Suy Niệm Thứ Bẩy Tuần 13 Thường Niên
Con Người chúng ta
thuộc về Thiên Chúa và được Ngài yêu thương vì chính chúng ta đã được tạo nên
trong chính hình ảnh của Ngài, vì thế Ngài không bao giờ có ý định tiêu diệt con người chu1ng ta Nhưng Thiên Chúa luôn làm việc,
và luôn
có những kế hoạch mới cho cuộc sống của chúng ta trong tương lai. Điều quan trọng là chúng ta không nên để cho những sự tuyệt vọng hay những việc tiêu cực xâm chiếm tâm hồn của chúng ta khi chúng ta gặp phải những khó khăn; hãy tránh những sự buồn tủi hay hoài nghi vì cả hai thứ này đều là kẻ thù của chúng ta và chúng muốn tìm cách hủy hoại tâm hồn chúng ta. Đây là những lúc của sự đấu tranh, vì thế chúng ta cần phải biết dùng thời gian này để cầu nguyên, để cũng cố đức tin của chúng ta trong niểm hy vọng, Thiên Chúa không bao giờ ngủ và bỏ quên chúng ta.
Nếu như chúng ta chỉ biết cố gắng nắm bắt những ý tưởng mới để hoà nhập với cái tư duy cũ của chúng ta thì chúng ta chẳng khác gì như là người đổ rượu mới vào bầu da cũ, Vì bầu da cũ đã khộ cứng không thể chịu đựng sự lên men và sự ép nép của rượu mới, nên khi rượu mới lên men, thì bình da cũ không thể co giãn, đàn hồi nên phải vỡ ra, và như thế bình da cũ sẽ vỡ toang ra thì rượu mới trong bình cũng bị tuôn đổ ra bên ngoài.
Khi
chúng ta đều có những suy nghĩ hay ý tưởng mới, hình ảnh mới, hay biểu tượng mới, và cách thấu hiểu thế giới mới, chúng ta cần phải tạo nên một tâm trí và
tâm hồn mới để có thể chứa đựng chúng. Những ý tưởng cũ và cách làm việc cũ kỹ đôi khi cũng phải được đặt sang một bên,
nếu chúng ta muốn phát triển và tiến lên về phía trước. Vì thế trong những môi trường mới, những ý
tưởng mới
cũng phải được áp dụng đối với những ý thức tâm linh của chúng ta, Như chân Phước Hồng Y John Newman nói: "Sống là để thay đổi; được hoàn hảo là
phải có sự thay đổi thường xuyên.
" Chúng ta hãy không nên cứng nhắc và sợ thay đổi và Đừng nên hay cứ bám víu thật chặt vào những gì quen thuộc mà nên biết thay đổi, cầu tiến và chấp nhận
thay đổi của Giáo Hội.
Lạy Chúa xin hãy mỡ rộng tâm hồn và lòng trí của chúng con để chúng con có một tâm hồn biết cởi mở và cầu tiến.
Saturday 13th Week in Ordinary Time
“The wedding guests cannot mourn as long as the bridegroom is with them.” Today’s first reading illustrates the importance of the blessing of the father for his elder son. However, Rebekah wants her younger son Jacob to be blessed with these special blessings instead of her elder son Esau. Parents’ blessings are of the utmost importance in our lives. Therefore one of the Ten Commandments tells us to honour our parents.
In the Gospel Jesus tells us that as long as he is present with his disciples they need not fast. Jesus doesn’t undermine the importance of fasting in our spiritual journey. He himself fasted for forty days and forty nights before He began His public ministry. Fasting has indeed a great significance in our spiritual journey. It helps to be in communion with God. The disciples are already in the presence of the Lord. They are enjoying his company. Therefore they do not need to fast. That is what Jesus seems to be telling John’s disciples. Fasting is not end in itself. It is a means to come into the company of the Lord.
Lord, grant us the grace that we may respect our parents and always yearn for Your company.
Saturday of the Thirteenth Week in Ordinary Time
“No one patches an old cloak with a piece of unshrunken cloth, for its fullness pulls away from the cloak and the tear gets worse. People do not put new wine into old wineskins. Otherwise the skins burst, the wine spills out, and the skins are ruined. Rather, they pour new wine into fresh wineskins, and both are preserved.” Matthew 9:16–17
The parable above teaches us that even if someone were to faithfully understand and live the authentic Law that was given through Moses and the prophets, Jesus’ new teaching of grace, the New Law, was so different that it was not simply an improvement of the old, it completely replaced it. Furthermore, many of the customs taught by the Pharisees were unfaithful representations of the Law of Moses. They had deviated from the Law’s meaning and replaced it with their own scrupulous and erroneous multiplication of external practices. Thus, Jesus’ New Law needed to break away from these deviations completely.
To use a modern example, if you were to have an old phone that had become obsolete or stopped working, you wouldn’t buy a new phone so as to remove various parts from it to try to add those parts to the old phone to fix it. Instead, you use the new phone as a complete replacement for the old one.
A central quality of the New Law of grace is that it is entirely new and transforming. Therefore, by embracing this New Law, we become entirely new creations in Christ. Grace doesn’t simply patch that which is weak and sinful in us. It transforms us, elevating our human nature to an entirely new existence. This teaching is not only directed at the misguided teachings that the Pharisees had developed over the years, it was directed at human life itself. Not only were the Jewish customs to go through a transformation, humanity itself was to go through a transformation. Everything is made new in Christ.
This teaching applies just as much to us today as it did to the Jewish people of old. Today, we not only receive the new life of grace in Baptism, but we also receive it anew and share in this ongoing transforming renewal every time we allow grace to touch us more deeply and transform us more fully into the people God wants us to be. The “new patch” and the “new wine” are always transforming, and we must look forward to this newness throughout our lives.
Reflect, today, upon the joyful discovery that awaits you every day. Discovering the New Law of grace, accepting it into your life, and allowing it to transform you will set you on a path of discovery that will never get old. It is an ongoing discovery that is far greater than anything this world has to offer. Nothing can ever compare to the gift of God alive in our lives. It will never get old. It will always be transforming. And it will always be new. Ponder this gift God offers you today and say “Yes” to it with all your heart.
My transforming Lord, You continuously offer to renew me, transform me and elevate me to the life of grace. I thank You for this Gift and desire to accept it with all my heart. May I always be ready and willing to say “Yes” to You and the transformation that awaits me as I discover this ever new treasure of Your Grace. Jesus, I trust in You.
Saturday 13th Ordinary time 2023
Opening Prayer: Lord Jesus, I want to approach you today, as did your disciples, with my questions, doubts, and concerns. I am confident that you hear me and have a message, especially for me, as I reflect on your words.
Encountering Christ:
1. Our Future: The Lord recommended to his listeners that they put new wine into fresh wineskins, “so that both are preserved.” He was recommending that they accommodate the new ways Jesus wanted to be worshiped, the new church he was forming, the new graces he would leave for all of us in the Sacraments, etc. Many of his teachings seemed radical to Pharisees and followers alike, so that even Peter said, “Master, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life” (John 6:68). In our own lives, following Jesus can require the abandonment of the future we planned for ourselves. Only when we place our future in his hands can we be assured that we will age well, like wine in new wineskins.
2. Fasting/Feasting: When Jesus walked the earth, fasting was unnecessary
because, as Jesus told his disciples, the bridegroom was present! Modern-day
disciples of Jesus follow the church’s liturgical year, which is cyclical, and
includes seasons for fasting (Advent and Lent) and even longer seasons for
feasting (Easter and Christmas). We exert self-control during fasts to unite
ourselves with Christ and open our hearts to become more receptive to grace.
Feasting is especially sweet, temporally and spiritually when we’ve fasted
well. Wanting only the best for us, our Church never demands that we fast
without feasting, nor vice versa.
3. Living with the
Bridegroom: Our bridegroom
lives! Does this fact fill us with joy? Are we fervent and faithful to him? Do
we act like a bride, striving to keep ourselves pure and undefiled? Attentive
and obedient to the groom? Willing to bear fruit? We are invited to a nuptial
union with Christ. As the saints describe it, this union is infinitely more
intimate than conjugal love. What a reason to rejoice that the bridegroom
lives!
Conversing with
Christ: Lord, everywhere I
look today in the Scriptures, I see your protective care: in the institution of
the Church; in its cyclical nature, which encourages us to fast and feast; and
in the spousal intimacy you want to share with me. You are a mighty and
powerful God, but you remind me in Scripture that you care for me
tenderly.
Resolution: Lord, today, by your grace I will open my heart to
greater intimacy with you and with those souls you place in my life.
Saturday 13th Ordinary
time 2022
Opening Prayer: Lord, let me better understand your word during this time of prayer. I want to be like the wedding guests who are in the presence of the bridegroom, unable to mourn because of intimacy with you. You ask me to detach myself from the things of this world that keep me from you; enlighten me to know what these things are, and strengthen me to give them up, assured of the hope of something infinitely better.
Encountering Christ:
1. This One Is Different: Both John the Baptist and Jesus were accompanied by groups of men who were edified by their words and deeds. These people bore the label “disciple,” from the Latin word meaning student, learner, or follower. Those who followed John would have learned from their teacher about certain differences between him and Jesus, particularly in stature: “I baptize you with water, but he who is mightier than I is coming, the strap of whose sandals I am not worthy to untie. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire" (Luke 3:16). These disciples, some of whom would have seen a dove land on the newly baptized Jesus, and heard a voice from Heaven saying, “This is my son” (Matthew 3:16-17), had not yet discovered the most profound difference between these two teachers, one of essence, which John had discerned from his first encounter with the divine Jesus—causing him to leap in St. Elizabeth’s womb (Luke 1:41).
2.
The
Bridegroom Is with Us: Clear
differences also existed between the practices of the two bands of disciples.
For instance, one group often observed a fast and the other did not. Without a
doubt, each teacher preached of the need for repentance, which can be
manifested in many ways. “Scripture and the Fathers insist above all on three
forms, fasting, prayer, and almsgiving, which express conversion in relation to
oneself, to God, and to others” (CCC 1434). Jesus’ disciples did not fast in
the presence of “the bridegroom,” the continual source for their joy. Today,
while we have access to the bridegroom in the Eucharist, we also long for that
continual union with him in joy for all eternity. St. John of the Cross once
said that we cannot rise up to God if we are bound to the things of this world,
reminding us that fasting from things we enjoy is a preparation for Heaven.
3.
New Wine,
Fresh Skins: Another
preparation for Heaven, of course, is to reconcile with God while here on
earth, by confessing our sins to “the bridegroom” in humble contrition. With
souls absolved of sin, we, like new wineskins, can more effectively receive the
“new wine” that Christ has in store for us, an outpouring of his grace. If we
wonder what beautiful gifts a pure soul might accept from the Lord, we can look
to our Blessed Mother. The Immaculate One, preserved from the stain of sin from
the moment of her conception, was the epitome of a “new wineskin.” It was to
this beautiful earthen vessel that the Angel Gabriel was able to proclaim
“Hail, full of grace,” seeking her fiat to become the bride of the Holy Spirit,
and set in motion God’s plan of salvation. May we also cooperate with God’s
plan, keeping our souls clean and ready to accept God’s grace with deep gratitude.
Conversing with Christ: I thank you, Lord, for your invitation to me to
enter into prayer with you. You are the bridegroom who is always attentive to
his bride, the Church, into which you adopted me at my baptism. Let me
gratefully appreciate the grace you poured out on that day and each time I
return to you in your sacraments. Make me a “fresh wineskin,” always ready to
receive from you.
Resolution: Lord,
today by your grace I will read (or sing) the lyrics of
the hymn “How Can I Keep From Singing?” and consider the joy that flows from
the bridegroom’s invitation to be members of his bride, the Church.
Nếu như chúng ta chỉ biết cố gắng nắm bắt những ý tưởng mới để hoà nhập với cái tư duy cũ của chúng ta thì chúng ta chẳng khác gì như là người đổ rượu mới vào bầu da cũ, Vì bầu da cũ đã khộ cứng không thể chịu đựng sự lên men và sự ép nép của rượu mới, nên khi rượu mới lên men, thì bình da cũ không thể co giãn, đàn hồi nên phải vỡ ra, và như thế bình da cũ sẽ vỡ toang ra thì rượu mới trong bình cũng bị tuôn đổ ra bên ngoài.
Lạy Chúa xin hãy mỡ rộng tâm hồn và lòng trí của chúng con để chúng con có một tâm hồn biết cởi mở và cầu tiến.
“The wedding guests cannot mourn as long as the bridegroom is with them.” Today’s first reading illustrates the importance of the blessing of the father for his elder son. However, Rebekah wants her younger son Jacob to be blessed with these special blessings instead of her elder son Esau. Parents’ blessings are of the utmost importance in our lives. Therefore one of the Ten Commandments tells us to honour our parents.
In the Gospel Jesus tells us that as long as he is present with his disciples they need not fast. Jesus doesn’t undermine the importance of fasting in our spiritual journey. He himself fasted for forty days and forty nights before He began His public ministry. Fasting has indeed a great significance in our spiritual journey. It helps to be in communion with God. The disciples are already in the presence of the Lord. They are enjoying his company. Therefore they do not need to fast. That is what Jesus seems to be telling John’s disciples. Fasting is not end in itself. It is a means to come into the company of the Lord.
Lord, grant us the grace that we may respect our parents and always yearn for Your company.
“No one patches an old cloak with a piece of unshrunken cloth, for its fullness pulls away from the cloak and the tear gets worse. People do not put new wine into old wineskins. Otherwise the skins burst, the wine spills out, and the skins are ruined. Rather, they pour new wine into fresh wineskins, and both are preserved.” Matthew 9:16–17
The parable above teaches us that even if someone were to faithfully understand and live the authentic Law that was given through Moses and the prophets, Jesus’ new teaching of grace, the New Law, was so different that it was not simply an improvement of the old, it completely replaced it. Furthermore, many of the customs taught by the Pharisees were unfaithful representations of the Law of Moses. They had deviated from the Law’s meaning and replaced it with their own scrupulous and erroneous multiplication of external practices. Thus, Jesus’ New Law needed to break away from these deviations completely.
To use a modern example, if you were to have an old phone that had become obsolete or stopped working, you wouldn’t buy a new phone so as to remove various parts from it to try to add those parts to the old phone to fix it. Instead, you use the new phone as a complete replacement for the old one.
A central quality of the New Law of grace is that it is entirely new and transforming. Therefore, by embracing this New Law, we become entirely new creations in Christ. Grace doesn’t simply patch that which is weak and sinful in us. It transforms us, elevating our human nature to an entirely new existence. This teaching is not only directed at the misguided teachings that the Pharisees had developed over the years, it was directed at human life itself. Not only were the Jewish customs to go through a transformation, humanity itself was to go through a transformation. Everything is made new in Christ.
This teaching applies just as much to us today as it did to the Jewish people of old. Today, we not only receive the new life of grace in Baptism, but we also receive it anew and share in this ongoing transforming renewal every time we allow grace to touch us more deeply and transform us more fully into the people God wants us to be. The “new patch” and the “new wine” are always transforming, and we must look forward to this newness throughout our lives.
Reflect, today, upon the joyful discovery that awaits you every day. Discovering the New Law of grace, accepting it into your life, and allowing it to transform you will set you on a path of discovery that will never get old. It is an ongoing discovery that is far greater than anything this world has to offer. Nothing can ever compare to the gift of God alive in our lives. It will never get old. It will always be transforming. And it will always be new. Ponder this gift God offers you today and say “Yes” to it with all your heart.
My transforming Lord, You continuously offer to renew me, transform me and elevate me to the life of grace. I thank You for this Gift and desire to accept it with all my heart. May I always be ready and willing to say “Yes” to You and the transformation that awaits me as I discover this ever new treasure of Your Grace. Jesus, I trust in You.
Opening Prayer: Lord Jesus, I want to approach you today, as did your disciples, with my questions, doubts, and concerns. I am confident that you hear me and have a message, especially for me, as I reflect on your words.
1. Our Future: The Lord recommended to his listeners that they put new wine into fresh wineskins, “so that both are preserved.” He was recommending that they accommodate the new ways Jesus wanted to be worshiped, the new church he was forming, the new graces he would leave for all of us in the Sacraments, etc. Many of his teachings seemed radical to Pharisees and followers alike, so that even Peter said, “Master, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life” (John 6:68). In our own lives, following Jesus can require the abandonment of the future we planned for ourselves. Only when we place our future in his hands can we be assured that we will age well, like wine in new wineskins.
Opening Prayer: Lord, let me better understand your word during this time of prayer. I want to be like the wedding guests who are in the presence of the bridegroom, unable to mourn because of intimacy with you. You ask me to detach myself from the things of this world that keep me from you; enlighten me to know what these things are, and strengthen me to give them up, assured of the hope of something infinitely better.
1. This One Is Different: Both John the Baptist and Jesus were accompanied by groups of men who were edified by their words and deeds. These people bore the label “disciple,” from the Latin word meaning student, learner, or follower. Those who followed John would have learned from their teacher about certain differences between him and Jesus, particularly in stature: “I baptize you with water, but he who is mightier than I is coming, the strap of whose sandals I am not worthy to untie. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire" (Luke 3:16). These disciples, some of whom would have seen a dove land on the newly baptized Jesus, and heard a voice from Heaven saying, “This is my son” (Matthew 3:16-17), had not yet discovered the most profound difference between these two teachers, one of essence, which John had discerned from his first encounter with the divine Jesus—causing him to leap in St. Elizabeth’s womb (Luke 1:41).
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