples were in deep sleep. When they woke up, they saw Jesus in His
glory andthe two men with Him. But Peter’s reaction shows that they were
not aware of the realmeaning of the glory in which Jesus appeared to them.
As often happens with us, they were only aware of what concerned them. The
rest escapes their attention. “Master, it is good for us to be here!” And they do
not want to get off the mountain anymore! When it is question of the cross,
whether on the Mount of the Transfiguration or on theMount of Olives (Lk 22:
45), they sleep! They prefer the glory to the cross! They do notlike to speak or
hear of the cross. They want to make sure of the moment of glory on the
mountain, to extend it, and they offer to build three tents. Peter did not know
what he was saying.
While Peter was speaking, a cloud descended from on high and covered
them with its shadow. Luke says that the disciples became afraid when the
cloud enfolded them. The cloud is the symbol of the presence of God. The
cloud accompanied the multitude on their journey through the desert (Ex 40:
34-38; Num 10: 11-12). When Jesus ascended into heaven, He was covered by a
cloud and they no longer saw Him (Acts 1: 9). This was a sign that Jesus had
entered forever into God’s world.
• The proclamation “This is My Son, the Chosen; listen to Him” was very
important for the community of the late 80s. Through this assertion God the
Father confirmed the faith of Christians in Jesus as Son of God. In Jesus’
time, that is, in the 30s, the expression Son of Man pointed to a very high
dignity and mission. Jesus Himself gave a relative meaning to the term by
saying that all were children of God (cf. John 10: 33- 35). But for some the title
Son of God became a resume of all titles, over one hundred that the first
Christians gave Jesus in the second half of the first century. In succeeding
centuries, it was the title of Son of God that the Church concentrated all its
faith in the person of Jesus.
A Deepening:
• The Transfiguration is told in three of the Gospels: Matthew (Mt 17: 1-9), Mark
(Mk9: 2-8) and Luke (Lk 9: 28-36). This is a sign that this episode contained a
very importantmessage. As we said, it was a matter of great help to Jesus, to
His disciples and to the first communities. It confirmed Jesus in His mission
as Messiah-Servant. It helped the disciples to overcome the crisis that the
46
cross and suffering caused them. It led the communities to deepen their faith
in Jesus, Son of God, the One who revealed the Fatherand who became the
new key to the interpretation of the Law and the Prophets. The
Transfiguration continues to be of help in overcoming the crisis that the cross
and suffering provoke today. The three sleeping disciples are a reflection of all
of us. The voice of the Father is directed to us as it was to them: “This is My
Son, the Chosen; listen to Him!”
• In Luke’s Gospel there is a great similarity between the scene of the
Transfiguration(Lk 9: 28-36) and the scene of the agony of Jesus in the Garden
of Olives (Lk 22: 39-46).We may note the following: in both scenes Jesus goes
up the mountain to pray and takeswith Him three disciples, Peter, James and
John. On both occasions, Jesus’ appearance is transformed, and He is
transfigured before them; glorious at the Transfiguration, perspiring blood in
the Garden of Olives. Both times heavenly figures appear to comfort Him, Moses
and Elijah and an angel from heaven. Both in the Transfiguration and in the
Agony, the disciples sleep, they seem to be outside the event and they seem
not to understand anything. At the end of both episodes, Jesus is reunited
with His disciples. Doubtless, Luke intended to emphasize the resemblance
between these two episodes. What would that be? Perhaps it is to show that
understanding takes time and effort, even for the Apostles, so we should
persevere and not be asleep, especially at those crucial moments in our lives
when He is revealing Himself to us personally. It is in meditatingand praying
that we shall come to understand the meaning that goes beyond words, and
to perceive the intention of the author. The Holy Spirit will guide us.
• Luke describes the Transfiguration. There are times in our life when suffering
is such that we might think: “God has abandoned me! He is no longer with
me!” And thensuddenly we realize that He has never deserted us, but that we
had our eyes bandaged and were not aware of the presence of God. Then
everything is changed and transfigured. It is the transfiguration! This happens
every day in our lives.
Psalm 42 (41)
“My soul thirsts for the living God!”
As a dear longs for flowing streams,so longs my soul for Thee, O God.
My soul thirsts for God, for the living God. When shall I come and behold the
face of God?
My tears have been my food day and night, while men say to me continually,
"Where is your God?"These things I remember, as I pour out my soul:
how I went with the throng, and led them in procession to the house of God,
with glad shouts and songs of thanksgiving, a multitude keeping festival.
Why are you cast down, O my soul, and why are you disquieted within me?
Hope in God; for I shall again praise Him,my help and my God.
My soul is cast down within me; therefore I remember Thee from the land of
Jordanand of Hermon, from Mount Mizar.
47
Deep calls to deep at the roar of Your torrents; all Thy waves and breakers have
gone over me.
By day the Lord commands His steadfast love;and at night His song is with me,
a prayer to the God of my life.I say to God, my rock: "Why hast Thou forgotten
me?
Why do I go mourning because of the oppression of the enemy?"As with a
deadly wound in my body, my adversaries taunt me, while they say to me
continually,"Where is your God?"
Why are you cast down, O my soul, and why are you disquieted within me?
Hope in God; for I shall again praise Him, my help and my God.
Final Prayer
Lord Jesus, we thank You for the word that has enabled us to understand better
the willof the Father. May Your Spirit enlighten our actions and grant us the
strength to practicewhat Your Word has revealed to us. May we, like Mary, Your
mother, not only listen to but also practice the Word. You who live and reign
with the Father in the unity of theHoly Spirit forever and ever. Amen.
Opening Prayer
Just and holy God,our loving Father,
you offered us Your hand in friendship, and You sent us Your Son Jesus to go
with us on the road of obedience and loyalty. God, we often hurt this friendship,
we act as if we were not Your sons and daughters.See the look of shame on our
faces.
Forgive us, for we count on You. Accept our thanks for continuing to take us as
we are and loving us notwithstanding our sins. We ask You this through Christ
our Lord.
Reflection
• These three brief verses of today’s Gospel (Lk 6:36-38) are the final part of a
brief discourse of Jesus (Lk 6: 20-38). In the first part of His discourse, He
addresses Himself to the disciples (Lk 6: 20) and to the rich (Lk 6: 24)
48
proclaiming four beatitudes for the disciples (Lk 6: 20-23), and four curses for
the rich (Lk 6: 20-26). In the second part, He addresses Himself to all those who
are listening (Lk 6: 27), that is, the immense crowd of poor and sick, who had
come from all parts (Lk 6:17-19). The words which He addresses to this people
and to all of us are demanding and difficult: to love the enemy (Lk 6, 27), not
curse them (Lk 6: 28), offer the other cheek to the one who slaps you on one,
and do not complain if someone takes what is ours (Lk 6: 29). How can this
difficult advice be understood? The explanation is given in the three verses of
today’s Gospel from which we draw the center of the Good News brought by
Jesus.
• Luke 6: 36: Be merciful as your Heavenly Father is merciful. The Beatitudes for
the disciples (Lk 6: 20-23) and the curses against the rich (Lk 6: 24-26) cannot
be interpreted as an occasion for the poor to take revenge against the rich.
Jesus orders us to have the contrary attitude. He says: Love your enemies! (Lk
6: 27). The change which Jesus wants to bring about in us does not consist in
merely changing something to invert the system, because in this way
nothing would change. He wants to change the system. The idea which Jesus
wants to portray comes from the new experience that He has of God the
Father, full of tenderness, who accepts all, good and bad, who makes the
sunshine on both the good and on the bad and makes the rain fall on both
good and bad (Mt 5: 5, 45). True love does not depend, nor can it depend, on
what I receive from others. Love must want the good of the other
independently of what he does for me. Because this is how God’s love is for
us. He is merciful not only toward those who are good, but with all, even with
the ungrateful and the evil (Lk 6: 35). The disciples of Jesus should radiate this
merciful love.
• Luke 6: 37-38: Do not judge and you will not be judged. These last words
repeat in a clearer way what Jesus had said before: Treat others as you would
like them to treat you (Lk 6: 31; cf. Mt 7: 12). If you do not want to be judged, do
not judge! If you do not want to be condemned, do not condemn. If you want
to be forgiven, then forgive! If you want to receive a good measure, give this
good measure to others! Do not wait for the other one to take the initiative.
You take it and begin now! You will see that it is like this.
Personal Questions
• Lent is a time of conversion. Which is the conversion which today’s Gospel is
asking of me?
• Have you already been merciful as the Heavenly Father is? What are my limits
in being merciful and forgiving?
Concluding Prayer
Help us, God our Savior, for the glory of Your name; Yahweh, wipe away our sins,
rescue us for the sake of Your name. (Ps 79: 9)
49
Tuesday, March 18, 2025
Season of Lent
Opening Prayer
God our Father,
may we love You in all things and above all things
and reach the joy You have prepared for us
beyond all our imagining.
We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, Your Son,
who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Reflection
Today’s Gospel is part of Jesus’ long criticism of the scribes and the Pharisees
(Mt 23: 1-39). Luke and Mark mention only a few lines of this criticism aimed at
the religious heads of the time. Only the Gospel of Matthew has a longer
presentation of this. This very severe text gives us a glimpse of the polemics
which existed in the communities of Matthew with the communities of the
Jews of Galilee and Syria of that time.
In reading this text, which is strongly critical of the Pharisees, we have to be very
careful not to be unfair to the Jewish people. Many Christians, for centuries,
have had attitudes against the Jews and, for this reason, engenders attitudes
against the Christians. What is important in meditating on these texts is to
discover their objective. Jesus condemns the lack of sincerity in the relationship
with God and with neighbor. He is speaking about hypocrisy, that of yesterday
as well as that of today - of our hypocrisy!
• Matthew 23: 1-3: The basic error: they say, but they do not do. Jesus addresses
Himself to the multitude and to the disciples and criticizes the scribes and the
Pharisees. The reason for attacking them is the disjuncture between their
50
words and their actions. They speak, but they do not do. Jesus recognizes the
authority and the knowledge of the scribes: “The scribes and the Pharisees
occupy the chair of Moses! You must, therefore, do and observe what they tell
you, but do not be guided by what they do, since they do not practice what
they preach.”
• Matthew 23: 4-7: The fundamental error is manifested in diverse ways. The
fundamental error is hypocrisy: “They say, but they do not do.” Jesus
enumerates the points which reveal this. Some scribes and Pharisees
imposed heavy laws upon the people. They knew the laws well, but they did
not practice them; neither did they use their knowledge to lessen the weight
imposed upon the people. They did everything possible to be seen and
praised; they wore special tunics for prayer; they liked the first places and to
be greeted in the public squares. They wanted to be called “Teacher.” They
represented a type of community which maintained, legitimized, and
nourished the difference of social classes. It legitimized the privileges of the
great and the inferior position of the little ones. Now, if there is something
which displeases Jesus, it is appearances which deceive.
• Matthew 23: 8-12: How to overcome the fundamental error. How should a
Christian community be? All the community functions should be assumed as
a service: “The greatest among you must be your servant!” You should call
nobody teacher (Rabbi), nor father, nor guide; because the community of
Jesus has to maintain, legitimize and nourish not the differences, but rather
the fraternal spirit. This is the fundamental law: “You are all brothers and
sisters!” The fraternal spirit comes from the experience that Jesus is Father
and makes of all of us brothers and sisters. “Anyone who raises himself up will
be humbled, and anyone who humbles himself will be raised up.”
The group of the Pharisees! The group of the Pharisees was born in the second
century before Christ, with the objective of a more perfect observance of the
law of God, especially regarding the prescriptions on purity. They were more
open to novelty than the Sadducees. For example, they accepted faith in the
resurrection and faith in the angels, something which the Sadducees did not
accept. The life of the Pharisees was an exemplary witness: they prayed and
studied the law for eight hours a day; they worked eight hours in order to be
able to survive; they dedicated eight hours to rest. This is the reason why people
respected them very much. And in this way, they helped people to keep their
own identity and not to lose it, in the course of centuries.
The so-called Pharisaic mentality. With time, the Pharisees took hold of power
and no longer listened to the appeals of the people, nor did they allow them to
speak. The word “Pharisee”means“separated.” Their observance was so strict
and rigorous that they separated themselves from the rest of the people. This is
why they were called “separated.” From this comes the expression “pharisaic
mentality.” It is typical of the people who think they can attain justice through
the rigid and rigorous observance of the law. Generally, they are people who are
afraid, who do not have the courage to assume the risk of liberty and of
responsibility. They hide themselves behind the law and authority. When these
people obtain an important function, they become harsh and insensitive and
indifferent to hide their own imperfection.
51
Rabbi, Guide, Teacher, Father. These are four titles that Jesus prohibits people to
use. Today, in Church, the priests are called “Father.” Many study in the
university of the Church and obtain the title of “Doctor” (Teacher). Many people
receive spiritual direction and take advice from people who are called “Spiritual
directors” (Guides). What is important is to take into account the reason which
impelled Jesus to prohibit the use of these titles. If these were used by people in
order to affirm their position of authority and their power, these people would
be in error and would be criticized by Jesus. If these titles were used to nourish
and deepen fraternal spirit and service, they would not be criticized by Jesus.
Personal Questions
• What is my reason for living and working in community?
• How does the community help me to correct and to improve my
motivations?
• Do you know of people within the Church who also see themselves as more
important or above others because of their position in the Church? Why is
this?
Concluding Prayer
I am listening.
What is God's message?
Yahweh's message is peace for His people,
for His faithful, if only they renounce their folly. (Ps 85: 8)
LECTIO
Opening Prayer:
Spirit who moves over the water,
calm in us all discordance,
the agitated waves, the noise of the words,
the whirlwind of vanity,
and make the Word which recreates,
arise in silence.
Spirit who in a sigh you whisper
to our spirit the Name of the Father,
come and gather together all our desires,
make them grow in a beam of light
which will be a response to Your light,
the Word of the new Day.
52
Spirit of God, the sap of love
of the immense tree on which you graft us,
so that all our brothers and sisters
will seem to us as a gift
in the great Body in which
the Word of communion matures.
(Frère Pierre-Yves of Taizé)
A Moment of Silence:
so that the Word of God may enter into our hearts and enlighten our lives.
MEDITATIO
A Key to the Reading:
The passage of today’s Gospel is taken from the first chapter of the Gospel of
Matthew which forms part of the section concerning the conception, birth and
infancy of Jesus. The center of all this account is the person of Jesus around
which are all the events and the persons mentioned. One must keep in mind
that the Gospel reveals a theology of the history of Jesus, and so getting close to
the Word of God we should get the message which is hidden under the veils of
the account without losing ourselves, as Paul so wisely advises us “in foolish
speculations,” avoiding “those genealogies and the quibbles and disputes about
the Law, they are useless and futile” (Tt 3: 9).
In fact, this text is connected to the genealogy of Jesus, which Matthew
arranges with the intention of stressing the dynastic succession of Jesus, the
Savior of his people (Mt 1: 21). To Jesus are conferred all the rights inherited from
the lineage of David, of “Joseph, son of David” (Mt 1: 20; Lk 2: 4-5) His legal father.
For the Biblical and Hebrew world legal paternity was sufficient to confer all the
rights of the lineage in question (cf.: the law of the levirate and of adoption (Dt
25: 5ff). That is why from the beginning of the genealogy, Jesus is designed as
“Christ the Son of David” (Mt 1: 1) that is, the anointed one of the Lord Son of
David, with whom all the promises of God to David His servant, are fulfilled (2
53
Sam 7: 1-16; 2 Cr 7: 18; 2 Cr 21: 7; Ps 89: 30). This is why Matthew adds to the
account of the genealogy and of the conception of Jesus the prophecy of Isaiah:
“All this took place to fulfill what the Lord had spoken through the prophet.: The
young woman is with child and will give birth to a son whom she will call
Immanuel, which means God with us” (Mt 1: 21-23 and Is 7: 14).
Let us stop to say something, on the spiritual reality of adoption, we can refer to
the fact that the elected people possess “the glory, the covenants, the
legislation, the cult, the promises,” because “they are Israelites and possess the
adoption of sons” (Rm 9: 4). But we also, the new people of God in Christ receive
the adoption of children because “when the completion of the time came God
sent His Son, born of a woman, born a subject of the Law, to redeem the
subjects of the Law, so that we could receive adoption as children” (Gal 4: 4-5).
This is the salvation which Jesus has brought to us. Christ “will save His people
from their sins” (Mt 1: 21) because He is the “God with us!” (Mt 1: 23) who makes
us adopted children of God.
Jesus is born from “Mary who was betrothed to Joseph” (Mt 1: 18a)) who “was
found to be with child through the Holy Spirit” (Mt 1: 18b). Matthew does not
give the account of the annunciation as Luke does (Lk 1: 26-38), but structures
the account from the point of view of the experience of Joseph the just man.
The Bible reveals to us that God loves the just and many times chooses them for
an important mission, protects them and does not join them to the impious
(Gen 18: 23ff). In the Old Testament we find many persons who are considered
just. We think of Noah “a good man, an upright man among his
contemporaries” (Gen 6: 9). Or also Johoash who “did what Yahweh regards as
right” (2 K 12: 3).
A constant idea in the Bible is the “dream” as a privileged place where God
makes His plans and designs known, and sometimes reveals the future. The
dreams of Jacob at Bethel are well known (Gen 28: 10ff) and Joseph his son, as
also those of the cup-bearer and the chief baker imprisoned in Egypt with him
(Gen 37: 5ff; Gen 40: 5ff) and the dreams of Pharaoh which revealed the future
years of plenty and of famine and want (Gen 41: 1ff).
“An Angel of the Lord“ appeared to Joseph (Mt 1: 20) to reveal to him God’s
design. In the Gospels of the infancy frequently the Angel of the Lord is
mentioned as the heavenly messenger (Mt 1: 20, 24; 2: 13, 19; Lk 1: 11; 2, 9) and also
on other occasions the angel appears to calm, to reveal the plans of God, to heal
and to liberate from slavery (cf. Mt 28: 2; Jn 5: 4; Acts 5: 19; 8: 26; 12: 7, 23). Many
are the references to the Angel of the Lord in the Old Testament where
originally the angel represented the Lord himself who guided and protected His
people being close to them (cf. Gen 16: 7-16; 22: 12; 24: 7; Ex 3: 3; 23: 20; Tb 5: 4).
ORATIO
54
Psalm 92
CONTEMPLATIO
The Christian contemplation of God’s dream, of the plan which God cherishes
for the history of humanity does not produce alienation but keeps the
consciences vigilant and active and stimulates us to face with courage and
altruism the responsibilities which life gives us.
Opening Prayer
Lord our God,
55
many of us never had it so good, and so we have become smug and self-
satisfied, happy in our own little world.
God, may our ears remain open to Your word and our hearts to You and to our
brothers and sisters. Do not allow us to forget You, or to place our trust in
ourselves. Make us restless for You through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Reflection
Every time that Jesus has something important to communicate, He creates a
story and tells a parable. In this way, through reflection on an invisible reality, He
leads those who listen to Him to discover the invisible call of God, who is present
in life. A parable is meant to make us think and reflect. For this reason it is
important to pay attention to even the smallest details. In the parable in today’s
Gospel there are three persons: the poor Lazarus, the rich man without a name,
and Father Abraham. In the parable, Abraham represents the thought of God.
The rich man without a name represents the dominating ideology of that time.
Lazarus represents the silent cry of the poor in the time of Jesus and in all times.
• Luke 16: 19-21: The situation of the rich man and the poor man. The two
extremes of society. On the one side, aggressive richness; on the other, the
poor man without resources, without rights, covered with wounds, without
anybody to accept him, to receive him, except the dogs which came to lick
his wounds. What separates both of them is the closed door of the rich man’s
house. For the rich man, there is no acceptance nor pity concerning the poor
man at his door. But the poor man has a name; the rich man does not. That
56
is, the poor man has his name written in the book of life, not the rich one. The
poor man’s name is Lazarus. It means God helps. And through the poor man,
God helps the rich man who could have a name in the book of life. But the
rich man does not allow himself to be helped by the poor man, because he
keeps his door closed. The beginning of this parable is a faithful mirror of what
was happening during the time of Jesus and the time of Luke. It is a mirror of
everything that is happening today in the world!
• Luke 16:22: The change which reveals the hidden truth. The poor man died
and was carried away by the angels into Abraham’s embrace. The rich man
also died and was buried. In the parable the poor man dies before the rich
one. This is a warning for the rich. During the time when the poor man is alive
and at the door, there is still the possibility of salvation for the rich man. But
when the poor man dies, the only instrument of salvation for the rich man
also dies. Now, the poor man is in Abraham’s embrace. The embrace of
Abraham is the source of life, where the people of God were born. Lazarus, the
poor man, is part of the people of Abraham, from which he was excluded
when he was before the rich man’s door. The rich man, who believes that he
is a son of Abraham, does not go toward Abraham’s embrace! The
introduction to the parable ends here. Now its significance begins to be
revealed, through the three conversations between the rich man and Father
Abraham.
• Luke 16: 23-26: The first conversation. In the parable, Jesus opens a window on
the other side of life, the side of God. It is not a question of Heaven. It is a
question of the life which only faith generates and which the rich man, who
has no faith, cannot see. It is only in the light of death that this ideology
disintegrates; then appears as what the true value of life is. On the part of God,
without the deceptive thinking of the ideology, things change. The rich man
sees Lazarus in the arms of Abraham and asks to be helped in his suffering.
The rich man discovers that Lazarus is his only possible benefactor. But now
it is too late! The nameless rich man is pious, because he recognizes Abraham
and calls him Father. Abraham responds and calls him son. In reality, this
word of Abraham is addressed to all the rich who are alive. In so far as they are
alive, they have the possibility of becoming sons and daughters of Abraham
if they know how to open the door to Lazarus, the poor man, the only one who
in God’s name can help them. Salvation for the rich man does not consist in
Lazarus giving him a drop of fresh water to refresh his tongue, but rather, that
he, the rich man, open the closed door to the poor man so as fill the great
abyss that exists.
• Luke 16: 27-29: The second conversation. The rich man insists: “Then, Father, I
beg you to send Lazarus to my father’s house, because I have five brothers!”
The rich man does not want his brothers to end in this place of suffering.
Lazarus, the poor man, is the only true intermediary between God and the
rich. He is the only one, because it is only to the poor that the rich have to
return what they had and, thus, re-establish the justice which has been
damaged! The rich man is worried for his brothers, but was never concerned
about the poor! Abraham’s response is clear: “They have Moses and the
57
Prophets; let them listen to them!” They have the Bible! The rich man had the
Bible. He knew it by heart. But he was never aware that the Bible had
something to do with the poor. The rich man’s key to understanding the Bible
is the poor man sitting at his door!
• Luke 16: 30-31: The third conversation. “No, Abraham, but if someone from the
dead goes to them, they will repent!” The rich man recognizes that he is
wrong, he has committed an error, because he speaks of repenting,
something which he never heard during his life. He wants a miracle, a
resurrection! But this type of resurrection does not exist. The only resurrection
is that of Jesus. Jesus, risen from the dead comes to us in the person of the
poor, of those who have no rights, of those who have no land, of those who
have no food, of those who have no house, of those who have no health. In his
final response, Abraham is clear and convincing: “If they will not listen either
to Moses or to the prophets, they will not be convinced even if someone
should rise from the dead!” The conversation ends this way and is the end of
the parable!
The key to understanding the sense of the Bible is the poor Lazarus, sitting before the
door! God presents Himself in the person of the poor, sitting at our door, to help us cross
the enormous abyss which the rich have created. Lazarus is also Jesus, the poor and
servant Messiah, who was not accepted, but whose death changed all things radically.
And everything changes in the light of the death of the poor. The place of torment, of
torture, is the situation of the person without God. Even if the rich man thinks that he
has religion and faith, in fact, he is not with God, because he does not open the door to
the poor, as Zacchaeus did (Lk 19: 1-10).
Personal Questions
• How do we treat the poor? Do they have a name? In my attitude toward them,
am I like Lazarus or like the rich man?
• When the poor come in contact with me, do they hear the Good News?
• Who do I consider are the poor? There are many kinds of poverty. Identifying
these kinds of poverty should cause us to expand who we help, rather than
limit us to “giving a donation” and not becoming personally involved.
Concluding Prayer
How blessed is anyone who rejects the advice of the wicked and does not take a
stand in the path that sinners tread, nor a seat in company with cynics, but who
delights in the law of Yahweh and meditates on His law day and night. (Ps 1: 1-2)
Opening Prayer
58
God, we do not want to die;we want to live.
We want to be happy but without paying the price. We belong to our times,
when sacrifice and suffering are out of fashion.God, make our life worth living.
Give us back the age-old realization, that life means to be born again and again
in pain, that it may become againa journey of hope to You, together with Christ
Jesus, our Lord.
Reflection
The text of today’s Gospel forms part of a greater whole which includes Mathew
21: 23-40. The chief priests and the elders had asked Jesus by what authority He
did those things (Mt 21: 23). They considered themselves the custodians of
everything andthey did not want anybody to do things without their
permission. Jesus’ answer is divided into three parts:
• 1) He, in turn, asks them a question because He wants to know,in their
opinion, if John the Baptist was from heaven or from earth (Mt 21: 24-
27);
• 2) He then tells them the parable of the two sons (Mt 21: 28-32);
• 3) He tells them the parable of the vineyard (Mt 21: 33-46), which is
today’s Gospel.
• Matthew 21: 33-40: The parable of the vineyard. Jesus begins as follows: “Listen
to another parable: There was a man, a landowner, who planted a vineyard,
he fenced it around, dug a winepress in it and built a tower.” The parable is a
59
beautiful summary of the history of Israel, taken from the prophet Isaiah (Is 5:
1-7). Jesus addresses Himself to the chief priests, to the elders (Mt 21: 23) and
to the Pharisees (Mt 21: 45) and He gives a response to the question which
they addressed to Him about the origin of His authority (Mt 21: 23). Through
this parable, Jesus clarifies several things:
• (a) He reveals the origin of His authority: He is the Son, the heir;
• (b) He denounces the abuse of the authority of the tenants, that is of
the priests and elders who were not concerned and did not take care
of the people of God;
• (c) He defends the authority of the prophets, sent by God, but who
were killed by the priests and the elders;
• (d) He unmasks the authority by which they manipulate the religion
and kill the Son, because they do not want to lose the source of
income which they have accumulated for themselves throughout the
centuries.
• Matthew 21: 41: The sentence which they give to themselves. At the end of the
parableJesus asks: “Now, when the owner of the vineyard comes, what will he
do to those tenants?” They are not aware that the parable was speaking
precisely of them. This is why, with the response that they give, they decree
their own condemnation: “The chief priests and the elders of the people
answered: ‘He will bring those wretches to a wretched end and lease the
vineyard to other tenants who will deliver the produce to him at the proper
time’.” Several times Jesus uses this same method. He leads the personto tell
the truth about himself, without knowing that he is condemning himself. For
example, in the case of the Pharisee who condemns the young woman,
considering hera sinner (Luke 7: 42-43), and in the case of the parable of the
two sons (Mt 21: 28-32).
• Matthew 21: 42-46: The sentence given by themselves was confirmed by their
behavior. From the clarification given by Jesus, the chief priests, the elders
and the Pharisees understand that the parable is about them, but they do not
convert. Rather, they keep to their own plan to kill Jesus. They will reject “the
cornerstone.” But they do not have the courage to do it openly because they
fear the reaction of the people.
The diverse groups which held the power at the time of Jesus. In today’s
Gospel threegroups appear, which, at that time, governed: the priests, the
elders, and the Pharisees. Then, some brief information on the power which
each of these groups and others possessed is given:
• The priests: They were the ones in charge of the worship in the
Temple. The people paid the Temple a tithe and other taxes and
offerings. The High Priest occupied a veryimportant place in the life of
the nation, especially after the exile. He was chosen and appointed
from among the three or four aristocratic families who possessed more
power and riches.
60
• The elders or the Chief Priests of the People: They were the local
leaders in the different villages of the city. Their origin came from the
heads of the ancient tribes.
• The Sadducees: they were the lay aristocratic elite of society who
wanted to maintain a priestly caste. Many of them were rich
merchants or landlords. From the religious point of view they were
liberal in their willingness to incorporate Hellenism into their lives.
They did not accept the changes supported by the Pharisees, for
example, faith in the resurrection and the existence of angels.
• The Pharisees: Pharisee means “separated.” They believed in the Oral
Law handed down from Moses and that through the perfect
observance of the Law of purity, people would succeed in being pure,
separated and holy as the Law and Tradition demanded! Because of
the exemplary witness of their life according to the norms of the time,
their moral authority was widespread in the villages of Galilee.
• Scribe or doctor of the Law: They were the ones in charge of teaching.
They dedicated their life to the study of the Law of God and taught
people what to do to observe all theLaw of God. Not all the Scribes
belonged to the same line. Some were united with the Pharisees,
others with the Sadducees.
Personal Questions
• Have you sometimes felt that you were unduly controlled or misunderstood?
What was your reaction? Was it the same as that of Jesus?
• If Jesus returned today and told us the same parable, would it be as relevant?
What would the reaction be from society and on a personal level?
Concluding Prayer
As far as heaven is above the earth, so strong is the faithful love of the Lord for
those who fear Him.As far as the east is from the west, so far from us does He
put our faults. (Ps 103: 11-12)
61
Tax collectors and sinners were all drawing near to listen to Jesus, but the
Pharisees and scribes began to complain, saying, "This man welcomes sinners
and eats with them." So to them Jesus addressed this parable. "A man had two
sons, and the younger son said to his father, 'Father, give me the share of your
estate that should come to me.' So the father divided the property between
them. After a few days, the younger son collected all his belongings and set off
to a distant country where he squandered his inheritance on a life of dissipation.
When he had freely spent everything, a severe famine struck that country, and
he found himself in dire need. So he hired himself out to one of the local citizens
who sent him to his farm to tend the swine. And he longed to eat his fill of the
pods on which the swine fed, but nobody gave him any. Coming to his senses
he thought, 'How many of my father's hired workers have more than enough
food to eat, but here am I, dying from hunger. I shall get up and go to my father
and I shall say to him, "Father, I have sinned against heaven and against you. I
no longer deserve to be called your son; treat me as you would treat one of your
hired workers."' So he got up and went back to his father.
While he was still a long way off, his father caught sight of him, and was filled
with compassion. He ran to his son, embraced him and kissed him. His son said
to him, 'Father, I have sinned against heaven and against you; I no longer
deserve to be called your son.' But his father ordered his servants, 'Quickly, bring
the finest robe and put it on him; put a ring on his finger and sandals on his feet.
Take the fattened calf and slaughter it. Then let us celebrate with a feast,
because this son of mine was dead, and has come to life again; he was lost, and
has been found.' Then the celebration began. Now the older son had been out
in the field and, on his way back, as he neared the house, he heard the sound of
music and dancing. He called one of the servants and asked what this might
mean. The servant said to him, 'Your brother has returned and your father has
slaughtered the fattened calf because he has him back safe and sound.' He
became angry, and when he refused to enter the house, his father came out
and pleaded with him.
He said to his father in reply, 'Look, all these years I served you and not once did
I disobey your orders; yet you never gave me even a young goat to feast on with
my friends. But when your son returns who wasted your property with
prostitutes, for him you slaughter the fattened calf.' He said to him, 'My son, you
are here with me always; everything I have is yours. But now we must celebrate
and rejoice, because your brother was dead and has come to life again; he was
lost and has been found.'"
Reflection
Chapter 15 of Luke’s Gospel includes the following information: The tax
collectors and sinners were all crowding around to listen to Him and the
Pharisees and Scribes complained saying, “This man welcomes sinners and eats
with them” (Lk 15: 1-3). Luke presents these three parables which are bound
together by the same theme: the lost sheep (Lk 15: 4-7), the lost drachma (Lk 15:
8-10), the lost son (Lk 15: 11-32). This last parable constitutes the theme of today’s
Gospel.
• Luke 15: 11-13: The younger son’s decision. A man had two sons. The younger
one asks for the part of the estate which will be his. The father divides
62
everything between the two and each receives his part. To receive the
inheritance is not any merit of ours. It is a gratuitous gift. The inheritance of
the gifts of God is distributed among all human beings, whether Jewish or
Gentiles, whether Christians or non-Christians. All receive something of the
inheritance of the Father, but not all take care of it in the same way. The
younger son leaves and goes to a distant country and squanders his money
on a life of debauchery, getting away from the father. At the time of Luke, the
elder one represented the communities which came from Judaism, and the
younger represented the gentile communities. Today, who would be the
younger and who the elder?
• Luke 15: 14-19: The disillusionment and the will to return to the father’s home.
The need to find some food makes the young man lose his freedom, and he
becomes a farm worker and takes care of the pigs. This was the condition of
life of millions of slaves in the Roman Empire at the time of Luke. The situation
in which he finds himself makes the young man remember how he was in his
father’s home. Finally, he prepares the words which he will say to his Father:
“I no longer deserve to be called your son! Treat me as one of your hired men!”
The hired man executes the orders and fulfills the law of servants. The
younger son wants to fulfill the law as the Pharisees and the Scribes of the
time of Jesus wanted (Lk 15: 1). The missionaries of the Pharisees accused the
Gentiles who were converted to the God of Abraham (Mt 23: 15). At the time
of Luke, some Christians who converted from Judaism submitted themselves
to the yoke of the Law (Gal 1: 6-10).
• Luke 15: 20-24: The joy of the father when he meets his younger son again.
The parable says that the younger son was still a long way off from the house,
but the father saw him, and ran to the boy, clasped him in his arms and kissed
him. The impression given by Jesus is that the Father remained all the time
at the window to see if his son would appear around the corner. According to
our human way of thinking and feeling, the joy of the father seems
exaggerated. He does not even allow his son to finish his words. Nobody
listens! The father does not want his son to be his slave. He wants him to be
his son! This is the Good News which Jesus has brought to us! A new robe,
new sandals, a ring on his finger, the calf, the feast! In the immense joy of the
encounter, Jesus allows us to see how great the sadness of the father is
because of the loss of his son. God was very sad and the people now become
aware of this, seeing the immense joy of the father because of the encounter
with his son! It is joy shared with all in the feast that he has prepared.
• Luke 15: 25-28b: The reaction of the older son. The older son returns from his
work in the fields and finds that there is a feast in the house. He refuses to
enter. He wants to know what is happening. When he is told the reason for
the feast, he is very angry and does not want to go in. He thinks that he is in
the right. He does not like the feast and he does not understand the why of
his father’s joy. This is a sign that he did not have great intimacy with the
father, in spite of their having lived in the same house. In fact, if he had had
this intimacy, he would have noticed the father’s sadness for the loss of his
younger son and would have understood his joy when the son returned.
63
Those who live in a state of anxiety about the observance of the Law of God
run the risk of forgetting God himself! The young son, even being far away
from home, seemed to know the father better than the older son who lived
with him. The younger one had the courage to go back home to his father,
while the older one no longer wants to enter the the father’s house. He does
not realize that the father, without him, will lose his joy, because he, the older
son, is son as much as the younger one!
• Luke 15: 28a-30: The attitude of the father and the older son’s response. The
Father goes out of the house and begs the older son to come inside. But the
son answers, “All these years I have slaved for you and never once disobeyed
any orders of yours, yet you never offered me so much as a kid for me to
celebrate with my friends. But for this son of yours, when he comes back after
swallowing up your property, he and his loose women, you kill the calf we had
been fattening.” The older son also wants feast and joy, but only with his own
friends, not with his brother and much less with his father. He does not even
call his own brother “brother,” but rather “this son of yours,” as if he were no
longer his brother. And he, the older brother, speaks about prostitutes. His
malice makes him interpret his younger brother’s life in this way. How many
times does the older brother misinterpret the life of the younger brother. How
many times do we misinterpret the life and the practices of others! The
attitude of the father is the contrary! He accepts the younger son but does
not want to lose the older son. Both of them form part of the family. One
cannot exclude the other!
• Luke 15: 31-32: The father’s final response. Like the father who does not pay
attention to the arguments of the younger son, in the same way he does not
pay attention to those of the older son. He says, “My son, you are with me
always and all I have is yours, but it was only right we should celebrate and
rejoice, because your brother here was dead and has come to life; he was lost
and is found!” Was the older son really aware that he was always with his
father and found in his presence the reason for his joy? The father’s
declaration - “All I have is yours!” also includes the younger son who has
returned! The older brother does not have the right to make a distinction, and
if he wants to be the father’s son, he has to accept the father as he is and not
as he would like him to be! The parable does not say what was the older
brother’s final response. It is up to the older son, who we are, to give it!
• The one who experiences the gratuitous and surprising eruption of the love
of God in his life becomes joyful and wishes to communicate this joy to others.
The salvific action of God is a source of joy: “Rejoice with me!” (Lk 15: 6, 9). And
from this experience of God’s gratuitousness the sense of feast and joy
emerges (Lk 15: 32). At the end of the parable, the father asks them to be
happy and to celebrate, to feast. The joy is threatened by the older son, who
does not want to enter the house. He thinks he has the right to joy only with
his own friends and does not want to share joy with all the members of the
same human family. He represents those who consider themselves just and
observant, and who think that they do not need any conversion, just like the
keepers of the Law in Jesus’ time.
64
Personal Questions
• What is the image of God that I have had since my childhood? Has it changed
as I changed, and why?
• With which of the two sons do I identify with: the younger one or the older
one? Why?
• This parable has references to communities (Pharisees/Gentiles) as well as to
individuals. Do those references apply today?
Concluding Prayer
Bless Yahweh, my soul, from the depths of my being, His holy name; bless
Yahweh, my soul, never forget all His acts of kindness. (Ps 103: 1-2)
Opening Prayer
Lord Jesus, send Your Spirit to help us read the Scriptures in the same way that You read
them to the disciples on the road to Emmaus. With the light of the Word in the Bible, You
helped them to discover the presence of God in the distressing events surrounding Your
condemnation to death. The cross, which seemed to put an end to all hope, was revealed
to them as the source of life and resurrection.
Create in us the silence necessary to hear Your voice in creation and in the Scriptures, in
the events of daily life and in people, above all in the poor and the suffering. May Your
word give us direction, just as it did to the two disciples on the road to Emmaus, so that
we too will experience the power of Your resurrection and bear witness to others
that You are alive in our midst as the source of community, of justice and of peace. We
ask this of You, Jesus, son of Mary, You who revealed the Father to us and sent us Your
Spirit. Amen.
The text describes the dialogue between Jesus and the Samaritan woman. It is a very
human conversation, which shows how Jesus related to people and how He Himself
learned and became enriched in talking with others. While reading the text, try to be
aware of what surprises you most about the attitude both of Jesus and the woman.
A Division of the Text to Assist a Careful Reading:
• 5-6: So He came to a city of Samaria, called Sychar, near the field that Jacob
gave to his son Joseph. Jacob's well was there, and so Jesus, wearied as He
was from His journey, sat down beside the well. It was about the sixth hour.
• 7-15: There came a woman of Samaria to draw water. Jesus said to her, "Give
me a drink." For His disciples had gone away into the city to buy food. The
Samaritan woman said to Him, "How is it that You, a Jew, ask a drink of me, a
woman of Samaria?" For Jews have no dealings with Samaritans. Jesus
answered her, "If you knew the gift of God, and who it is that is saying to you,
'Give me a drink,' you would have asked Him, and He would have given you
living water." The woman said to Him, "Sir, you have nothing to draw with, and
the well is deep; where do you get that living water? Are You greater than our
father Jacob, who gave us the well, and drank from it himself, and his sons,
and his cattle?" Jesus said to her, "Everyone who drinks of this water will thirst
again, but whoever drinks of the water that I shall give him will never thirst;
the water that I shall give him will become in him a spring of water welling up
to eternal life." The woman said to Him, "Sir, give me this water, that I may not
thirst, nor come here to draw."
• 16-18: Jesus said to her, "Go, call your husband, and come here." The woman
answered Him, "I have no husband." Jesus said to her, "You are right in saying,
'I have no husband'; for you have had five husbands, and he whom you now
have is not your husband; this you said truly."
• 19-26: The woman said to Him, "Sir, I perceive that you are a prophet. Our
fathers worshiped on this mountain; and you say that in Jerusalem is the
place where men ought to worship." Jesus said to her, "Woman, believe Me,
the hour is coming when neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem will you
worship the Father. You worship what you do not know; we worship what we
know, for salvation is from the Jews. But the hour is coming, and now is, when
the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for such the
Father seeks to worship Him. God is spirit, and those who worship Him must
worship in spirit and truth." The woman said to Him, "I know that Messiah is
coming (he who is called Christ); when he comes, he will show us all things."
Jesus said to her, "I who speak to you am He."
• 27-30: Just then His disciples came. They marvelled that He was talking with
a woman, but none said, "What do you wish?" or "Why are You talking with
her?" So the woman left her water jar, and went away into the city, and said
to the people, "Come, see a man who told me all that I ever did. Can this be
the Christ?" They went out of the city and were coming to Him.
66
• 31-38: Meanwhile the disciples besought Him, saying, "Rabbi, eat." But He said
to them, "I have food to eat of which you do not know." So the disciples said
to one another, "Has anyone brought Him food?" Jesus said to them, "My food
is to do the will of Him who sent me, and to accomplish His work. Do you not
say, 'There are yet four months, then comes the harvest? I tell you, lift up your
eyes, and see how the fields are already white for harvest. He who reaps
receives wages, and gathers fruit for eternal life, so that sower and reaper may
rejoice together. For here the saying holds true, 'One sows and another reaps.'
I sent you to reap that for which you did not labor; others have labored, and
you have entered into their labor."
• 39-42: Many Samaritans from that city believed in Him because of the
woman's testimony, "He told me all that I ever did." So when the Samaritans
came to Him, they asked Him to stay with them; and He stayed there two
days. And many more believed because of His word. They said to the woman,
"It is no longer because of your words that we believe, for we have heard for
ourselves, and we know that this is indeed the Savior of the world."
Some Questions
to help us in our meditation and prayer.
• What most attracted your attention in Jesus’ attitude toward the woman
during the dialogue? What method did Jesus use to help the woman become
aware of a deeper dimension to life?
• What most attracted your attention about the attitude of the Samaritan
woman during her conversation with Jesus? How did she influence Jesus?
• Where in the Old Testament is water associated with the gift of life and the
gift of the Holy Spirit?
• How does Jesus’ attitude during the conversation question me or touch
something within me or correct me?
• The Samaritan woman led the discussion towards religion. If you could come
across Jesus and talk to Him, what would you like to talk about? Why?
• Do I adore God in spirit and in truth or do I find my security in rituals and
regulations?
67
Jesus uses the word water in two senses. The first sense is the material, normal
sense of water that one drinks; the second is the symbolic sense as the source of
life and the gift of the Spirit. Jesus uses a language that people can understand
and, at the same time, awakens in them the desire to go deeper and to discover
a more profound meaning to life.
The symbolic sense of water has its roots in the Old Testament, where it is frequently a
symbol for the action of the Spirit of God in people. For example, Jeremiah compares
running water to water in a cistern (Jer 2: 13). The more water is taken from a cistern, the
less it has; the more water is taken from a stream of living water, the more it has. Other
texts from the Old Testament: Is 12: 3; 49: 10; 55: 1; Ezek 47: 1-3. Jesus knew the traditions
of His people and He uses these in His conversation with the Samaritan woman.
Suggesting the symbolic meaning of water, He suggests to her (and to the readers)
various episodes and verses from the Old Testament.
The Dialogue Between Jesus and the Woman:
Jesus meets the woman at the well, a traditional place for meetings and
conversations (Gen 24: 10-27; 29: 1-14). He starts off from His own very real need
because He is thirsty. He does this in such a way that the woman feels needed
and she serves Him. Jesus makes Himself needy in her regard. From His
question, he makes it possible for the woman to become aware that He
depends on her to give Him something to drink. Jesus awakens in her the
desire to help and to serve.
The conversation between Jesus and the woman has two levels:
• The superficial level, in the material sense of water that quenches
someone’s thirst, and in the normal sense of husband as the father of
a family. At this level the conversation is tense and difficult and does
not flow. The Samaritan woman has the upper hand. At the
beginning, Jesus tries to meet her by talking about daily chores
(fetching water), but He does not succeed. Then He tries by talking
about family (call your husband), and still there is no breakthrough.
Finally the woman speaks about religion (the place of adoration).
Jesus then gets through to her by the door she herself has opened.
• The deeper level, in the symbolic sense of water as the image of the
new life brought by Jesus, and of the husband as the symbol of the
union of God with the people. At this level, the conversation flows
perfectly. After revealing that He Himself is offering the water of new
life, Jesus says, "Go and get your husband and then return." In the past,
the Samaritans had five husbands, or five idols, attached to the five
groups of people who were taken off by the King of Assyria (2 Kings 17:
30-31). The sixth husband, the one the woman had at present, was not
truly her husband: "the one you have now is not your husband" (Jn 4:
18). What the people had did not respond to their deepest desire:
union with God, as a husband who unites himself to his spouse (Is 62:
5; 54: 5). The true husband, the seventh, is Jesus, as promised by Hosea:
"I will espouse you to me forever; I will espouse you in right and in
justice, in love and in mercy. I will espouse you in fidelity, and you shall
know the Lord." (Hos 2: 21-22). Jesus is the bridegroom who has arrived
(Mk 2: 19) to bring new life to the woman who has been searching for
68
it her whole life long, and until now, has never found it. If the people
accept Jesus as "husband," they will have access to God wherever they
are, both in spirit and in truth (vv. 23-24).
Jesus declares His thirst to the Samaritan woman but He does not drink. This is a sign
that we are talking about a symbolic thirst, which had to do with His mission: the thirst
to accomplish the will of His Father (Jn 4: 34). This thirst is ever present in Jesus and will
be until His death. At the moment of His death, He says, "I am thirsty" (Jn 19: 28). He
declares His thirst for the last time and so He can say, "It is accomplished." Then He
bowed His head and gave up His spirit. (Jn 19: 30). His mission had been accomplished.
The Importance of Women in the Gospel of John:
In John’s Gospel, women feature prominently seven times, which are decisive
for the spreading of the Good News. To women are given functions and
missions, some of which, in the other Gospels, are attributed to men:
• At the wedding feast in Cana, the mother of Jesus recognizes the limits of the
Old Testament and affirms the law of the Gospel, "Do whatever He tells you."
(Jn 2: 1-11).
• The Samaritan woman is the first person to have revealed to her by Jesus the
great secret, that He is the Messiah. "It is I who speak to you." (Jn 4: 26). She
then becomes the evangelizer of Samaria (Jn 4: 28-30, 39-42).
• The woman, who is called an adulteress, at the moment of receiving the
forgiveness of Jesus, becomes the judge of the patriarchal society (or of male
power) that seeks to condemn her. (Jn 8: 1-11).
• In the other Gospels it is Peter who makes the solemn profession of faith in
Jesus (Mt 16: 16; Mk 8: 29; Lk 9: 20). In the Gospel of John, it is Martha, sister of
Mary and Lazarus, who makes the solemn profession of faith (Jn 11: 27).
• Mary, the sister of Martha, anoints the feet of Jesus for the day of his burial (Jn.
12: 7). At the time of Jesus, the one who died on a cross was not buried nor
embalmed. Mary anticipated the anointing of Jesus’ body. This means that
she accepted Jesus as the Messiah-Suffering Servant, who must die on the
cross. Peter did not accept this (Jn.13: 8) and sought to dissuade Jesus from
this path (Mt. 16: 22). In this way, Mary is presented as a model for the other
disciples.
• At the foot of the cross, Jesus says, "Woman, behold your son; son, behold your
mother" (Jn. 19: 25-27). The Church is born at the foot of the cross. Mary is the
model for the Christian community.
• Mary Magdalene must announce the Good News to the brothers (Jn. 20: 11-
18). She receives an order, without which all the other orders given to the
apostles would have no effect or value.
• The Mother of Jesus appears twice in John’s Gospel: at the beginning, at the
wedding feast in Cana (Jn. 2: 1-5), and at the end, at the foot of the cross (Jn.
19: 25-27). In both cases, she represents the Old Testament that waits for the
arrival of the New, and, in both cases, assists its arrival. Mary unites what has
gone before with what would come later. At Cana, it is she, the Mother of
69
Jesus, symbol of the Old Testament, who perceives its limits and takes steps
so that the New will arrive. At the hour of Jesus’ death, it is the Mother of Jesus,
who welcomes the "Beloved Disciple." In this case the Beloved Disciple is the
new community, which has grown around Jesus. It is the child that has been
born from the Old Testament. In response to Jesus’ request, the son, the New
Testament, welcomes the Mother, the Old Testament, into his home. The two
must journey together. The New Testament cannot be understood without
the Old. It would be a building without a foundation. The Old without the New
would be incomplete. It would be a tree without fruit.
Psalm 19 (18)
God Speaks to Us Through Nature and Through the Bible
The heavens are telling the glory of God; and the firmament proclaims His handiwork.
Day to day pours forth speech, and night to night declares knowledge.
There is no speech, nor are there words; their voice is not heard; yet their voice goes out
through all the earth, and their words to the end of the world.
In them He has set a tent for the sun, which comes forth like a bridegroom leaving his
chamber, and like a strong man runs its course with joy.
Its rising is from the end of the heavens, and its circuit to the end of them; and there is
nothing hid from its heat.
The law of the Lord is perfect, reviving the soul; the testimony of the Lord is sure, making
wise the simple; the precepts of the Lord are right, rejoicing the heart; the
commandment of the Lord is pure, enlightening the eyes.
The fear of the Lord is clean, enduring for ever; the ordinances of the Lord are true, and
righteous altogether. More to be desired are they than gold, even much fine gold;
sweeter also than honey and drippings of the honeycomb.
Moreover by them is Thy servant warned; in keeping them there is great reward. But
who can discern his errors? Clear thou me from hidden faults.
Keep back thy servant also from presumptuous sins; let them not have
dominion over me! Then I shall be blameless, and innocent of great
transgression.
Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in
Thy sight, O Lord, my rock and my redeemer.
Final Prayer
Lord Jesus, we thank You for Your word, which has helped us see better the will
of the Father. Let Your Spirit illumine all that we do and give us the strength to
carry out what Your Word has made us see. Let us, like Mary, Your Mother, not
only listen to the Word but also put it into practice. You who live and reign with
the Father in the unity of the Holy Spirit forever and ever. Amen.
70
Monday, March 24, 2025
Season of Lent
Opening Prayer
Just and holy God, our loving Father,
You offered us Your hand in friendship and You sent us Your Son Jesus to go
with us on the road of obedience and loyalty.
God, we often hurt this friendship; we act as if we were not Your sons and
daughters. See the look of shame on our faces. Forgive us, for we count on You.
Accept our thanks for continuing to take us as we are and loving us
notwithstanding our sins.
We ask You this through Christ our Lord.
Reflection
Today’s Gospel (Lk 4: 24-30) forms part of a larger part (Lk 4: 14-32). Jesus had
presented His program in the synagogue of Nazareth, using a text from Isaiah
which spoke about the poor, the prisoners, the blind and the oppressed (Is 61: 1-
2) and which mirrored the situation of the people of Galilee at the time of Jesus.
In the name of God, Jesus takes a stand and defines His mission: to proclaim the
Good News to the poor, to proclaim release to prisoners, to give back sight to
the blind, to restore liberty to the oppressed. After finishing the reading, He
updates the text and says, “Today this text is being fulfilled even while you are
listening!” (Lk 4: 21). All those present were astonished (Lk 4: 16, 22b). But
immediately after there was a reaction to discredit. The people in the
synagogue were scandalized and did not want to know anything about Jesus.
They said, “Is He not the son of Joseph?” (Lk 4: 22b). Why were they scandalized?
What is the reason for this [unexpected] reaction?
Because Jesus quoted the text from Isaiah only to the part that says, “to
proclaim a year of favor from the Lord,” and He omits the end of the sentence,
which says, “to proclaim a day of vengeance for our God” (Is 61: 2). The people of
Nazareth remained surprised because Jesus omitted the phrase on vengeance.
71
They wanted the Good News of the liberation of the oppressed to be an action
of vengeance on the part of God against the oppressors. In this case the coming
of the Kingdom would be only a superficial social change, and not a change or
conversion of the system. Jesus does not accept this way of thinking. His
experience of God the Father helps Him to understand better the significance
of the prophecies. He takes away the vengeance. The people of Nazareth do not
accept that proposal, and the authority of Jesus begins to diminish: “Is He not
Joseph’s son?”
• Luke 4: 24: No prophet is ever accepted in his own country. Jesus answers,
“No prophet is ever accepted in his own country!” In fact, they did not accept
the new image of God which Jesus communicated to them through this new
and freer interpretation of Isaiah. The message of the God of Jesus went
beyond the limits of the Jewish people and opened itself to accept the
excluded and all humanity.
• Luke 4: 25-27: Two stories of the Old Testament. In order to help the
community to get beyond the scandal and to understand the universality of
God, Jesus uses two well known stories of the Old Testament: one of Elijah
and the other one of Elisha. Through these stories He criticized the people of
Nazareth who were so closed up in themselves. Elijah was sent to the foreign
widow of Zarephah (1 Kg 17: 7-16). Elisha was sent to take care of Naaman of
Syria (2 Kg 5: 14). The people of Nazareth felt threatened by this. Paul makes a
similar statement with similar results too (Acts 22: 21)
• Luke 4: 28-30: They intended to throw Him off the cliff, but He passed straight
through the crowd and walked away. What Jesus said did not calm the
people down. On the contrary! The use of these two biblical passages caused
them to become more angry. The community of Nazareth reached the point
of wanting to kill Jesus. And thus, at the moment in which He presented His
plan to accept the excluded, Jesus Himself was excluded! But He remained
calm! The anger of the others did not make Him change His mind. In this way,
Luke indicates that it is difficult to overcome the mentality of privilege which
is closed up in itself. And he showed that the polemic attitude of the gentiles
had already existed in the time of Jesus. Jesus had the same difficulty which
Luke had with the Hebrew community in his time.
Personal Questions
• How do I carry on the gift of the Good News in the world today?
• Who are the excluded whom we should accept more warmly in our
community?
• Does taking on poverty, oppression, or blindness (in all its forms) start on a
personal level and spread to my community, or do I wait for the community
to act before taking personal action?
Concluding Prayer
72
My whole being yearns and pines for Yahweh's courts; My heart and my body
cry out for joy to the living God. (Ps 84: 2)
Opening Prayer
God of the poor and the humble, we thank You today for choosing Mary as the
Virgin Mother of Jesus, Your Son. Her faith and willing service opened the way to
Your new world. Dispose us to seek Your will and to cooperate with Your plans
that we too, like Mary, may give to the world its Savior Jesus Christ, Your Son
and our Lord.
He went in and said to her, “Rejoice, you who enjoy God's favor! The Lord is with
you.” She was deeply disturbed by these words and asked herself what this
greeting could mean, but the angel said to her, “Mary, do not be afraid; you have
won God's favor. Look! You are to conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you
must name Him Jesus. He will be great and will be called Son of the Most High.
The Lord God will give Him the throne of His ancestor David; He will rule over the
House of Jacob for ever and His reign will have no end.”
Mary said to the angel, “But how can this come about, since I have no knowledge
of man?”' The angel answered, “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the
power of the Most High will overshadow you. And so the child will be holy and
will be called Son of God. And I tell you this too: your cousin Elizabeth also, in her
old age, has conceived a son, and she whom people called barren is now in her
sixth month, for nothing is impossible to God.”
Mary said, “You see before you the Lord's servant, let it happen to me as you have
said.” And the angel left her.
Reflection
The visit of the angel to Mary reminds us of the visit of God to different women
of the Old Testament: Sarah, mother of Isaac (Gen 18: 9-15), Anne, mother of
Samuel (1 Sam 1: 9-18), the mother of Samson (Jgs 13: 2-5). All of them
announced the birth of a son with an important mission in God’s plan.
The account begins with the expression “in the sixth month.” It is the sixth
month of the pregnancy of Elizabeth. The need of Elizabeth, a woman advanced
in age who is expecting her first son with the risk of delivery, is the background
73
of this entire story. Elizabeth is mentioned at the beginning (Lk 1: 26) and at the
end of the visit of the angel (Lk 1: 36, 39).
• The angel says, “Rejoice, you who enjoy God’s favor, the Lord is with
you!” Similar words were said also to Moses (Ex 3: 12), to Jeremiah (Jer 1: 8), to
Gideon (Jgs 6: 12) and to others with an important mission in God’s plan. Mary
is surprised at the greeting and tries to understand the significance of these
words. She is practical. She wants to understand. She does not accept just any
invitation.
• The angel answers: “Do not be afraid!” Just as it happened in the visit of the
angel to Zechariah, the first greeting of God is always: “Do not be afraid!”
Immediately the angel recalls the promises of the past which will be fulfilled
thanks to the son who will be born and who is to receive the name of Jesus.
He will be called the Son of the Most High and in Him the Kingdom of God
will be realized. This is the explanation of the angel in such a way that Mary is
not afraid.
• Mary is aware of the mission which she is about to receive, but she continues
to be practical. She does not allow herself to be drawn by the greatness of the
offer and knows her condition. She examines the offer through criteria which
she has available. Humanly speaking, it was not possible: “But how can this
come about? I have no knowledge of man.”
• The angel explains that the Holy Spirit, present in God’s Word since the
creation (Gen 1: 2), is able to realize things which seem impossible. This is why
the Holy One who will be born of Mary will be called Son of God. The miracle
repeats itself right up to today. When the Word of God is accepted by us,
something new happens, thanks to the power of the Holy Spirit! Something
new and surprising such as a son born of a virgin or a son born to a woman of
advanced age, like Elizabeth, whom all said was barren, that she could not
have children! And the angel adds, “See, your cousin Elizabeth also, in her old
age, has conceived a son, and she whom people called barren is now in her
sixth month, for nothing is impossible with God.”
• The response of the angel clarifies everything for Mary, and she surrenders:
“Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord, may it be done to me according to
your word.” Mary uses for herself the title of a servant, Handmaid of the Lord.
This title from Isaiah represents the mission of the people not as a privilege,
but rather as a service to other people (Is 42: 1-9; 49: 3-6). Later Jesus will define
His mission as a service: “I have not come to be served, but to serve!” (Mt 20:
28). He learned from his Mother!
Reflection
• What struck you the most in the visit of the angel Gabriel to Mary?
• Jesus praises his Mother when He says: “Blessed are those who hear the Word
of God and keep it.” (Lk 11: 28). How does Mary relate to the Word of God during
the visit of the angel?
74
Concluding Prayer
To Yahweh belong the earth and all it contains, the world and all who live there;
it is He who laid its foundations on the seas, on the flowing waters fixed it firm.
(Ps 24: 1-2)
Opening Prayer
Lord our God,
Your prophets remind us in season and out of season of our responsibilities
toward You and toward the world of people.
When they disturb and upset us,let it be a holy disturbance that makes us
restless, eager to do Your will and to bring justice and love around us.
We ask You this through Christ our Lord.
Reflection
Today’s Gospel (Mt 5: 17-19) teaches how to observe the law of God in its
complete fulfillment (Mt 5: 17-19). Matthew writes in order to help the
communities of convertedJews overcome the criticism of the brothers of their
own race who accused them, saying,“You are unfaithful to the Law of Moses.”
Jesus Himself had been accused of infidelityto the Law of God. Matthew has
Jesus’ clarifying response to His accusers. Thus, Matthew sheds some light to
help the communities solve their problems.
Using images of daily life, with simple and direct words, Jesus had said that the
mission of the community, its reason for being, is that of being salt and light! He
had given some advice regarding each one of the two images. Then follow the
brief verses of today’s Gospel.
• Matthew 5: 17-18: Not one dot, nor one stroke is to disappear from the Law.
There were several different tendencies in the first Christian communities.
Some thought that it was not necessary to observe the laws of the Old
Testament, because we are saved by faith in Jesus and not by the observance
of the Law (Rm 3: 21-26). Others accepted Jesus, the Messiah, but they did not
accept the liberty of spirit with which some of the communities lived the
75
message of Jesus. They thought that being Jews, they had to continue to
observe the laws of the Old Testament (Acts 15: 1, 5). But there were Christians
who lived so fully in the freedom of the Spirit, who no longer looked at the life
of Jesus of Nazareth, nor to the Old Testament that they even went so far as
to say, “Anathema Jesus!” (1 Cor 12: 3). Observing these tensions, Matthew tries
to find some balance between both extremes. The community should be a
place where the balance can be attained and lived. Jesus’ answer to those
who criticized Him continued to be relevant for the communities: “I have not
come to abolish the law, but to complete it!” The communities could not be
against the Law, nor could they close themselves off in the observance of the
Law. Like Jesus, they should advance and show in practice, the objective thst
the Law wanted to attain in people’s lives, that is, in the perfect practice of
love.
• Matthew 5: 17-18: Not one dot or stroke will disappear from the Law. It is for
those who wanted to get rid of the law altogether that Matthew recalls the
other parable of Jesus: “Anyone who breaks even one of the least of these
commandments and teaches others to do the same will be considered the
least in the Kingdom of Heaven; but the person who keeps them and teaches
them will be considered great in the Kingdom of Heaven.” The great concern
in Matthew’s Gospel is to show that the Old Testament, Jesus of Nazareth, and
the life in the Spirit cannot be separated. The three of them form part of the
same and unique plan of God and communicate to us the certainty of faith:
The God of Abraham and of Sarah is present in the midst of the community
by faith in Jesus of Nazareth who sends us His Spirit.
Personal Questions
• How do I see and live God’s law: as a freedom to do anything I please, as an
impositionwhich restricts me, or as a guide to grow in love?
• What can we do today for our brothers and sisters who consider all of this
type ofdiscussion as obsolete and not relevant?
• How does this view of the Law and the Commandments affect me? As a line
whichdefines sin, as rules to avoid vice, or as a guide in attaining virtue?
Concluding Prayer
Praise Yahweh, Jerusalem, Zion, praise your God.
For He gives strength to the bars of your gates, He blesses your children within
you. (Ps 145: 12-13)
Opening Prayer
76
Lord our God,
many of us never had it so good and so we have become smug and self-
satisfied, happy in our own little world.
God, may our ears remain open to Your word and our hearts to You and to our
brothers and sisters. Do not allow us to forget You, or to place our trust in
ourselves. Make us restless for You through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Reflection
Today’s Gospel is that of Luke. We already meditated on the parallel text in
Mark (Mk 3: 22-27) during January.
• Luke 11: 14-16: The diverse reactions before the expulsion of a devil. Jesus had
expelled a devil which was mute. The expulsion produced two different
reactions. On the one side, the crowd of people who remain astonished and
surprised. The people accept Jesus and believe in Him. On the other side,
those who do not accept Jesus and do not believe in Him. Among the latter,
some said that Jesus cast out devils in the nameof Beelzebul, the prince of
devils, and others wanted a sign from heaven. Mark says thatit was a question
of the Scribes who had come from Jerusalem (Mk 3: 22), who were not in
agreement with the liberty of Jesus. They wanted to defend tradition against
the message of Jesus.
• Luke 11: 17-22: Jesus’ answer is divided into three parts:
• 1st part: Comparison with a divided kingdom. (11: 17-18a) Jesus
denounces the absurdity of the calumny of the Scribes. To say that he
casts out devils with the help of the prince of devils means to deny the
evidence. It is the same thing as saying that wateris dry and that the
sun is darkness. The doctors of Jerusalem slandered Him because
they did not know how to explain the benefits which Jesus
accomplished for the people.They were afraid to lose their position of
leadership. They felt threatened in their authority before the people.
77
• 2nd part: through whom do your own sons drive them out? (11: 18b-20)
Jesus provokes the accusers and asks, “But if it is through Beelzebul
that Idrive out devils, in whose name do your disciples drive them out?
Let them respond and explain themselves! If I drive out the devil
through the finger of God, then the Kingdom of God has indeed
caught you unawares.”
• 3rd part: when someone stronger than himself attacks and defeats
him, the stronger one takes away all weapons. (11: 21-22) Jesus
compares the devil to a strong man. Nobody,except a stronger person,
can rob the house of a strong man: Jesus is the strongest. This is why
He succeeds in entering the house and in getting hold of the strong
man. He succeeds in driving out the devils. Jesus seizes the strong
man and now robs his house,that is, He liberates the people who were
under the power of evil. The Prophet Isaiah had used the same
comparison to describe the coming of the Messiah (Is 49: 24-25). This
is why Luke says that the expulsion of the devil is an obvious sign that
the Kingdom of God has arrived.
• Luke 11: 23: Anyone who is not with Me is against Me. Jesus ends His response
withthis sentence: “Anyone who is not with Me is against Me. And anyone who
does not gather in with Me throws away.” On another occasion, also regarding
the expulsion ofa devil, the disciples prevented a man from using the name
of Jesus to drive out the devil because he was not one of their group. Jesus
answered, “You must not stop him: anyone who is not against you is for you!”
(Lk 9: 50). These two declarations seem to be contradictory, but they are not.
The sentence in today’s Gospel is directed to the enemies who have a
prejudice against Jesus: “Anyone who is not with Me is against Me. And
anyone who does not gather in with Me throws away.” The prejudice and the
lack of acceptance make dialogue impossible and break the union. The other
sentence is addressed to the disciples who thought they had the monopoly
on Jesus. “Anyone who is not against you is for you!” Many people who are not
Christian practice love, goodness, justice, many times in a much better way
than Christians. We must not exclude them. They are brothers and workers in
the construction of the Kingdom. We Christians are not Jesus’ owners. On the
contrary, Jesus is our Lord!
Personal Questions
• To be “with Me” or “against Me” can become a complex question. At what
point in belief or action would a person move from being “with” to “against”
Jesus and his message?
• “Do not stop him, because anyone who is not against you is for you!” How
does this apply to the various Christian interpretations of Jesus’ message
today?
Concluding Prayer
Come, let us cry out with joy to Yahweh,acclaim the rock of our salvation.
78
Let us come into His presence with thanksgiving, acclaim Him with music. (Ps
95: 1-2)
Opening Prayer
Father,
Your love never fails. Hear our call. Keep us from danger and provide for all our needs.
We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, Your Son, who lives and reigns with You
and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Reflection
The Gospel today presents a beautiful conversation between Jesus and a doctor of
the Law. The doctor wants to know from Jesus which is the first of all the
commandments. Today, many people want to know what is most important in
religion. Some say: to be baptized. Others, to pray. Others say: to go to Mass or to
participate in worship on Sunday. Others say: to love your neighbor! Others are
worried about the appearance or the changes or tasks in the Church.
• Mark 12: 28: The question of the doctor of the Law. A doctor of the Law, who
had seen the debate of Jesus with the Sadducees (Mk 12: 23-27), was pleased
with Jesus’ response, and he perceives in Him a great intelligence and wants
to take advantage of this occasion to ask Him a question: “Which is the first
one of all the commandments?” At that time the Jews had an enormous
number of norms which regulated, in practice, the observance of the Ten
Commandments of the Law of God. Some said: “All these norms have the
same value, because they all come from God. It does not belong to us to
introduce distinctions in the things of God.” Others would say, “Some Laws
79
are more important than others, that is why they oblige more!” The doctor
wanted to know Jesus’ opinion.
• Mark 12: 29-31: Jesus’ response. Jesus responds by quoting a passage of the
Bible to say that the first commandment is “to love God with all your heart,
with all your mind and with all your strength!” (Dt 6: 4-5). At the time of Jesus,
the pious Jews made of this text of Deuteronomy a prayer which they recited
three times a day: in the morning, at noon and in the evening. It was also one
of the four verses written in the phylacteries (tefillin) that men (mostly) wore.
Among them it was known as today we know the Our Father. And Jesus adds,
quoting the Bible again, “the second one is this: You shall love your neighbor
as yourself. There is no other more important commandment than this one.”
(Lev 19: 18). A brief and profound response! It is the summary of all that Jesus
has taught about God and about life (Mt 7: 12).
• Mark 12: 32-33: The answer of the doctor of the Law. The doctor agrees with
Jesus and draws this conclusion: “To love Him with all your heart, with all your
understanding and strength, and to love your neighbor as yourself; this is far
more important than any burnt offering or sacrifice.” In other words, the
commandment of love is more important than the commandments related
to worship and sacrifice in the Temple. This affirmation was already used by
the prophets of the Old Testament (Hos 6: 6; Ps 40: 6-8; Ps 51: 16-17). Today, we
would say that the practice of love is more important than novenas, promises,
Masses, prayers, and processions.
• Mark 12: 34: The summary of the Kingdom. Jesus confirms the conclusion
reached by the doctor and says, “You are not far from the Kingdom of God!”
In fact, the Kingdom of God consists in recognizing that love toward God is
equal to the love of neighbor. Because if God is Father, we all are sisters and
brothers and should show this in practice, living in community. "These two
commandments depend on the Law and the prophets” (Mt 22: 4). The
disciples must keep in mind, fix in their memory, in their intelligence, in the
heart, in their hands and feet this important law of love: God is only attained
through the total gift of self to our neighbor!
• The first and most important commandment. The most important and first
commandment was and will always be: “to love God with all your heart, with
all your mind and with all your strength” (Mk 12: 30). In the measure in which
the people of God, throughout the centuries, have deepened the meaning
and the importance of the love of God, it has become aware that God’s love is
true and real only in the measure in which it is made concrete in the love to
neighbor. And thus, the second commandment which asks for the love for
neighbor, is similar to the first commandment of God’s love (Mt 22: 39; Mk 12:
31). “Anyone who says I love God, and hates his brother, is a liar” (1 Jn 4: 20).
“On these two commandments hang the whole Law and the Prophets.” (Mt
22: 40).
Personal Questions
80
There are different kinds of love, some incomplete. There is love that is
possessive: “I love my spouse; you can’t have him/her.” There is the love that
wants to share the one/thing loved: “I love these candies! Have some!” There is
love that begets obligation: “I have to take care of my cat.” And there is the love
that brings total service, as one does to a new baby: no one questions why the
baby is upset, or advises the baby to eat less, but only responds with complete
service at the moment.
• Which form of love do I give to God, really and truly, and which form of love
would my friends, neighbors, or community say I give?
• Of these types of love, which do I have for the people around me? Is it different
for the people I see but don’t know personally? What should it be, and am I
honest in my self-evaluation?
• I am on my way to the last Sunday Mass today. Someone approaches and
needs my help. Do I miss Mass and help, or avoid the person so I can make it
to Mass? How does your answer fit with these commandments from Jesus?
Concluding Prayer
Direct me in Your ways, Yahweh, and teach me Your paths.
Encourage me to walk in Your truth and teach me since You are the God who
saves me. (Ps 25: 4-5)
Opening Prayer
Lord our God,
You yourself remind us through Your holy peoplethat all our religious practices,
even the eucharistic sacrifice,are not worth anything
if we use them to bend You our way.
God, may we come to Youin humility and repentance,
ready to encounter You in loveand to turn toward You.
Accept us as Your sons and daughters,together with Jesus Christ,
your Son and our Lord forever.
81
but beat his breast and prayed, ‘O God, be merciful tome a sinner.’ I tell you, the
latter went home justified, not the former; for everyone whoexalts himself will be
humbled, and the one who humbles himself will be exalted.”
Reflection
In today’s Gospel, Jesus, in order to teach us to pray, tells the parable of the
Phariseeand the tax collector. Jesus has a different way of seeing things. He saw
something positive in the tax collector, of whom everybody said, “He does not
know how to pray!”Jesus, through prayer, lived so united to the Father that
everything became an expressionof prayer for Him.
The way of presenting the parable is very didactic. Luke gives a brief
introduction which serves as the key for reading. Then Jesus tells the parable
and at the end Jesus Himself applies the parable to life.
• Luke 18: 9: The introduction. The parable is introduced in this way: “He spoke
the following parable to some people who prided themselves on being
upright and despisedeveryone else!” This statement is Luke’s. It refers to the
time of Jesus, but it also refersto our own time. There are always people and
groups of people who consider themselves upright and faithful and who
despise others, considering them ignorant and unfaithful.
• Luke 18: 10-13: The Parable. Two men went up to the Temple to pray: one a
Pharisee,the other a tax collector. According to popular opinion at that time,
the tax collectors were not esteemed at all, and they could not address
themselves to God because they were impure. In the parable, the Pharisee
thanks God because he is better than others. His prayer is nothing other than
a praise of himself, an exaltation of his good qualities and contempt for others
and for the tax collector. The tax collector does not even raise his eyes, but he
beats his breast and says, “God, be merciful to me, a sinner!” He puts himself
in his own place, where he stands before God.
• Luke 18: 14: The application. If Jesus had allowed people to express their
opinion and say which of the two went home justified, all would have
answered, “the Pharisee!” Atthat time, this was the common opinion. Jesus
thinks in a different way. For Him, the one who returns home justified, in a
good relationship with God, is not the Pharisee, but rather the tax collector.
Jesus turns all things upside down. It is certain that the religious authorities of
that time were not pleased with Jesus’ application of the parable.
Jesus prays. Luke informs us, especially, about Jesus’ prayer life. He presents
Jesus inconstant prayer. The following is a list of texts of Luke’s Gospel, in which
Jesus appearsin prayer: Lk 2: 46-50; 3: 21; 4: 1-12; 4: 16; 5: 16; 6: 12; 9: 16, 18, 28; 10: 21;
11: 1; 22: 32; 22: 7-14; 22: 40-46; 23: 34; 23: 46; 24: 30). In reading Luke’s Gospel, you
can find other texts which speak about the prayer of Jesus. Jesus lived in
contact with the Father. To do the will of the Father was the breathing of His life
(Jn 5: 19). Jesus prayed very much and insisted that people and His disciples do
the same, because from union with God springs truth, and the person is able to
discover and find self, in all reality and humility.In Jesus prayer was intimately
bound to concrete facts of life and to the decisions which He had to make. In
order to be faithful to the Father’s plan, He sought to remain alone with Him in
82
order to listen to Him. Jesus prayed the psalms. He did it like any other pious
Jew and He knew them by heart. Jesus even succeeded in composing His own
psalm. It is the Our Father. His whole life was constant prayer: “By himself the
Son can do nothing; He can do only what He sees the Father doing!” (Jn 5: 19,
30). To Him can be applied what the psalm says: “All I can do is pray!” (Ps 109: 4).
Personal Questions
• Looking into the mirror of this parable, am I like the Pharisee or like the tax
collector?
• Do we “pray always” or do we turn everything we do into prayer? Which is
more sincere?
• There are people who say that they do not know how to pray, but they speak
with Godall the time. Do you know any people like this?
• The Eastern Church has the “Jesus Prayer,” which would be based on this
passage, and is used to “pray always.” Do I pray with the same intent: “Lord
Jesus Christ have mercy on me, a sinner.”
Concluding Prayer
Have mercy on me, O God, in Your faithful love, in Your great tenderness wipe
away my offenses; wash me clean from my guilt, purify me from my sin. (Ps 51: 1-
2)
Opening Prayer
Lord Jesus, send Your Spirit to help us to read the Scriptures with the same
mind that You read them to the disciples on the way to Emmaus. In the light of
the Word, written in the Bible, You helped them to discover the presence of
God in the disturbing events of Your sentence and death. Thus, the Cross that
seemed to be the end of all hope became for them the source of life and of
resurrection.
Create silence in us so that we may listen to Your voice in Creation and in the
Scriptures, in events and in people, above all in the poor and suffering. May Your
word guide us so that we too, like the two disciples on the way to Emmaus, may
experience the force of Your resurrection and witness to others that You are
alive in our midst as source of fraternity, justice and peace. We ask this of You,
Jesus, son of Mary, who revealed the Father to us and sent us Your Spirit. Amen.
83
The text of the Gospel of the fourth Sunday of Lent invites us to meditate on the
healing of a man born blind. It is a short but lively text. It is a concrete example
of the way the Fourth Gospel reveals the deep hidden meaning of the events in
Jesus’ life. The story of the healing of the blind man helps us open our eyes to
the picture of Jesus that we each carry within ourselves. We often think of a
Jesus who looks like a glorious king, removed from the life of ordinary people! In
the Gospels, Jesus is presented as a Servant of the poor, friend of sinners. The
picture of the Messiah-King that the Pharisees had in mind, kept us from
recognizing Jesus the Messiah-Servant. As we read the Gospel, let us try to pay
attention to two things: (i) the expert and free way the blind man reacts to the
provocations of the authorities, and (ii) the way the blind man himself opens his
eyes concerning Jesus.
A Division of the Text as a Help to the Reading:
• John 9: 1-5: Blindness before the evil that exists in the world
• John 9: 6-7: The sign of the “One sent by God” who will provoke various
reactions
• John 9: 8-13: The reaction of the neighbors
• John 9: 14-17: The reaction of the Pharisees
• John 9: 18-23: The reaction of the parents
• John 9: 24-34: The final judgement of the Pharisees
• John 9: 35-38: The final attitude of the man born blind
• John 9: 39-41: A closing reflection
Text:
1 As He went along, He saw a man who had been blind from birth. 2 His
disciples asked Him, 'Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he should
have been born blind?' 3 'Neither he nor his parents sinned,' Jesus answered, 'he
was born blind so that the works of God might be revealed in him. 4 'As long as
day lasts we must carry out the work of the one who sent me; the night will
soon be here when no one can work. 5 As long as I am in the world I am the
light of the world.'
6 Having said this, he spat on the ground, made a paste with the spittle, put this
over the eyes of the blind man, 7 and said to him, 'Go and wash in the Pool of
Siloam' (the name means 'one who has been sent'). So he went off and washed
and came back able to see.
8 His neighbors and the people who used to see him before (for he was a
beggar) said, 'Isn't this the man who used to sit and beg?' 9 Some said, 'Yes, it is
the same one.' Others said, 'No, but he looks just like him.' The man himself said,
'Yes, I am the one.' 10 So they said to him, 'Then how is it that your eyes were
opened?' 11 He answered, 'The man called Jesus made a paste, daubed my eyes
with it and said to me, "Go off and wash at Siloam"; so I went, and when I
washed I gained my sight.' 12 They asked, 'Where is he?' He answered, 'I don't
know.' 13 They brought the man who had been blind to the Pharisees.
84
14 It had been a Sabbath day when Jesus made the paste and opened the
man's eyes, 15 so when the Pharisees asked him how he had gained his sight, he
said, 'He put a paste on my eyes, and I washed, and I can see.' 16 Then some of
the Pharisees said, 'That man cannot be from God: he does not keep the
Sabbath.' Others said, 'How can a sinner produce signs like this?' And there was
division among them. 17 So they spoke to the blind man again, 'What have you
to say about Him yourself, now that He has opened your eyes?' The man
answered, 'He is a prophet.'
18 However, the Jews would not believe that the man had been blind without
first sending for the parents of the man who had gained his sight and 19 asking
them, 'Is this man really the son of yours who you say was born blind? If so, how
is it that he is now able to see?' 20 His parents answered, 'We know he is our son
and we know he was born blind, 21 but how he can see, we don't know, nor who
opened his eyes. Ask him. He is old enough: let him speak for himself.' 22 His
parents spoke like this out of fear of the Jews, who had already agreed to ban
from the synagogue anyone who should acknowledge Jesus as the Christ. 23
This was why his parents said, 'He is old enough; ask him.'
24 So the Jews sent for the man again and said to him, 'Give glory to God! We
are satisfied that this man is a sinner.' 25 The man answered, 'Whether he is a
sinner I don't know; all I know is that I was blind and now I can see.' 26 They said
to him, 'What did he do to you? How did he open your eyes?' 27 He replied, 'I
have told you once and you wouldn't listen. Why do you want to hear it all
again? Do you want to become His disciples yourselves?' 28 At this they hurled
abuse at him, 'It is you who are His disciple, we are disciples of Moses: 29 we
know that God spoke to Moses, but as for this man, we don't know where He
comes from.' 30 The man replied, 'That is just what is so amazing! You don't
know where He comes from and He has opened my eyes! 31 We know that God
doesn't listen to sinners, but God does listen to people who are devout and do
his will. 32 Ever since the world began it is unheard of for anyone to open the
eyes of someone born blind; 33 if this man were not from God, He wouldn't have
been able to do anything.' 34 They retorted, 'Are you trying to teach us, and you
a sinner through and through ever since you were born!' And they ejected him.
35 Jesus heard they had ejected him, and when He found him He said to him,
'Do you believe in the Son of man?' 36 'Sir,' the man replied, 'tell me who he is so
that I may believe in Him.' 37 Jesus said, 'You have seen Him; He is speaking to
you.' 38 The man said, 'Lord, I believe,' and worshipped Him.
39 Jesus said, ‘It is for judgement that I have come into this world, so that those
without sight may see and those with sight may become blind.’ 40 Hearing this,
some Pharisees who were present said to Him, 'So we are blind, are we?' 41
Jesus replied,‘If you were blind, you would not be guilty, but since you say, “We
can see,” your guilt remains.’
Some Questions
to help us in our personal reflection.
85
• What part of this text touched me most? Why?
• A popular saying goes, “None so blind as those who will not see!” How does
this apply to the conversation between the blind man and the Pharisees?
• By what titles is Jesus hailed in the text? Who pronounces these? What do
they mean?
• Which title do I like best? Why? Or, what picture of Jesus do I carry in my mind
and my heart? Where does this picture come from?
• How can I purify my eyes to see the true Jesus of the Gospels?
As we meditate on the story of the healing of the blind man, it is good to keep
in mind the context of the Christian communities in Asia Minor towards the end
of the first century for whom the Gospel of John was written and who identified
with the blind man and his healing. Because of a legalistic view of the Law of
God, they were blind from birth. But, as happened with the blind man, they too
were able to see the presence of God in the person of Jesus of Nazareth and
were converted. It was a painful process! In describing the steps and conflicts of
the healing of the blind man, the author of the Fourth Gospel recalls the
spiritual journey of the community, from the darkness of blindness to the full
light of faith enlightened by Jesus.
A Commentary on the Text:
• John 9: 1-5: Blindness before the evil that exists in the world
When the disciples see the blind man, they ask: “Rabbì, who sinned, this man
or his parents, for him to have been born blind?” In those days, a physical
defect or sickness was thought to be a punishment from God. Associating
physical defects with sin was the way the priests of the Old Testament kept
their power over people’s consciences. Jesus helps his disciples to correct
their ideas: “Neither he nor his parents sinned…he was born blind so that the
works of God might be displayed in him!” The works of God is the same as
Sign of God. Thus, that which in those days was a sign of God’s absence, is
now a sign of his brilliant presence in our midst. Jesus says: “As long as the
day lasts I must carry out the work of the one who sent me; the night will soon
be here when no one can work. As long as I am in the world I am the light of
the world.” The Day of signs begins to manifest itself when Jesus, “on the third
day” (Jn 2: 1), makes present the “first sign” in Cana (Jn 2:n11). But the day is
about to end. The night is about to fall, because it is already “the seventh day,”
the Sabbath, and the healing of the blind man is now the sixth sign (Jn 9: 14).
The Night is the death of Jesus. The seventh sign will be the victory over death
at the resurrection of Lazarus (Jn 11). In John’s Gospel there are only seven
signs, miracles, that announce the great sign, namely the Death and
Resurrection of Jesus.
86
• John 9: 6-7. The sign of the “One sent by God” who will provoke various
reactions
Jesus spits on the ground, forms mud with his saliva, puts the mud on the
eyes of the blind man and tells him to wash in the pool of Siloam. The man
goes and comes back healed. This is the sign! John comments saying that
Siloam means sent. Jesus is the One sent by the Father who works the works
of God, the signs of the Father. The sign of this ‘sending’ is that the blind man
begins to see.
87
for the lie you just pronounced!” The blind man had said, “He is a prophet!”
According to the Pharisees he should have said, “He is a sinner!” But the blind
man is intelligent. He replies, “I don’t know if he is a sinner; I only know that I
was blind and now I can see!” There are no arguments against this fact! Again
the Pharisees ask, “What did He do to you? How did He open your eyes?” The
blind man answers with a touch of irony: “I have told you once…. Do you want
to become His disciples too?” Then they insulted him and said, “You can be
His disciple, we know that God spoke to Moses, but for this man, we don’t
know where He comes from.” Again with a touch of irony the blind man
replies, “Now here is an astonishing thing! He has opened my eyes, and you
don’t know where He comes from! …. If this man were not from God, He
couldn’t do a thing.” Faced with the blindness of the Pharisees, the light of
faith grows in the blind man. He does not accept the logic of the Pharisees
and confesses that Jesus comes from the Father. This profession of faith costs
him his expulsion from the synagogue. The same was happening in the
communities of the end of the first century. Those who professed faith in
Jesus had to break all family and community ties. This happens today: those
who decide to be faithful to Jesus run the risk of being excluded.
• John 9: 35-38: The attitude of faith of the blind man towards Jesus
Jesus does not abandon those who are persecuted for His sake. When Jesus
hears of the expulsion and meets the man again, He helps him to take a
further step by inviting him to take on his faith and asks, “Do you believe in
the Son of Man?” He replies,“Sir…tell me who He is that I may believe in Him?”
Jesus said to Him, “You are looking at Him; He is speaking to you.” The blind
man exclaims, “Lord, I believe!” And he worships Jesus. The faith attitude of
the blind man before Jesus is one of absolute trust and total acceptance. He
accepts everything from Jesus. It is this faith that sustained the Christian
communities of Asia towards the end of the first century, and that sustains us
today.
A Broader View:
88
blind man in faith and how his vision becomes clear:
89
between Jesus and the Father. The face of God shines in Jesus of Nazareth:
“To have seen Me is to have seen the Father!” (Jn 14: 9)
Alleluia! Praise Yahweh, all nations, extol Him, all peoples, for His faithful love is strong
and His constancy never-ending.
Final Prayer
Lord Jesus, we thank You for the word that has enabled us to understand better
the will of the Father. May Your Spirit enlighten our actions and grant us the
strength to practice what Your Word has revealed to us. May we, like Mary, Your
mother, not only listen to but also practice the Word. You who live and reign
with the Father in the unity of the Holy Spirit forever and ever. Amen.
Opening Prayer
Lord our God, almighty Father, You want us not to turn to the past to regret it
and to mourn over it but to hope in the future, in the new earth and the new
heaven.
Give us a firm faith in Your Son Jesus Christ, that notwithstanding the
shortcomings of our time we may have faith in the future, which You want us to
build up with Your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord.
90
and he and his whole household came to believe. Now this was the second sign
Jesus did when he came to Galilee from Judea.
Reflection
Jesus had left Galilee and set forth toward Judah in order to arrive in Jerusalem
on the occasion of the festival (Jn 4: 45) and, passing through Samaria, He was
returning again to Galilee (Jn 4: 3-4). The observant Jews were forbidden to pass
through Samaria, and they could not even speak with the Samaritans (Jn 4: 9).
When the Assyrians conquered Israel, the Jews there ended up scattered
throughout the area and the Assyrians adopted the the God of Israel, Yahweh,
and their practices. The Jews within Judah denied that any non-Hebrew had a
right to worship Yahweh, or to worship outside of Jerusalem. Jesus did not care
about these norms which prevented friendship and dialogue. He remained
several days in Samaria and many people were converted (Jn 4: 40). After that,
He decided to return to Galilee.
• John 4: 43-46ª: The return to Galilee. Even though Jesus knew that the people
of Galilee had certain reservations about Him, He wished to return to His own
home town. John refers to how badly Jesus was received in Nazareth of
Galilee. Jesus himself had declared that “No prophet is honored in his own
home town” (Lk 4: 24). But now, given the evidence of what He had done in
Jerusalem, the Galileans change their opinion and receive Him well. Jesus
then returns to Cana where He had worked the first “sign” (Jn 2: 11).
• John 4: 46b-47: The petition of the court official. It is the case of a gentile. A
short time before, in Samaria, Jesus had spoken with a Samaritan woman, a
heretical person according to the Jews, to whom Jesus revealed His condition
of Messiah (Jn 4: 26). And now, in Galilee, He receives a gentile, the official of
the king, who was seeking help for his sick son. Jesus does not limit Himself
to help those of His race only, nor those of His own religion. He is ecumenical
and receives all.
• John 4: 48: Jesus’ answer to the court official. The official wanted Jesus to go
with him to his house to cure his son. Jesus answered, “Unless you see signs
and portents you will not believe!” A harsh and strange answer. Why does
Jesus answer in this way? What was wrong with the the official’s request?
What did Jesus want to accomplish through this response? Jesus wants to
explain how our faith should be. The official would believe only if Jesus went
with him to his house. He wanted to see Jesus curing. In general, this is the
attitude that we all have. We are not aware of the deficiency of our faith. We
often expect God to accomplish His work in the way we think it should be
done.
• John 4: 49-50: The official repeats his petition and Jesus repeats the response.
In spite of Jesus’ answer, the man does not keep silence and repeats the same
petition: “Sir, come down before my child dies!” Jesus continues to stand His
ground. He does not respond to the petition and does not go with the man
to his house and repeats the same response, but formulated in a different
way: “Go home! Your son will live!” Both in the first as well as in the second
91
response, Jesus asks for faith, much faith. He asks that the official believe that
his son has already been cured. And the true miracle takes place! Without
seeing any sign, nor any portent, the man believes in Jesus’ word and returns
home. It could not have been easy. This is the true miracle of faith: to believe
without any other guarantee, except the Word of Jesus. The ideal is to believe
in the word of Jesus, even without seeing (cf. Jn 20: 29).
• John 4: 51-53: The result of faith in the word of Jesus. When the man was on
the way home, his servants saw him and ran to meet him to tell him that his
son had been cured, that he was alive. He asked them when the boy had
begun to recover and discovered that it was exactly the time when Jesus had
said, “Your son will live!” He was confirmed in his faith.
• John 4: 54: A summary presented by John, the Evangelist. John ends by
saying, “This new sign, the second, Jesus performed.” John prefers to speak of
sign and not of miracle. The word sign connotes something which I see with
my eyes, but only faith can make me discover its profound sense. Faith is like
an X-Ray: it enables one to see what the naked eye cannot see.
Personal Questions
• How do you live your faith? Do you have faith in God’s word or do you only
believe in miracles and in perceptible experiences?
• Jesus accepts heretics and foreigners in a way that fosters conversion. How
do I relate with people who are different from me? How do I foster their
conversion through that relationship?
• These early cultures, like the Assyrians adopting the religion of the Hebrews
over time, mixed their beliefs as they assimilated. That was probably one
reason there was such resistance to outsiders among the Jews in Judah. This
is true among cultures today. How should different cultures be welcomed
within and into the Church, while preserving the Church’s teachings,
doctrine, and culture?
Concluding Prayer
Make music for Yahweh, all you who are faithful to Him, praise His unforgettable
holiness.
His anger lasts but a moment, His favor throughout life; In the evening come
tears, but with dawn cries of joy. (Ps 30:4-5)
92