Showing posts with label A Broken Heart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Broken Heart. Show all posts

Sunday, August 16, 2020

Jesus' Teaching of Inclusion

 In today's gospel, Matthew 15: 21-28, a Canaanite woman, a non-Jew, approaches Jesus and begs Him to heal her daughter who is possessed by a demon. Jesus ignores her. When she persists, He  says to her: "I was sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel."  Again, she approached Him and says: "Lord, help me." He replies: "It is not right to take the food of the children and throw it to the dogs."  the woman is not deterred by that remark and says to Jesus:  "Please, lord, for even the dogs eat the scraps that fall from the table of their masters."  Even Jesus' disciples were against this woman and asked Jesus to "send her away; for she keeps calling after us.  However, Jesus is amazed by the faith of this foreigner and says to her:  "O woman, great is your faith!  Let it be done for you as you wish." And Matthew tells us that "the woman's daughter was healed from that hour."

O my God! I probably would have walked again dejected and hurt and angry.  Not this woman! No way was she going to take a "no"!  Her daughter was suffering tremendously at the hands of Satan.  "No, you are not one of us," was unacceptable to this Canaanite mother.

Jesus was well aware of the Jews attitude toward strangers and, in fact, their animosity toward Canaanites!  Was He actually teaching His disciples how to treat strangers, namely, that they, too, were part of the redemptive process and recipients of  God's generosity, compassion and love, just as they were!  Is it possible that, all along, Jesus actually intended to respond positively to this woman's request but led her along as a way of breaking through his disciples' belief that they alone were privy to God's merciful love?

Do you, do I, think that we are better than others, more deserving of God's mercy and that there are people who deserve to be sent away from "the Table of the Lord"? Do you, do I, believe that it is right for us to exclude others, to be indifferent toward others, to ignore their needs for help?




Friday, June 8, 2018

A Heart that Overflows with Love

Today we celebrate the feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, a heart overflowing with love for all humankind. The Gospel of today's Mass, John 19: 31-37, recalls  the depth of God's love, the death of Jesus on the cross.  The Gospel passage notes that the time is fast approaching when the Jews need to remove the bodies from the cross, so that they do not violate Passover customs! So, executioners break the legs of those being crucified, depriving them of the means to lift themselves up to get any air into their lungs. Jesus is already dead so, instead of breaking His legs, they thrust a lance into His side, from whence flows blood and water. I immediately think of the priest pouring a drop of water into the wine prior to the consecration of the Mass when the Bread and Wine become the Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity of Jesus and is offered to the Father in atonement of our sins and the sins of the whole world.  What a moment! Though Jesus does not ever die again, His sacrifice of love, I believe, is always before the Father.  Day and night, Jesus intercedes for us at the throne of God!  He awaits that day when you and I enter eternal life, a gift secured for us on the cross! Will you and I accept this gift in faith and love? Or have we already chosen our own gods, gods that cannot save us?