Các
bài đọc hôm nay nhắc nhở chúng ta về việc chuẩn bị và sẵn
sàng tâm hồn chúng ta. Chúa Giêsu đã thanh tẩy Đền Thờ vì Đền thờ là ngôi nhà của
Chúa Cha, cha Ngài, là một nơi dành cho việc cầu nguyện,
tế lễ để vinh danh Thiên Chúa, chứ không phải là chỗ đễ cho các việc
kinh doanh buôn bán, bóc lột. Chúa Giêsu thanh tẩy đền thờ và
giờ đây Ngài cũng
muốn chúng ta phải thanh tẩy đền thờ trong tâm hồn chúng
ta, vì mỗi
người chúng ta là đền thờ riêng cho Chúa ngự trị.
Trong một bồi cảnh gợi nhớ
đến sự dâng hiến đền thờ Solomon ban đầu của 800
năm trước (1 Các Vua 8), Dân
Chúng thời Tiên tri Maccabees tái cung hiến Đền Thờ và
họ đã hân hoan, ăn mừng ngày lễ trong tám ngày. Cho đến này, Mặc
dù đền Jerasalem không còn nữa, nhưng mỗi năm, người Do Thái vẫn còn
nhớ đến kỉ niệm ngày cung hiến đền thờ này khi họ ăn mừng lễ
Hanukkah trong tám ngày. Chúng ta cũng là đền thờ của Chúa
Thánh Thần, Trong cuộc sống hàng ngày, chúng ta phải tự nhắc nhở
và nhớ rằng Thiên Chúa đang ở trong chúng ta. Cách mà giúp
chúng ta được thanh tẩy là hãy đến với Chúa trong bí tích Hoà giảì, để
chúng ta làm hoà với Thiên Chúa để chúng ta được thánh tẩy và thánh hoá tâm hồn
của chúng ta, nơi mà Thiên Chúa hằng ngự trị mỗi ngày trong cuộc sống của chúng
ta.
Lạy Chúa, xin hướng dẫn lời nói
và việc làm của chúng con ngày hôm nay và mỗi ngày trong đời
của chúng con để chúng con có thể dâng lên Chúa những lời
ngợi khen, tôn kính và phục vụ.
Reflection: Lk. 19:45-48)
For
what do you prepare in life — an important exam, the start of a new year, the
birth of a child? Today’s readings are about preparation. Jesus cleanses the
Temple. The Temple is his Father’s house a place meant for prayer
and not for business. Jesus cleanses the Temple at this time because he is
about to teach there. His teachings are received most deeply when they become
part of our prayer.
In the first reading, the Jewish Maccabees retake control of Judea from the
Seleucid Empire. They arrive at the Temple and see that this sacred place has
been neglected and desecrated. The people are disturbed by this sight but they
purify the site, build a new altar and eventually make the Temple a place where
God is worshipped again. In a scene that is reminiscent of the original
dedication of the Temple by Solomon 800 years before (1 Kings 8), the Maccabees
now rededicate the Temple. The people rejoice for eight days.
Each year, Jewish people still remember this rededication as they celebrate
Hanukkah for eight days. We are also a Temple of the Holy Spirit. In daily
life, what or who helps us to remember that God dwells within us? Is there
anything from which we desire to be cleansed?
Lord,
guide my words and deeds today so that I may give You praise, reverence and
service.
Friday 33rd
Ordinary Time 2023
And every day he was teaching in the temple area. The chief
priests, the scribes, and the leaders of the people, meanwhile, were seeking to
put him to death, but they could find no way to accomplish their purpose
because all the people were hanging on his words. Luke 19:47–48
Jesus had just entered
Jerusalem for the upcoming Feast of Passover. He arrived in that holy city and
then returned again the next day and entered the Temple area. As He witnessed
the corruption of those selling animals for the Temple sacrifices, Jesus responded
with fervent preaching in an attempt to cleanse the Temple from this
corruption. He quoted the Prophet Isaiah and cried out, “It is written, My
house shall be a house of prayer, but you have made it a den of thieves.”
Luke’s Gospel points out the reaction of the chief priests, the scribes and the
leaders of the people. They were “seeking to put him to death.” However, as the
Gospel further relates, “they could find no way to accomplish their purpose
because all the people were hanging on his words.”
It’s important to consider this
passage within its context. The words that Jesus spoke were words that sought
to cleanse the Temple of corruption. With the approval of the temple priests,
who benefitted from the temple tax, there were many people who were using the
practice of divine worship to make a profit for selfish gain, turning the
Temple into a marketplace. Jesus could see this clearly, and many of the people
would have also sensed the corruption of these practices. Though they needed to
purchase animals for the ritual sacrifices and Passover meal, many of them were
most likely disturbed by this abuse. Therefore, as Jesus spoke with fervor and
condemnation, it angered those who were responsible for the corruption but left
the people with consolation. Hence, they were “hanging on his words.”
The Gospel is always consoling,
and, for those who are open, it leads them to hang on every word that is
spoken. It refreshes and invigorates, clarifies and motivates. Usually when we
think of the Gospel, we think of words that are gentle and inviting—words of
mercy to the sinner and compassion for those who are struggling. But sometimes
the pure Gospel message from our Lord fiercely attacks sin and evil. And though
this may be shocking to the evil doers, to those with pure faith, these words
also refresh and strengthen.
Today, we need the full Gospel
message. Many need to hear Jesus’ gentle invitation to conversion by which
their heavy burdens are lifted. But many others need to hear His firm words of
condemnation. And the Church as a whole needs both of these messages to be
proclaimed if we are to fully participate in the apostolic ministry of our
Lord. Only our Lord has the right to condemn, chastise, and call others to
repentance. But we are all called to share in this mission of our Lord. And
though we do not have the right to judge the hearts of others, when we see
objective evil and disorder within our world and even within our Church, we
must cry out with our Lord, “My house shall be a house of prayer, but you
have made it a den of thieves.” And when we do hear the holy and inspired
words of God’s messengers who boldly and courageously proclaim the truth and
call others to repentance, it should inspire, invigorate and console us as we
find ourselves hanging on their every word.
Reflect, today, upon the Gospel
messages that need to be preached in our day and age that are both inspired by
God and are also fervently directed at corruption within the world and even
within our Church. Allow yourself to support such holy preaching and to be
inspired by it. Hang on these holy words of God’s prophets today. As you do,
God will protect them and inspire them to continue His holy mission of
purification.
My purifying Lord, the
corruption within our world, and at times even within our Church, requires Your
holy preaching and purifying action. Please send Your messengers to those in
need so that all may be cleansed as You cleansed the Temple. May I share in
this mission in the ways in which You call me, and may I always hang on every
word spoken from Your merciful and fervent heart of love. Jesus, I trust in You.
Friday 33rd
Ordinary Time 2023
Opening Prayer: Lord, help me to value not only the sacredness of my own
person, but also the sacred space of the parish where I worship you in the
Eucharist. Grant me a deeper consciousness of your continual presence.
Encountering Christ:
1. A House of Prayer: Over and over again in the Gospel accounts we see Jesus
going off to pray in silence, preach in the synagogue, and go to the temple for
worship. His attitude was obvious: he honored his Father and had a deep
awareness of the sacred space of his own person and in places of worship
reserved for the Father’s honor and glory. Jesus was so very conscious of his
Father’s continual presence that he could enter the chamber of his heart alone
and be with his Father for long periods of time. How can we imitate Jesus in
his constant communion with the Father? How can we protect the sacredness of
our prayer time and our reverence for the church in which we worship?
2. A Den of Thieves: By virtue of original sin we are wounded and tend toward
concupiscence. Our souls, and even our church, can sometimes seem like a den of
thieves with attitudes, vices, and spirits that undermine our sacredness, our
intimacy with God, and our reverence for the house of God. Jesus asks us to
look intently at him and allow him to expose those interior spaces which
require renovation. He will do the heavy lifting if we allow him to show us
where we need to do the spiritual work.
3. Resistance or Openness?: The chief priests, scribes, and leaders of the
people didn’t accept the message and actions of Jesus and immediately dismissed
him as a radical and fanatic, without just reason. His listeners, however, were
amazed by Jesus and hung on his every word. Jesus fed their souls, their hopes,
and their lives. Every day Jesus is teaching in the temples of our lives. He is
accessible at daily Mass, in adoration chapels, and through the charity of
others we meet. We are called to be good “students” of the Master: to be
attentive to the message he wants us to learn each day, each moment. God plans
to give us all the grace we need to join him one day in heaven. All we need do
is pay attention.
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, I want to grow in the awe of the dignity and
sacredness of my person and allow that to translate into how I worship and
honor you in the life of the church. Help me to say no to all sin and
vice—those thieves seeking to steal my heart from you!
Resolution: Lord,
today by your grace I will pray in a place (whether at home or at church) where
I put all distractions aside so as to be fully present to you.
Friday 33rd
Ordinary Time
Opening Prayer: Heavenly Father, your Son Jesus pleased you by
safeguarding the sacred place of the temple. I also am a living temple of the
Holy Spirit. I believe that by the grace of your Baptism you dwell within me.
Help me to enter into this moment of prayer and speak with you who live within
me, heart to heart.
Encountering Christ:
·
Jesus Dwells in the Temple: Why would one go to the temple? It
was a sacred palace, unique and set apart, the place where God dwelt in the
Holy of Holies, and a place of worship and sacrifice to God. As a young boy,
Jesus called it “my Father’s house” (Luke 2:49). With that same affirmation in his heart, Jesus came to the
temple to drive out those who were desecrating its purpose, those who would use
the things of God in their own name and for their own gain, those who would
misrepresent the face of God upon the earth. Jesus came to drive them out, for
his very mission was to reveal the face of the Father—the Father’s authentic
face, not how others would imagine him to be.
·
Driving Out Our Inner Thieves: In our own day, Jesus wishes to
purify our image of the Father, to “drive out” of the temple of our hearts
images of God that are misconstrued. There are thieves in our interior which
attempt to rob the faith, hope, and love that give it light, life, and a
future. Invoking the light of the Holy Spirit, we can ask him: Are there fears
or doubts which tug at my heart, keeping me from “letting go and letting God”?
Are there insecurities which make me believe I must earn my worth before God
and others, that my own perfection makes me worthy of him? Is there a
second-guessing in my heart which makes me think I must make myself loveable,
disbelieving that it is God himself who makes me loveable?
·
The Temple of Our Hearts: Just as every day Jesus was in the temple area, so
every day he dwells anew in our hearts to cast out the thieves and the robbers
and reveal the face of the Father. He awaits the acceptance of those who see
him. The scribes and the Pharisees were looking for a way to put him to death.
His overturning of tables was too threatening for them; it came too close to
undoing their self-made world order. But perhaps we can find our place among
the crowd, hanging on his every word. His words are spirit and life (Psalm 19);
may we allow them to speak truth and grace into our sacred, inner temple—our
heart, which is his preferred dwelling place.
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, just as you came into the temple with
passion and enthusiasm to defend and claim what was your Father’s, remember
also that I am yours and come to my defense before the lies and doubts which
can sometimes plague me and those I love. You reveal that the name of God is
mercy, that his face is love and forgiveness and life. I wish to welcome this
grace into my life. Come, Holy Spirit, and speak your truth in these places
where I need it most.
Resolution: Lord, today by your grace I will put my headphones aside
and renew some of my interior headspace for God.
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