Thứ Sáu Tuần Thứ & Mùa Phục Sinh ( John 21,15-19)
Con có
yêu Thầy nhiều hơn những
thứ này không?
Tại sao Chúa Giêsu hỏi Phêrô
có yêu Chúa không tới ba lần trước mặt các tông
đồ khác?
Điều mà đã làm cho Phêrô phải đay nghiến và đau khổ mãi là lúc ông đã công khai chối Chúa ba lần trong
đêm Chúa Giêsu bị bắt, bị tra tấn và bị án tử hình. Bây
giờ, Ông Phêrô thành tâm với tấm lòng đầy sầu não và khiêm tốn, ông
thưa rõ ràng rằng Ông yêu Chúa, yêu người thầy của mình và sẽ sẵn sàng chết để phục
vụ Ngài bằng bất cứ giá nào, khi Chúa Giêsu hỏi ông "con có yêu
thầy nhiều hơn những ‘thứ
này’ không?"
Chúa Giêsu có
thể chỉ vào chiếc thuyền và
bộ lưới đánh cá và mẻ cá vừa bắt được, Chúa Giêsu có thể đã thách thức Phêrô phải từ bỏ cái nghề đánh các của ông để làm nhiệm vụ chăn dắt và hướng dân đoàn
“chiên con” của Chúa. Chúa Giêsu cũng có thể nêu ra cho các môn đệ khác thấy về niềm tự hào trước kia
của Phêrô: "Mặc
dù cho mọi người đều sẽ vấp ngã vì Thầy, con sẽ không vấp ngã bao giờ
" (Mt 26:33). Phêrô bây giờ không còn khoe
khoang hay so sánh nhưng đã khiêm tốn trả lời: "Thầy biết con yêu thầy"
Chúa Giêsu mời gọi mỗi người chúng ta,
ngay cả trong sự yếu đuối, tội lỗi,
và thất bại của chúng ta, để yêu mến Ngài trên
hết mọi sự. Thánh Augustine đã viết: "Cuối cũng con cũng yêu Chúa, Ôi một vẻ đẹp rất cổ xưa
và cũng như mới vậy,
dù có trễ cuối cùng Con đã
yêu
Chúa ...Chúa tỏa ánh sáng của Chúa trên con và đưa con ra khỏi chốn đui mù của con! . Chúa thở hương thơm của Chúa trên con. ... Chúa là hương thơm, và con đã thu hút hơi thở của con và bây giờ con thèm muốn trong Chúa....Con nếm trải tình Chúa, và giờ đay, con khát khao Chúa. Chúa rờ vào con!. Và con ghi dấu ân tình này để sống trong sự an bình của Chúa " (Tự
Thú (Confessions) x:27).
Những niềm tự hào, tội lỗi của chúng ta và sự cố chấp có thể giữ cho chúng ta ra khỏi tình yêu của Thiên Chúa, Thiên Chúa yêu thương
chúng ta trước hết và tình yêu của chúng ta dành cho Ngài có phải chỉ là một sự
đáp trả lại sự khoan dung và lòng nhân hậu của Ngài dành cho chúng ta mà
thôi?homedepot
Chúng ta có cho phép tình yêu Thiên Chúa thay lòng và biến đổi cuộc sống
của chúng
ta không?".
Lạy Chúa Giêsu, xin Chúa kích động lòng trí chúng con với tình yêu của Chúa và loại bỏ bất cứ những
gì nơi chúng con mà không có tình yêu thương, như sự ác độc, vô ơn, bội
nghĩa xấu xa, và tất
cả những gì không phù hợp với lòng mong ước của Chúa"
Friday - John 21.15-19 Do you love me more than these?
Why did Jesus question Peter’s
love and fidelity three times in front of the other apostles?
- It must have caused Peter great pain and sorrow since he
had publicly denied Jesus three times during the night of Jesus' betrayal and
condemnation by the Jewish authorities.
- Now Peter, full of sorrow and humility, unequivocally
stated that he loved his master and was willing to serve him whatever it might
cost.
- When Jesus asks him "do you love me more than these?"
- Jesus may have pointed to the boats, nets and
catch of fish.
- He may have challenged Peter
to abandon his work as a fisherman for the task of shepherding God's people.
- Jesus also may have pointed
to the other disciples and to Peter's previous boast: "Though they all
fall away because of you, I will never fall away" (Matthew 26:33).
Peter now makes no boast or comparison but humbly
responds: "You know I love
you."
The
Lord Jesus calls each one of us, even in our weakness, sin, and failings, to
love him above all else.
In his Confessions, Saint Augustine wrote:
"Late have I loved you, O Beauty so ancient and so new. Late have I loved
you! ...You shone your Self upon me to drive away my blindness. You breathed
your fragrance upon me... and in astonishment I drew my breath...now I pant for
you! I tasted you, and now I hunger and thirst for you. You touched me! - and I
burn to live within your peace" (Confessions 10:27).
Nothing, but our own sinful pride and
wilfulness can keep us from the love of God.
He
loved us first and our love for him is a response to his exceeding graciousness
and mercy towards us.
Do
we allow God's love to change and transform our life?
"Lord
Jesus, inflame our heart with your love and remove from it whatever is
unloving, unkind, ungrateful, unholy, and not in accord with your will."
Friday 7Th Easter REFLECTION
Christ informs us that he has personally chosen us to be the bearers of the `good news' to the world and through whom others will know and love the Father. He is counting on all Christians to do this unfailingly bolstered by the reassurance that we can ask the Father anything to aid us fulfill this mission. However, we would not be able to achieve this successfully if we do not first `die to ourselves'. Pope Benedict reminds us that `unless the seed dies, it cannot give new life' to `bear much fruit'. This means that we have to curb our own weak tendencies, let go of our earthly attachments and choose to do everything only for God's greater glory.
Christ informs us that he has personally chosen us to be the bearers of the `good news' to the world and through whom others will know and love the Father. He is counting on all Christians to do this unfailingly bolstered by the reassurance that we can ask the Father anything to aid us fulfill this mission. However, we would not be able to achieve this successfully if we do not first `die to ourselves'. Pope Benedict reminds us that `unless the seed dies, it cannot give new life' to `bear much fruit'. This means that we have to curb our own weak tendencies, let go of our earthly attachments and choose to do everything only for God's greater glory.
Christ
here reiterates that all should know that we are his followers in the way we
deal with all the people in the landscape of our lives in love, with love and
simply through love. Do each one of us emanate love and joy
REFLECTION
After his resurrection, Jesus showed himself on a number of occasions to his disciples. One time, on the Lake of Tiberias, Peter, together with some of the other diciples, went fishing throughout the night. It was something that they were very accustomed to doing. Perhaps the familiarity of fishing gave them some consolation and helped them sort things out, after having experienced the most extraordinary events of Jesus' passion, death and resurrection, in the previous days. At daybreak, Jesus was standing on the shore, and asked if they had any luck catching any fish. When they answered "Nothing," Jesus told them to cast their net on the right side of the boat. And they hauled in a great number of fish. It was only then that they recognized Jesus, who invited them to have breakfast with him on the shore. After breakfast, Jesus gently asked Simon Peter three times if Peter loved him. There was no rebuke from Jesus, which Peter would have justly deserved and expected for denying knowing the Lord three times when he was arrested. And Peter answered three times that he loved Jesus. It must have been a poignant moment for Peter when the Lord gave him the chance to redeem himself and affirm his love face to face. "Follow me." Jesus then entrusts the care of his flock, the people he has saved, to Peter, the first Pope, the Vicar of Christ. At the end of our life, Jesus will not ask us how successful we were or what great things we did. He will ask, "Do you love me?" We pray that we can answer with our whole being like Simon Peter did, "Lord, you know everything; you know that I love you." \
After his resurrection, Jesus showed himself on a number of occasions to his disciples. One time, on the Lake of Tiberias, Peter, together with some of the other diciples, went fishing throughout the night. It was something that they were very accustomed to doing. Perhaps the familiarity of fishing gave them some consolation and helped them sort things out, after having experienced the most extraordinary events of Jesus' passion, death and resurrection, in the previous days. At daybreak, Jesus was standing on the shore, and asked if they had any luck catching any fish. When they answered "Nothing," Jesus told them to cast their net on the right side of the boat. And they hauled in a great number of fish. It was only then that they recognized Jesus, who invited them to have breakfast with him on the shore. After breakfast, Jesus gently asked Simon Peter three times if Peter loved him. There was no rebuke from Jesus, which Peter would have justly deserved and expected for denying knowing the Lord three times when he was arrested. And Peter answered three times that he loved Jesus. It must have been a poignant moment for Peter when the Lord gave him the chance to redeem himself and affirm his love face to face. "Follow me." Jesus then entrusts the care of his flock, the people he has saved, to Peter, the first Pope, the Vicar of Christ. At the end of our life, Jesus will not ask us how successful we were or what great things we did. He will ask, "Do you love me?" We pray that we can answer with our whole being like Simon Peter did, "Lord, you know everything; you know that I love you." \
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