Tin Mừng hôm nay, Chúa Giêsu dạy
chúng ta biết cách cư xử với Thiên Chúa như cách nguời con cư xử với người cha của chúng ta. Khía
cạnh đầu tiên là chúng ta phải
nên
có sự tin tưởng và niềm tự tin vào nơi Thiên Chúa khi chúng ta tâm sự với Ngài. Nhưng Chúa Giêsu cũng cảnh báo chúng ta: “Khi cầu nguyện, anh em đừng lải nhải nhiều lời..” (Mt 6:7). Khi chúng ta nói chuyện với cha mẹ của chúng ta, chúng ta
không bao giờ lý luận phức tạp, cũng không phải
nói nhiều, nhưng chúng ta chỉ đơn giản là xin cha me cho chúng ta những gì chúng cho cần và muốn xin. Chúng ta nên luôn luôn
biết rằng Thiên Chúa sẽ nghe những lời cầu xin của chúng ta bởi vì Thiên Chúa cũng là người Cha yêu thương chúng ta-và nghe lời chúng ta. Trong thực tế, cầu nguyện không
phải là việc trình bày, phúc
trình hay việc báo
cáo cho Thiên Chúa những gì chúng ta muốn làm, những gì chúng ta dự định làm và những thành quả mà chúng ta đã làm, nhưng cầu nguyện với Chúa là để khẩn khoàn
cầu xin Chúa ban cho chúng ta những gì chúng ta cần, như “Cha của anh em biết rõ
anh em cần gì trước
khi anh em cầu xin” (Mt 6:8). Chúng ta sẽ không phải là ngưới Kitô hữu tốt lành nếu chúng ta không cầu nguyện, như người con không thể là một đứa con tốt, có hiếu, nếu anh ta không nói
chuyện với cha mẹ của mình.
Trong
Mùa Chay, Giáo Hội nhắc nhở chúng ta nên biết dùng thời giờ để lắng đọng tâm hồn
và
cầu nguyện một cách sâu đậm hơn
như
Thánh Gioan Kim Khẩu đã nói: “Lời cầu nguyện, là những cuộc đối thoại trực tiếp giữa chúng ta với Thiên Chúa, là kho tàng quý báu nhất của chúng ta, bởi vì nhờ đó mà
chúng ta được
kết hợp với Người”. Điều cần nhất là để chúng ta cần phải biết sống trong đức bác ái thì lời cầu nguyện sẽ mang lại sức mạnh cho chúng ta để chúng ta sống thánh
thiện
hơn mỗi ngày. Những lý do tại sao chúng ta cầu nguyện với Chúa mỗi ngày là vì cầu nguyện giúp chúng ta biết tha thứ không phải chỉ là những vấn đề xích mích nhỏ thôi, Nhưng giúp chúng ta có thể đối diện với những vấn đề to lớn khác, nhưng không thể bằng những lời nói và thái độ thù nghịch, tấn công và còn hơn thế nữa, Cầu nguyện giúp ta có khả năng chịu đựng, không có ác ý hay
làm tổn thương đến người nào khác, Và chúng ta có thể thành thật nói với người thù nghịch của chúng ta là chúng ta đã thật lòng tha thứ cho hô với những gì mà họ đang mắc nợ với chúng ta. Và chúng ta có thể làm được điều đó vì có Chúa Thánh Thần nâng đỡ và hướng dẫn chúng ta và Đức Maria, mẹ Thiên Chúa cầu bầu cho chúng ta có được sức mạnh để phấn đấu.
Ôi
lạy Chúa! Xin Chúa giúp chúng con để chúng con biết con cần phải học biết làm thế nào để cầu nguyện
và làm thế nào để thâu hoạch những ơn ích cụ thể cho cuộc sống
của riêng của chúng con mỗi ngày
qua việc cầu nguyện.”
Comment: When you pray, do not
use a lot of words; your Father knows what you need
Today, Jesus —the Son of God—
teaches us how to behave like a son of God. A first aspect is our trust and the
confidence we should have when we talk to him. But our Lord warns us: «When you
pray, do not use a lot of words» (Mt 6:7). When we talk to our parents, we do
not resort to complicate reasoning, nor to using a lot of words, but they
simply ask for what they need. We should always know God will listen to us
because God —who is also the Father— loves us and listens to us. In fact, to
pray is not so much to inform God, but to ask him for all we need, as «Your
Father knows what you need, even before you ask him» (Mt 6:8). We will not be
good Christians if we do not pray, as a son cannot be a good son if he does not
talk to his parents.
The
Lord's Prayer is the prayer that Jesus himself taught us, and it is just a
compendium of our Christian life. Each time we say the Lord's Prayer we let the
Father to take us by the hand and we ask him what we need everyday to become a
better sons of God. We need not only the material bread, but —more than that—
the Celestial Bread: «Let us beg we never lack the Eucharist bread». We need
also to learn to forgive and to be forgiven: «To be able to receive the
forgiveness God offers us, let us to address ourselves to the Father who loves
us», as it is said in the Mass in the preliminary introduction to our Lord's
Prayer.
During
Lent, the Church is asking us to deepen in our prayers. «The prayer, our
colloquy with God, is our best treasure, because it means (...) being united to
him» (Saint John Crisostom). Oh Lord! I need to learn how to pray and how to
draw specific benefits for my own life. Mostly to live the virtue of charity:
the prayer gives me strength to live it better every day. And this is why I ask
him daily to help me to forgive not only the small troubles I may have to face
from others but, also, the offensive words and attitudes and, more than that,
to bear no malice to my fellow men, so that I can sincerely tell them I have forgiven
from the bottom of my heart those who are in debt with me. I will be able to
achieve it because God's Mother will help me at all times.
TUESDAY, 1st Week of
Lent 2023
Jesus said to his disciples: “In praying, do not babble
like the pagans, who think that they will be heard because of their many words.
Do not be like them. Matthew 6:7–8
Recall that Jesus used to go
off by Himself at times and spend the whole night in prayer. Thus, it’s clear
that Jesus is in favor of long and sincere times of prayer, since He gave us
His own example as a lesson. But there is clearly a difference between that
which our Lord did all night and that which He criticized the pagans for doing
when they “babble” with many words. After this criticism of the prayer of the
pagans, Jesus gives us the “Our Father” prayer as a model for our personal
prayer.
The Our Father prayer begins by
addressing God in a deeply personal way. That is, God is not just an
all-powerful cosmic being. He is personal, familial—He is our Father. Jesus
continues the prayer by instructing us to honor our Father by proclaiming His
holiness, His hallowedness. God and God alone is the Holy One from which all
holiness of life derives. As we acknowledge the holiness of the Father, we must
also acknowledge Him as King and seek His Kingship for our lives and for the
world. This is accomplished only when His perfect will is done “on earth as it
is in Heaven.” This perfect prayer concludes by acknowledging that God is the
source of all of our daily needs, including the forgiveness of our sins and
protection from all evil.
Upon the completion of this
prayer of perfection, Jesus provides a context in which this and every prayer
must be prayed. He says, “If you forgive men their transgressions, your
heavenly Father will forgive you. But if you do not forgive men, neither will
your Father forgive your transgressions.” Prayer will only be effective if we
allow it to change us and make us more like the Father in Heaven. Therefore, if
we want our prayer of forgiveness to be effective, then we must live what we
pray for. We must also forgive others so that God will forgive us.
Reflect, today, upon this
perfect prayer, the Our Father. One temptation is that we can become so
familiar with this prayer that we gloss over its true meaning. If that happens,
then we will find that we are praying it more like the pagans who simply babble
the words. But if we humbly and sincerely understand and mean every word, then
we can be certain that our prayer will become more like that of our Lord’s.
Saint Ignatius of Loyola recommends pondering every word of that prayer very
slowly, one word at a time. Try to pray this way, today, and allow the Our
Father to move from babbling to authentic communication with the Father in
Heaven.
Our Father, Who art in heaven,
Hallowed be Thy Name. Thy Kingdom come. Thy Will be done, on earth as it is in
Heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our trespasses, as we
forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation, but
deliver us from evil. Amen. Jesus, I trust in You.
TUESDAY, 1st Week of Lent 2023
TUESDAY, 1st Week of Lent
In the Gospel
reading Matthew recounts how Jesus taught us to pray. The Lord's Prayer is a
beautiful and complete prayer.
First, it acknowledges that God in heaven is our Father. Not only
is he holy; his name is also holy.
Second, it is always better to enter into his will. Yet how many
times do we ask God to do our will, rather than we do what he wills? Most of
the time, we are unhappy because we deviate from God's will and plan for us; we
often think our plan is better than God's.
Third, we must put our trust in God's providence. We always worry
we do not have enough money or food to eat. But our Father will sustain and
take care of us.
Fourth, it is very hard to forgive those who have wronged us. When
treated badly or unfairly, we want to get even. Yet how can we ask for God's
forgiveness if we do not forgive those who have wronged us?
Last, we ask to be delivered from the test and from evil.
The Lord's Prayer is the prayer to our Father in heaven who loves
and cares for his children, who knows what each one needs even before he I she
asks.
Finally,
we pray for one another, for those who have asked our prayers and for those who
need our prayers the most.
REFLECTION
Friends, the Gospel for
today is of great moment, for in it the Son of God teaches us to pray. Our
teacher is not just a guru, a spiritual sage, or a religious genius, but the
Son of God. This is why the Our Father is the model of all prayer. A desire to
pray is planted deep within us, the desire to speak to God and to listen to
him. We can forget to pray, neglect to pray, become lazy in prayer, but we can
never really lose the desire to pray.
And so let us
attend carefully to the first words of Jesus' great prayer: "Our Father
who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name." Our basic problem is getting our
priorities mixed up. We seek all kinds of worldly things—money, pleasure,
power, honor—all of which are unsatisfying.
What we should
desire, first, is God. This is precisely what the prayer to hallow the name of
God is all about. It's not that God's name isn't in fact hallowed, but we're
praying that we might keep it that way, that we might honor God in all things.
We're praying for a radical reorientation of our consciousness.
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