Tuesday, January 24, 2023

Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ Hai tuần thứ Ba Thường Niên

Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ Hai tuần thứ Ba Thường Niên (
Mark 3:22-30 )
Đức Chúa Thánh Thần hai chức năng đó là : Mặc khải chân lý và sự thật của Thiên Chúa làm cho con người chúng ta hiểu biết và có thể nhận ra được chân lý của Thiên Chúa . Nếu một người không chịu nhận sự hướng dẫn của Chúa Thánh Thần dù chỉ là một khoảng khắc thời gian, thì người ấy thế nào cùng sẽ bị mất hết khả năng để nhận ra Chân lý của Thiên Chúa. Người ấy sẽ không còn khả năng để nhận ra những nét đẹp và sự tốt lành của Thiên Chúa nữa, mà chỉ biết nghĩ là tất cả những việc “xấu” hay sự gian ác
 Những người này thường xuyên bất tuân Luật Chúa            , Cho đến một lúc nào đó hành vi phạm tội này đã trở thành một cách sống không còn một chút e sợ (hay không có lương tâm). Đó là hình ảnh của  những kinh sư và người những Pharisêu mà chúng ta đã được nghe trong Tin Mừng hôm nay. Đó lý do tại sao họ có thể nhìn vào Chúa Giêsu và nói Chúa Chúa Giêsu là Hoàng Tử Beelzebul, hoàng tử của ma quỷ, của tất cả những điều ác dữ. Khi một người đã phạm tội phạm thượng và kêu ngạo,  thì trong tâm hồn của họ không thể ăn năn được nữa. Chỉ có một điều kiện của sự tha thứ đó là ăn năn, sám hối, thay đổi cách sống. Nhưng nếu một người đã lặp đi lặp lại từ chối sự hướng dẫn của Thiên Chúa, thì người này đã có những giá trị đạo đức của họ đảo ngược, họ coi những việc ác dữ của họ là tốt những sự  tốt làng với ngưới ấy lạ là xấu, ác,  Người ấy nghĩ rằng họ không bao giờ có tội, hay phạm tội, vì thế họ không thể hối cải và ăn năn do đó người ấy không bao giờ có thể được Thiên Chúa tha thứ. Chúng ta phải lắng nghe Lời của Chúa trong tất cả mọi ngày trong đời sống của chúng ta để cho thính giác m linh của chúng ta không bao giờ trở thành người bị điếc thiêng liêng.
 
Monday after 3rd Sunday of Ordinary
For our reflection today, we concentrate on one verse: "Whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit, never have forgiveness." What exactly is this unforgivable sin against the Holy Spirit?  The Holy Spirit has two functions: to reveal God's truth to people and to enable people to recognize that truth when they see it and hear it. If a person refuses the guidance of the Holy Spirit long enough and often enough, he will in the end become incapable of recognizing the truth when he sees it. He can no longer recognize God's beauty and goodness. He comes to a stage when his own evil seems to him good and when God's good seems to him evil. He so often and consistently disobeys God's will to a point that this sinful behavior becomes a way of life with no qualms or conscience. That was the stage to which the Scribes and Pharisees had come. That is why they could look at Jesus and say that he was Beelzebul, the prince of devils, the all evil one.
Why should a sin against the Holy Spirit be unforgivable? What differentiates it from all other sins? When a person reaches that stage, repentance becomes impossible. There is only one condition of forgiveness and that is penitence. But if a person, by repeated refusing God's guidance, has got his moral values inverted until evil to him is good and good to him is evil, he is conscious of no sin, he cannot repent and therefore he can never be forgiven. So long as a person sees loveliness in Christ, so long as he hates his  sin even if he cannot leave it, there is still hope for repentance and forgiveness. It is only when serious sin means nothing at all, when Christ means nothing anymore, that's when a person has shut himself out from the love of God and his kingdom. There is a dreadful warning here. We must listen to God in all our days that our spiritual hearing never becomes spiritual deafness.
 
Monday of the Third Week in Ordinary Time
The scribes who had come from Jerusalem said of Jesus, “He is possessed by Beelzebul,” and “By the prince of demons he drives out demons.” Mark 3:22
By this time, Jesus was fully engaged in His public ministry. He had healed the sick and lame, cast out many demons, called the Twelve Apostles and given them authority over evil spirits, and preached the Good News to many. Just prior to this Gospel passage, some of Jesus’ own extended family had criticized Him, claiming that Jesus was out of His mind. Then the scribes began their public condemnation of our Lord.
The scribes were faced with a dilemma. They saw Jesus cast out demons from those who were possessed, so they needed to come up with an explanation. They concluded that Jesus was able to cast out demons by the power of the prince of demons. Jesus goes on to address the scribes’ criticism by identifying their condemnation as a sin against the Holy Spirit. Jesus explains that every sin can be forgiven except the sin against the Holy Spirit. He says that “whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will never have forgiveness, but is guilty of an everlasting sin.” Why is that?
In this case, the sin against the Holy Spirit is not only the false condemnation spoken by the scribes against Jesus. First and foremost, their sin is one of obstinacy. They spoke falsely about our Lord, which is a grave sin, but what’s worse is that they did so in such a way that they remained firmly grounded in their error. They refused to humble themselves and reconsider their error. And it is this stubbornness that leaves them with an “everlasting sin.”
Perhaps the most important lesson we can learn from this passage is that we must avoid remaining stuck in our pride in an obstinate way. We must always be humble and be ready and willing to reexamine our actions. Humility will help us to perpetually remember that we can easily become misled in life. And though this will happen from time to time in various ways, if we remain humble and open to change, then we can always receive the mercy of God and find forgiveness. But if we are prideful and continually refuse to admit our errors, then we are also potentially guilty of a sin against the Holy Spirit.
Reflect, today, upon any tendency you have in your life to be stubborn. Stubbornness can be a virtue when the stubbornness is an unwavering commitment to the Gospel and to the will of God. However, you must always intentionally reexamine the path you are on so that you can change when that path begins to deviate from the Truth of God. Humble yourself this day and allow God’s voice to lead you back from any errors with which you now struggle.
My merciful Jesus, I sin every day and will continue to fail to follow You with perfection. For this reason, I thank You for Your abundant mercy. Please help me to always be open to that mercy by regularly re-examining my decisions in life. Give me humility, dear Lord, to always repent and to turn back to You when I stray. Jesus, I trust in You.
 
Monday of the Third Week in Ordinary Time
Introductory Prayer: Lord, you are the source of all goodness. I know that your goodness is both a challenge and a promise. I trust that your goodness will envelop me if I allow myself to be found by you. I love you for wanting to fight the battle against evil for my sake.
Petition: Lord, help me not fear the battle against evil.
1. Not Indifferent: With Jesus on earth, another world becomes evident around us: the world of evil spirits. Jesus has come to take control of the kingdom. The devils are in a panic and begin to lose ground. Jesus is a threat to evil. His goodness, truth, and holiness are capable of putting the devils into submission. When Christ takes a stronger hold on my life, things begin to change. Do I let Christ challenge evil in my heart? In the world around me?
2. Not One of Them  Jesus brings change: But change is not evil per se. The change that Jesus brings is good since he comes to put demons in their place, bringing about good. This awakening of the good worries the devil. The conquest over evil is not always done in peace and tranquility. Does the spiritual opposition I face as I try to overcome evil in my life cause me to hesitate in the fight or to wish that Jesus and his teachings would not be so demanding? Do I realize that facing difficulties is a sign of growth in Christian authenticity? Do I let the goodness of Christ radically define my life? Even in the face of opposition?
3. Only Good: Think of the joy people experienced when Jesus freed them from the power of the Evil One. Think of the joy we feel after making a good confession, attending a good retreat, or progressing in virtue. Jesus comes into our lives to bring the joy of freedom from evil. He is God’s goodness made flesh. Do I rejoice to have Christ as my friend? Do I try to listen to his teachings with a willing heart, thankful for the chance I have to abide in God’s heart by living the life of grace? What an amazing friend I have! I can trust in his power to lead me along the path of life.
Conversation with Christ: Christ, I know that you are more powerful than evil. Help me to face up to evil in my life, encouraged by your friendship and strength. In your name Lord, I will walk with confidence.
Resolution: I will do something to share my faith with others today.

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