Friday, September 16, 2022

Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ Bẩy tuần 24th Thường Niên.

 Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ Bẩy tuần 24th Thường Niên.

Trong bài Tin Mừng hôm nay, Chúa Giêsu đã cho chúng ta bài học mới về Nước Trời giống như một người gieo giống một hình ảnh mà dân Việt Nam chúng ta rất quen thuộc.
Hình ảnh người gieo giống hôm nay là người đem đến niềm hy vọng, đem sự sống mới cho thế giới. Khi người gieo giống gieo những hạt giống mới, ông ta vui mừng và hy vọng sau một vài tháng, những hạt giống này sẽ mọc lên thành cây và sẽ mang lại những hoa trái và họ sẽ được hưởng lợi sau mùa thu hoạch. Mặc dù ông ta biết rằng một số hạt giống ông đã gieo có thể sẽ bị chim tha mất, sẽ bị vướng trên những bụi gai và sẽ không phát triển được, nhưng ông vẫn tiếp tục gieo.
Qua bài dụ ngôn này, chúng ta có thể nhận ra rằng chính Thiên Chúa là người gieo giống, Ngài gieo Lời của Ngài trong trái tim của chúng ta. Ngài cũng biết rằng Lời của Ngài cũng như những hạt giống bị rơi vương vãi, bị lạc mất trong những người tự coi mình là cái rốn của vũ trụ, hay những người chỉ biết đến sự những đam mê vật chất tiền tài và xác thịt... Cũng có một số người trong chúng ta đã khép chặt tâm hồn và từ chối nhận Lời của Thiên Chúa, Có những người khác cũng đã đón nhận Lời của Chúa một cách hời hợt, vì họ quá bận rộn với việc kiếm cơm nuôi gia đình và vì đó mà Lời của Chúa không còn chỗ trong tâm hồn của họ nữa.
Nhưng, như những người nông dân gieo giống trên các đồng lúa, Thiên Chúa của chúng ta là Thiên Chúa của niềm hy vọng và niềm vui. Ngài biết rằng dù có những hạt lúa giống bị chim trời tha đi, có những hạt rơi vào bụi gai bên đường, hay bất cứ nơi nào nhưng Ngài biết rằng cũng có những người đã nghe và sống thực hành Lời của Ngài, đó là những "người biết suy ngẫm về Lời của Chúa ngày và đêm" và làm cho Lời Chúa hoàn toàn sống trong cuộc sống của họ và trong cuộc sống của những người khác.
Còn chúng ta, chúng ta là những loại đất nào trong cánh đồng mà Chúa đã và đang gieo những hạt giống của Ngài? Để đón nhận Lời Chúa dành cho chúng ta, Chúng ta hãy nâng tâm hồn và cất lên tiếng hát và hát thật chân thành bài hát: "Ôi lạy Chúa, Lời Chúa hằng sống của con, xin hãy để Lời Chúa đâm rễ thật sâu ngay trong con người chúng con, trong trái tim của chúng con. Ôi Lời Chúa của chúng con, Xin Chúa hãy khoả lấp đầy tâm trí của chúng con.

REFLECTION
A sower is a man of hope, a man of life. As he sows, he rejoices that one day those seeds will sprout up to yield a harvest. Even though he knows that some seeds that he sows will be lost — will not grow, he still continues to sow In this parable of the sower, we realize that the sower is God Himself, who sows His Word in our hearts. He too knows that the Word will be lost in those who are chocked up with problems, tensions, self-centeredness, consumerism and materialism. He knows that some hearts are shut and refuse to receive the Word of God. There are others too, who are so busy making money, so busy trying to gain prestige, power and recognition that the Word of God gets crowded out. But, like every sower, our God is a God of hope and joy.
He knows that there are also people who listen attentively to His Word, “who ponder on His Word day and night” and make God’s Word fully alive in their lives and in the lives of others. And what of us? Let us sincerely sing/say: “O, the Word of my Lord, deep within my being. O, the Word of my Lord, You have filled my mind.”

Saturday 24th Ordinary Time 2022
Opening Prayer: Dear Lord, create in me a heart only for you. May you say of me, “Blessed are you who have kept the word with a generous and good heart and have yielded a harvest through perseverance.” May your will in me be done. Thank you, Jesus.

Encountering Christ:
1. Journeying to Jesus: “Large crowds” of people “journeying to Jesus” from “one town after another” came to him with a variety of abilities of understanding, levels of education, and beliefs about God. Despite their varied backgrounds, the truth Jesus came to preach was accessible to them because it was already written on our hearts; this truth resonates deeply when we’re open to hearing it. “I will place my law within them, and write it upon their hearts; I will be their God, and they shall be my people” (Jeremiah 31:33). The parables Jesus told communicated profound truths in a simple way to the very diverse group of listeners gathered, and they have, throughout the ages, continued to help make these truths accessible to us. Then and now, his message is for each of us to hear, and it will be understood as each of us chooses to receive it.
2. Seeds of Grace: The sower in this parable seemed to sow randomly. He did not have a designated field he had prepared carefully for planting. He just sowed as he walked, scattering seeds everywhere—some on trampled paths, some on rocky ground, some where thorns grew, and some on good soil. What a beautiful image of God the Father, who sows his grace widely and liberally in souls. Whether we are dusty and dried out, rocky, or full of weeds, God reaches out to us, inviting us to accept the seeds of his grace and allow them to fertilize the soil of our souls so that we can bear fruit for his Kingdom. To strengthen us, he offers the sacraments. To nurture us, he offers encounters through prayer. What grows in our souls from these seeds of grace is faith. The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, “Faith is a gift of God, a supernatural virtue infused by him. Before this faith can be exercised, man must have the grace of God to move and assist him; he must have the interior helps of the Holy Spirit, who moves the heart and converts it to God, who opens the eyes of the mind and ‘makes it easy for all to accept and believe truth’” (CCC 153).
3. Divine Gardener: With the right amount of sunlight, water, and fresh air, a seed’s outer shell will break down, and its kernel will take root. A soul also needs favorable conditions to flourish. A trampled path (works of the devil), rocky ground (times of temptations), and thorns (anxieties and riches and pleasures of life) can inhibit or prevent the growth of a soul. Jesus tells us what we need to do to blossom: we must embrace the word with a generous and good heart, persevere in faith, and stay close to the sacraments. By God’s grace, we can also help to bring about a great harvest in other souls by how we live our lives, treat others, and speak of God. “The witness of a Christian life and good works done in a supernatural spirit have great power to draw men to the faith and to God.” (CCC 2044)
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, you find every way to reach me so I can follow you as you draw me to our Father. I will be your fruit bearer, and I will help you bear fruit in others if you help me to cooperate with your grace. Thank you for your tender gardening in my soul and for including me in your work of salvation.
Resolution: Lord, today, by your grace, I will contemplate the Gospel and allow you, the Divine Gardener, to sow your word in me.

Saturday 24th Ordinary Time 2021
Opening Prayer: Jesus, as I reflect on these words, please cleanse me of the thorns, weeds, and rocks in my life. May your words take root in me and bloom. I desire to be a person who, having heard your word, does “embrace it with a generous and good heart, and bear fruit through perseverance.”

Encountering Christ:
· Our Enemy: Jesus is quite clear in this parable: The devil is real, and he is the enemy of our souls. Satan delights in distracting our hearts away from the words of the Gospel. He knows our weaknesses and uses them against us. In the Netflix series The Good Place, the demons use the characteristics and personalities of each person against them; Strategically, they torment each soul in a specific and personal way. When we pray to St. Michael the Archangel to “defend us in battle” and ask God to “cast into hell Satan and all the evil spirits who prowl about the world seeking the ruin of souls,” we are not speaking in hyperbole. The threat is real; the battle is constant. Our enemy is wily and loves to mess with our minds, hearts, and souls to distract us and lure us away from our Savior. “The battle against the devil, which is the principal task of St. Michael the Archangel, is still being fought today because the devil is still alive and active in the world” (St. John Paul II, 1987).
· Rocks and Weeds: Anyone who has done any gardening knows how quickly the weeds can take over. A few days of neglect can result in weeds edging out the plants. Here Jesus warns us that the “rocks and weeds” (distractions and sins) can quickly overtake the garden of our souls and leave the seeds sown by Christ choking and fighting for sun, water, and air. Many of the “rocks” are good things–our work, our friends, our hobbies, our families, exercise, chores–but we need to make sure that they do not overtake the greatest thing of all—our relationship with Our Lord, nurtured in the sacraments and his word. For a Catholic Christian, this means making sure that our first priority is this relationship with Christ, followed by the duties and joys of our vocation in life.
· Rich Soil: How does the farmer prepare the soil? He tills it and takes out the weeds, old roots, and rocks. He adds fertilizer. How do we prepare our souls to nurture the words of Christ? By availing ourselves of the sacraments, reading Scripture, and surrounding ourselves with friends who love God—all of these things work mightily to keep our souls fertile and allow the word to take root. And, every single day we take the time to turn to the Lord in prayer, sit with him in silence, and allow him to do till and sow in our souls.
Conversing with Christ: Jesus, you are the master gardener. Please come into my soul and root out anything that is choking out your words. Guard me against my enemy, protect me from my own weaknesses.
Resolution: Lord, today by your grace I will pray the prayer to St. Michael the Archangel:
St. Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle. Be our protection against the wickedness and snares of the devil. May God rebuke him, we humbly pray. And do thou, Prince of the Heavenly Hosts, by the power of God cast into hell Satan and all the evil spirits who prowl about the world seeking the ruin of souls.

Reflection: Saturday 24th Ordinary Time
Seeds are the basic units of life. In the parable story, the seed is the Word of God. God has been so generous with us and blessed us with His word. But only a few listen because the others are blinded by the material things and idols on earth. Though the word may be hidden for a few, it is still there. They only need faith in order to overcome all these hindrances that stray them from the Lord. People are concrete seeds of God. We are made by the creator and we should all therefore be filled with positive characteristics. It is only the people tainted by the devil who are the bad seeds who have no root, no stable ground for their faith. Therefore they crumble into the depths of hell. Though all of us have the natural tendency to sin and be sinners, we also have the choice to do the right thing because we are always given choices. It is our duty to pick the right choice and do the right thing so that way, we may be pure in the eyes of God.
Let us recognize the fact that God accomplishes his purposes by helping us to attain ours. Let us continue to ask God to help us be more receptive to his word and become more serious about our spiritual growth. In other words, let God's seed fall on in our hearts and produce crops a hundredfold
May we hear it, cherish it and live it with patience and perseverance.

Reflection:
Jesus was a great story-teller; he made use of the common life of the people, "You have been granted to know the mystery of the kingdom of God. But to others it is given in the form of stories, or parables, so that seeing they may not perceive and hearing they may not understand."
The parable of the sower and the seed tells us how the word of God is received by people, comparing the reception and response of people to the way seeds sown on various soils and environments prospered or died.
Obviously all of us wish to be like the seed which fell on good soil, grew and produced fruit a hundred-fold. Our Lord explained that "the good soil are people who receive the word and keep it in a gentle and generous mind, and persevering patiently, they bear fruit."
Are we people like those who our Lord said bore good and plentiful fruit?
we people, like the wayside, who do not even have the patience to listen to God's word or like rocky ground "who receive the word . . . but they have no root, they believe for a while and give way in time of trial" or, like among thorns, "who hear the word but as they go their way, are choked by worries, riches, and the pleasures of life; they bring no fruit to maturity."
We hear God's word in many ways: in Church and at various talks and gatherings, in our own reading and study of the Scriptures, in private prayer and through the Spirit in the silence of our own hearts, in our dealings with and from the example of others. May we hear it, cherish it and live it with patience and perseverance.

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