Tuesday, October 27, 2020

Suy niệm Tin Mừng thứ Ba tuần thứ 30 Thường Niên .

 Suy niệm Tin Mừng thứ Ba tuần thứ 30 Thường Niên

Hạt cải và men làm bánh mì có thể dạy cho chúng ta những gì về vương quốc của Thiên Chúa?
Như chúng ta biết hạt cải là hạt rất nhỏ, nhỏ nhất trong các loại hột. Nhưng khi hột được gieo vào đất tốt đã được cuốc xới bón phân tốt, nước tưới đầy đủ, hạt cải nhỏ bé sẽ nẩy mầm và phát triển lớn lên thành bụi lớn và thu hút được nhiều loài chim, vì sự chăm sóc, tưới bón của người trồng, nên dù hạt cải đen nhỏ, đã trở thành vườn cải tốt tươi với cành lá xum xuê đến nỗi chim trời có thể làm tổ. Vương quốc của Thiên Chúa cũng tương tự. Nó bắt đầu được chớm nở từ sự khởi ban đầu rất nhỏ nhen trong trái tim của người chúng ta bằng sự tiếp nhận Lời của Thiên Chúa.
Hành trang để được vào nước trời cũng giống như là bột men làm bánh, Đó là đức tin, đức tin được chớm nở trong trái tim của mỗi người chúng ta bằng sự tiếp nhận Lời của Thiên Chúa. Đức tin đó hoạt động vô hình và gây biến chuyển và đổi thay từ bên trong, Men là một tác nhân mạnh mẽ của sự thay đổi. Một cục bột còn lại chính nó vẫn chỉ là một cục bột. Nhưng khi men được thêm vào để bột bánh được phồng lên và khi đút vào lò nướng đó sản xuất bánh mì thơm ngon và đó là chủ yếu cho cuộc sống đối với con người.
Đức tin sẽ biến đổi những ai đã được đón nhận cuộc sống mới mà Chúa ban cho vì khi chúng ta dâng lên Chúa cuộc sống của chúng ta. Thì cuộc sống của chúng ta sẽ được biến đổi bởi sức mạnh của Chúa Thánh Thần đấng đang ngự trong chúng ta. Thánh Phaolô có nói, "kho tàng này, chúng tôi lại chứa đựng trong những bình sành, để chứng tỏ quyền năng phi thường phát xuất từ Thiên Chúa, chứ không phải từ chúng tôi. (2 Cô-rinh-tô 4:7). Hãy đặt niềm tin của chúng ta vào sức mạnh và sự biến đổi của Chúa Thánh Thần

Meditation:
What can mustard seeds and leaven teach us about the kingdom of God? The tiny mustard seed literally grew to be a tree which attracted numerous birds because they loved the little black mustard seed it produced. God's kingdom works in a similar fashion. It starts from the smallest beginnings in the hearts of men and women who are receptive to God's word. And it works unseen and causes a transformation from within. Leaven is another powerful agent of change. A lump of dough left to itself remains just what it is, a lump of dough. But when the leaven is added to it a transformation takes place which produces rich and wholesome bread when heated – the staple of life for humans. The kingdom of God produces a transformation in those who receive the new life which Jesus Christ offers. When we yield to Jesus Christ, our lives are transformed by the power of the Holy Spirit who dwells in us. Paul the Apostle says, "we have this treasure in earthen vessels, to show that the transcendent power belongs to God and not to us" (2 Corinthians 4:7). Do you believe in the transforming power of the Holy Spirit?
"Lord Jesus, fill me with your Holy Spirit and transform me into the Christ-like holiness you desire. Increase my zeal for your kingdom and instill in me a holy desire to live for your greater glory."

Opening Prayer: Lord, I believe in your goodness, I hope in your grace, and I love you for having loved me. Thank you for the gift of life. Help me have the humility to recognize that all good things come from you. Help me to be docile to your timing and to the spiritual process that is developing in my soul. 
Encountering Christ:
1. The Kingdom of God: The Church started with a mustard seed—one person, Jesus Christ. He proclaimed the kingdom of God so that it began to grow, first with the Twelve Apostles, Mary, and the other holy women who followed Christ. Over time, it grew into an institution with a hierarchy, with dioceses and parishes. The kingdom of God takes time to grow. It is ever-developing. The same is true for each person who comes to know Christianity: Once the seed is planted, it needs time to develop in the individual’s heart until the full truth of the Gospel is embraced and the kingdom of God reigns in him or her.
2. Spiritual Growth: Our own maturation in faith and virtue is similar to the process of the mustard seed. We go through stages, forming our minds and hearts and conforming them to the mind and heart of Christ. Gradually habits of virtue develop and the exercise of the theological virtues deepens. We become strong, rooting ourselves in faith even amidst difficult circumstances. Sometimes we’d like to run ahead, but we grow in holiness at the pace of the Holy Spirit. “The wind blows where it wills, and you can hear the sound it makes, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes; so it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit”(John 3:8).
3. Shade and Nourishment: Today’s Gospel passage points out that when the mustard seed became a large bush, birds came to dwell in its branches, receiving shade and refreshment. The large bush was life-giving. Just as human beings go through a process of maturation before becoming parents, so too our spiritual life develops gradually to the point that it becomes life-giving. All true love brings forth new life. Being in love with God and living a life in communion with him generates spiritual motherhood and fatherhood. Others can find refreshment in “our branches.” "I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing” (John 15:5). 
Conversing with Christ: Dear Lord, grant me the grace to become a refuge for souls who seek your love. I want to remain in you, to live in communion with you, and to bear fruit for the kingdom of God. 
Resolution: Lord, today by your grace I will visit an adoration chapel to root myself in your presence in my life. 

Meditation:
Through the two parables today our Lord Jesus explains to us what the Kingdom of God is like.The Kingdom of God is evident on earth by how it grows from very small and humble beginnings into something much larger and greater. The tiniest of seeds becomes a large tree. A small amount of yeast causes the entire loaf to grow. Likewise, twelve simple Apostles took His words and built a church that now covers the entire world. Throughout history, Christ's work has been continued by the work of "small" people such as Francis of Assisi and Mother Teresa. The Kingdom of God is still like the mustard seed and is still being planted and growing in our world today. Through these parables, Jesus encourages us patience and hopeful certainty; parables referring to the Kingdom of God and to the Church and that are also applied to the growth of this same Kingdom in each of us. We now ask our Lord Jesus to fill us with the Holy Spirit and transform us into the Christ-like holiness God desire. Increase our zeal for God’s kingdom and instill in us a holy desire to live for His greater glory.

Meditation: 
Through the two parables today, Jesus places before our eyes one of the characteristics of the Kingdom of God: it is something that flourishes slowly as a mustard seed, but, eventually, grows to offer shelter to the birds in its trees. With this parable, Our Lord encourages us to patience, fortitude and hope. These virtues are especially necessary for those who devote themselves to propagate the Kingdom of God. We must be patient, and with God's grace and human cooperation, wait for the planted seed to grow while profoundly embedding its roots in the good soil to gradually become a tree.
In the first place, we need to have faith in the virtuality, fecundity contained in the seed of the Kingdom of God. This seed is the Word; it is also the Eucharist that is planted in us through Communion. In John Gospel, Our Lord Jesus Christ compared himself to “a kernel of wheat that falls to the ground and dies (…). But if it dies, it produces many seeds” (Jn 12:24).
The Kingdom of God, our Lord goes on, is similar to “the yeast that a woman took and mixed in with three measures of wheat flour until the whole batch of dough was leavened." (Lk 13:21). Here also the yeast needed to leaven all the dough. We only need the yeast inside the dough, getting to the people, to be like salt that preserves from corruption and makes all food to taste (cf. Mt 5:13). Time is also of essence so that it can carry out with its function by and by.
The kingdom of God produces a transformation in those who receive the new life which Jesus Christ offers. When we yield to Jesus Christ, our lives are transformed by the power of the Holy Spirit who dwells in us. Paul the Apostle says, "we have this treasure in earthen vessels, to show that the transcendent power belongs to God and not to us" (2 Corinthians 4:7). Through these parables, Jesus encourages us patience and hopeful certainty; parables referring to the Kingdom of God and to the Church and that are also applied to the growth of this same Kingdom in each of us.

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