Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ Bẩy- tuần thứ 3 Mùa Chay -29 /3/2014
Trong bài Tin Mừng hôm này cho chúng ta thấy người biệt phái này là đại diện tượng trưng cho những người tự cho mình đạo đức, Họ tự tôn mình lên trên những người khác về mặt đạo đức và tinh thần vì họ là những người học luật, họ là những
người lãng đạo tôn giáo, họ hiểu rõ và giữ luật Môisen kỹ hơn ai hết .
Phần chúng
ta, đôi khi chúng ta có thể nhìn thấy chính
mình trong những hình ảnh
của những người biệt phái, hay trong các biểu tượng của những người biệt phái Do thái này! Những người đã tự cao, tự đại coi rẻ hay khinh thường
những người khác, nhất là những người thấp kém, nghèo hèn , bệnh tật…để rồi tự sống trong một cảm giác tự mãn tự
hài lòng? Theo các nhà Tâm lý và Kinh Thánh cho
chúng ta biết rằng khi chúng ta
thất bại trong việc phải
đối
phó với bóng tối tội lỗi và sự thiếu sót trong bản thân
của chúng ta , Chúng ta thường hay đỗ lỗi của chúng ta vào những người hoặc các nhóm người khác mà không bao giờ chịu nhìn thấy được cái lỗi
lầm và thiếu xót nơi chính mình.
Những
điều mà chúng ta ghét cay ghét đắng những người khác thường ẩn nấp ở các cấp độ
rất sâu hơn trong tấm hồn của chúng ta. Những điều
mà chúng ta không thể chịu
đựng được ở
những người khác thường có thể được tìm thấy trong chính mình. Khi chúng ta biết
điều này, thí đấy là điều hữu ích
mà chúng ta có thể phát triển về sự hiểu biết vế chính mình.
Câu chuyện nói về người thu Thuế, như chúng ta biết họ là những đáng ghét nhất trong xứ Giu-đê vào thời điểm
đó, nhưng họ lại được Thiên Chúa thương xót và ngó mắt tới vì sự khiêm tốn, trung
thực của họ , và những sự đau khổ mà họ thực lòng cầu xin tới sự cởi mở và lòng thương xót của Thiên
Chúa.
Có
lẽ chúng ta cũng có thể thực hành cầu
nguyện cho những người mà chúng ta không thể chịu đựng nổi, không thích và hãy tự kiểm tra ngay tự bên trong tâm hồn của chúng ta, vì nơi đó là nơi mà tự do và
giác ngộ bắt đầu. Đừng
làm giảm
ngắn sự vinh quang của Thiên Chúa!
Lạy
Chúa, Xin giúp chúng con biết cách để kiểm tra những lỗi lầm riêng của chúng con, chứ không phải của
những người khác
Sat 29th March 2014- 3rd week of Lent
For
the people of Israel, there was only one legitimate response to what they
believed to be God's punishment: repentance. No excuses, no arrogance, no bargaining;
just humble submission to God’s actions and a plea for forgiveness. This is in
sharp contrast to the modern tendency to throw up a smokescreen of excuses and
explanations in an effort to evade responsibility.
In this story the Pharisee
stands for those of any religion, time, or place that feel morally and
spiritually superior to others. We can even see ourselves sometimes in the
symbol of the Pharisee! Who hasn’t looked down on someone whose life is less
than exemplary with a smug sense of self-satisfaction? Psychologists — and the
Bible — tell us that when we fail to deal with the darkness, sin, and
imperfections in ourselves we project them onto other people or groups.
The things that we detest in
others often lurk in the deeper levels of our own hearts. The things that we
can’t stand in others can often be found in ourselves. When we know this, it
can be very helpful for growing in self-knowledge. The tax-collector in the
story, loathed and hated in Judea at the time, was right in God’s eyes because
of his humility, honesty, and broken-hearted openness to God’s mercy.
Perhaps we can practice
praying for those whom we cannot stand and examining our own inner self — that
is where freedom and enlightenment begin. We have all fallen short of the glory
of God!
Lord, help me to examine my own faults
rather than those of others.
Opening Prayer: Jesus, thank you for your word. You help me
place you in your rightful place as my Lord and Savior. Help me to know that I
am your beloved child and to live from that truth.
Encountering Christ:
·
Righteousness: Each and every one of us needs a savior.
The only truly righteous one is Jesus. Any righteousness we have is not from
ourselves, but a share in the righteousness of Christ. St. Paul speaks to this:
“...that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having any righteousness of
my own based on the law but that which comes through faith in Christ, the
righteousness from God, depending on faith to know him and the power of his
Resurrection and [the] sharing of his sufferings by being conformed to his
death, if somehow I may attain the resurrection from the dead” (Philippians
3:8-11). Simply put, we cannot save ourselves. Only God can save us. True, we
are called to cooperate with the grace with which he blesses us. But without
Christ, none of us are righteous, cleansed from sin, or justified. These are
God’s works, not our own. According to the Catechism, “The grace of the Holy
Spirit has the power to justify us, that is, to cleanse us from our sins and to
communicate to us ‘the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ’ and
through Baptism” (CCC 1987).
·
Faith
and Works: The Pharisee thought
that his righteousness was “based on the law.” He was more concerned with
tithing from his “whole income” than sharing his whole heart. He was doing what
was required of the law, not loving and serving God from the heart. Jesus is
showing us through this parable that the way to righteousness is not only by
following the commandments but by coming to him. He alone is the source of our
salvation. Our faith is demonstrated by our works (James 2:17), but no amount
of works, rule-following, prayer, tithing, or any other human action can save
us without Christ. The Catechism teaches: “It is the divine name that alone
brings salvation, and henceforth all can invoke his name, for Jesus united himself
to all men through his incarnation, so that ‘there is no other name under
heaven given among men by which we must be saved’” (CCC 432). We need both
faith in Christ and works to be justified.
·
In
God’s Place: The Pharisee exalted
himself to Christ’s judgment seat, making himself the judge of what is
righteous. Notice that he “spoke this prayer to himself.” He offered the prayer
to himself and addressed himself as God: “O God…” (Luke 18:11). He was not
offering prayers of thanksgiving to God; he was praising himself. Conversely,
the tax collector knew his place before God. He humbly recognized his own
faults and sins and asked for God’s mercy. Each of us struggles with pride in
some way. It is the result of the fall of man, the original grasping at pride,
sometimes called the pusilla anima, or the “small soul.” The Pharisee was in
the grasp of his own small soul. He was the center of his universe and prayer,
not God. We can ask ourselves: When have we placed ourselves in God’s role,
closing our world in on ourselves rather than allowing God to be the Lord of
our lives (cf. 1 Peter 3:15)? When we place God in his rightful place, we
automatically inhabit our rightful place: as his beloved children who trust in
his mercy, like the tax collector. In our smallness, God will exalt us. As Dr.
Edward Sri says, “God can do great things with the humble soul.”
Conversing with Christ: Jesus, help me to always be dependent on
you. Help me to remember that I am not God and that I cannot save myself. I
cannot put aside my pride without you, Lord. Grant me a heart that is meek and
humble, like yours.
Resolution: Lord, today by your grace I will practice the
virtue of humility in some small way.
Saturday, March 13, 2021, Being Justified by Mercy
Saturday of the Third Week of Lent
Jesus addressed this parable to those who were
convinced of their own righteousness and despised everyone else. “Two people
went up to the temple area to pray; one was a Pharisee and the other was a tax
collector. Luke 18:9–10
This Scripture passage introduces the Parable
of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector. They both go to the Temple to pray, but
their prayers are very different from each other. The prayer of the Pharisee is
very dishonest, whereas the prayer of the tax collector is exceptionally
sincere and honest. Jesus concludes by saying that the tax collector went home
justified but not the Pharisee. He states, “…for everyone who exalts himself
will be humbled, and the one who humbles himself will be exalted.”
True humility is simply being honest. Too
often in life we are not honest with ourselves and, therefore, are not honest
with God. Thus, for our prayer to be true prayer, it must be honest and humble.
And the humble truth for all of our lives is best expressed by the prayer of
the tax collector who prayed, “O God, be merciful to me a sinner.”
How easy is it for you to admit your sin? When
we understand the mercy of God, this humility is much easier. God is not a God
of harshness but is a God of the utmost mercy. When we understand that God’s
deepest desire is to forgive us and to reconcile us to Himself, then we will
deeply desire honest humility before Him.
Lent is an important time for us to deeply
examine our conscience and make new resolutions for the future. Doing so will
bring new freedom and grace into our lives. So do not be afraid to honestly
examine your conscience so as to see your sin clearly in the way God sees it.
Doing so will put you in a position to pray this prayer of the tax collector:
“O God, be merciful to me a sinner.”
Reflect, today, upon your sin. What do you
struggle with the most right now? Are there sins from your past that you have
never confessed? Are there ongoing sins that you justify, ignore and are afraid
to face? Take courage and know that honest humility is the road to freedom and
the only way to experience justification before God.
My merciful Lord, I thank You for loving me
with a perfect love. I thank You for Your incredible depth of mercy. Help me to
see all of my sin and to turn to You with honesty and humility so that I can be
freed of these burdens and become justified in Your sight. Jesus, I trust in
You.
REFLECTION
In the first reading we are told that, when we repent before
God, it is not enough that we offer him sacrifices or burnt offerings. If we
repent before God, we should be ready to change our ways, to love God and to do
as he wills for us.
The Gospel
reading teaches us to pray to God like the tax collector, truly humble and
contrite and not like the Pharisee, proud of his legalistic following and
service of God but not realistic in his assessment of himself before the all
powerful God.
God listens to us
when we are humble and contrite: he is kind and merciful, compassionate and
loving of sinners. Let us approach him with trust and sincerity while begging
for his mercy.
During Lent
we pray with contrite hearts that God may forgive us our sins and we offer
ourselves to God in loving service to him and our neighbor. We ask God to give
us a new life in his Spirit.
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