Một
món quà mà cho đi với một tấm lòng hận thù hoặc cho đi để phô trưng cái sự
giàu có hay sự rộng rãi của mình thì món quà sẽ không còn cái giá trị nào của
nó nữa. Tuy nhiên, một món quà cho đi với tình thương, với một tinh thần quảng
đại và hy sinh, thì đó chính là món quà quý giá. Dù cho món quá đó nhiều hay ít
không có quan trọng nhiều bằng cách cho của người cho. Người góa phụ nghèo có
thể giữ lại đồng tiền xu của mình để mua một ít gạo nấu cơm cho cả nhà ăn,
nhưng bà ấy đã cho đi tất cả những gì bà ấy có! Chính cả sự sống của bà và gia
đình, Chúa Giêsu đã khen ngợi người bà góa này măc dầu bà ấy chỉ cúng chỉ có
một xu cho đền thờ, Nhưng chúng ta biết đó là một khoản tiền đáng kể cho cuộc
sống hàng ngày của bà ta, bởi vì đó là tất cả những gì bà ta có. Những gì chúng
ta đóng góp, hay bố thí có thể là rất ít so với những người khác, nhưng nếu
chúng ta đặt hết tất cả những gì chúng ta có vào hành động của Chúa, Thì vấn đề
nhiều hay ít sẽ không còn là vấn đề nữa, Thiên Chúa biết mọi sự và Ngài có thể
biến đổi món quá nhỏ bé thành món quà hữu dụng và những việc đó đã nằm
ngoài tầm tay và sự toan tính của chúng ta.
Lòng tốt của bà góa là một bài học tốt cho chúng ta là những môn đệ của Chúa
Kitô. Chúng ta có thể sống quảng đại, như những người giàu có, bỏ những đồng
tiền vàng vào hộp tiền (Lc 21:01). Tuy nhiên, số tiền lớn mà chúng ta dâng hiến
vào đền thờ sẽ không có giá trị nếu chúng ta chỉ cho Chúa "những đống tiền
dư thừa, những đồng tiền lẻ mà chúng ta có trong túi quần, túi áo", Cho mà
không có tinh thần yêu thương, tự hiến, hay cho mà "
không"cho hết chính bản thân mình. Thánh Augustinô nói: “Họ
đã quan sát cái lòng hảo tâm "tuyệt vời" từ những người giàu có và họ
ca ngợi những người đó và trong cùng lúc, họ có thể nhìn thấy
bà quả phụ này, nhưng đã có ai để ý đến hai đồng tiền xu.?
Ngưởi đàn bà goá đã cho Thiên Chúa tất cả những gì bà ấy có bằng với cả trái
tim của mình. Bà không có tiền của vật chất, những bà đã dâng lên Chuá tât cả
tâm hồn, và trái tím của bà, vì bà đã có Thiên Chúa trong trái tim của bà. Đó
là việc tốt cần nên bắt chước hơn. Chúng ta nên hãy rộng lượng với
Thiên Chúa và Ngài sẽ ban cho chúng ta nhiều hơn những gì chúng ta đã cho đi.
Monday 34th Week
in Ordinary Time: "She put in all that she had"
Do
you know the joy of selfless giving and love for others? True love doesn't
calculate - it spends lavishly! Jesus drove this point home to his disciples
while sitting in the temple and observing people offering their tithes. Jesus
praised a poor widow who gave the smallest of coins in contrast with the rich
who gave greater sums. How can someone in poverty give more than someone who
has ample means? Jesus' answer is very simple - love is more precious than gold
or wealth!
Jesus taught that real giving must
come from the heart. A gift that is given with a grudge or for display loses
its value. But a gift given out of love, with a spirit of generosity and
sacrifice, is precious. The amount or size of the gift doesn't matter as much
as the cost to the giver. The poor widow could have kept one of her coins, but
instead she recklessly gave away all she had! Jesus praised someone who gave
barely a penny - how insignificant a sum - because it was everything she had,
her whole living.
What we have to offer may look very
small and not worth much, but if we put all we have at the Lord's disposal, no
matter how insignificant it may seem, then God can do with it and with us what
is beyond our reckoning. Do you give out of love and gratitude for what God has
already given to you?
"Lord
Jesus, your love knows no bounds and you give without measure. All that I have
comes from you. May I give freely and generously in gratitude for all that you
have given to me. Take my life and all that I possess - my gifts, talents, time
and resources - and use them as you see fit for your glory."
Monday of the Thirty-Fourth Week in Ordinary Time
“I tell you truly, this poor widow put in more than all the rest;
for those others have all made offerings from their surplus wealth, but she,
from her poverty, has offered her whole livelihood.” Luke 21:3–4
We must all see ourselves as this poor widow by offering our
“whole livelihood” to Christ. Everything we have is a gift from God, and it
must be offered back to God, sacrificially, as our gift to Him. The material
offering made by this poor widow was two small coins worth very little. The
truth is that even if you were the richest person in the world and donated all
that you had to God, it would greatly pale in comparison to the gift given to
us by our Lord. We are all poor in the big picture of God’s grace and His
Kingdom. The most any one of us can offer is symbolized by these two small
coins.
As you look at your own life, how willing are you to give
everything you have to our Lord for His glory and service? The only appropriate
“offering” we are called to give to our Lord is the “sacrifice” of our entire
life. This spiritual truth is something very difficult for those who are very
wealthy in the things of this world. Material wealth offers an easy way to live
in comfort. Money can provide every modern convenience, entertainment, fun,
worldly security and much of what this world has to offer. But money cannot buy
fulfillment. It cannot satisfy us in the truest sense. This is why many people
who live very luxurious lives are not truly happy.
Happiness is found in sacrifice. Specifically, it is found in
sacrificial love by which we dedicate everything we are and all that we have to
the sole purpose of the glory of God and the furtherment of His Kingdom. Sadly,
when one is rich in the things of this world, it is easy to think that offering
a portion of their wealth, such as a tithe, means that they can keep and use
the rest any way they want. But that’s not true. Giving of ourselves completely
to God and to His service does not necessarily mean that we donate all of our
money to the Church. But it does mean that we offer everything to God. For
many, when this complete offering is done every day, God will lead them to use
their material resources for the raising of their family, to take care of their
basic needs, and, at times, to even enjoy various comforts in life. But the
real question is whether or not you truly live as though all you have and all
you are is God’s and is to be used for His glory and the furtherment of His
will.
Reflect, today, upon this poor widow. She was greatly blessed to
have very little. This made it easier for her to remain detached from money and
other forms of material wealth. And in that detachment, she gave all to God.
She entrusted all to Him, and Jesus noticed and praised her. Reflect upon our
Lord’s reaction to you and to the offering of your life to Him. If you are
holding back from our Lord, then use the witness of this poor widow to inspire
you to daily dedicate everything to the service of God in accord with His holy
will.
My wealthy Lord, Your riches are all that matter in life. You
bestow the riches of eternal salvation and countless other graces upon those
who have given all to You. I do give my life to You, dear Lord. I give all that
I have and all that I am. Please receive the offering of my life and use me in
accord with Your holy will. Jesus, I trust in You.
Monday
34th Week in Ordinary Time
Opening
Prayer: Dear God, I love you
because you notice little details, like a poor widow offering two small coins.
I know that you see and cherish all of my good deeds too. It makes me want to
love and serve you even more. Please give me the grace to do so!
Encountering Christ:
Complete
Love: There is a sense of
finality in the poor woman’s meager donation. She had something, and now she
has nothing and it would seem her life is about to end. We are now in the last
week of the liturgical year, when we read of the end times in Luke 21. And it all
begins with this poor widow donating her fortune to God. We are like that
woman; we are poor and seemingly insignificant in world history. Our names will
be forgotten, like hers was. And yet what she did for God has never been
forgotten. Scripture presents her as the epitome of love and devotion, for she
followed the first commandment and loved the Lord her God with all her heart,
mind, and soul.
Not Much, but
All: Jesus often makes
statements which can be maddening to those with a worldly mentality. He said,
“She has put in more than all the rest.” The worldling says, “But it simply
isn’t true! She put in only two coins, entirely irrelevant to the treasury
needs.” Jesus is trying to open us up to a deeper reality: The Father does not
measure our self-donation in worldly terms but he does ask us to offer him
everything we have. May we have the courage to give everything to the Lord, as
did this poor woman.
I Choose All: What happened to the widow the day after she gave
God her last two coins? Did she die of want and exposure? The Gospel doesn’t
say. Wasn’t it rash of her to give away everything she owned? Yes, it was rash.
But the saints remind us that love is daring, rash, and sometimes even foolish.
When discerning her path in life, St. Thérèse of Lisieux said, “I choose all.”
The worldling says, “You can’t choose all, that’s foolish.” May we be fools for
Christ!
Conversing with Christ: Jesus Christ, you loved me so much that you gave me all
you had by dying on the cross. From the poverty of your humanity, you offered
your whole self to your Heavenly Father. You learned obedience through what you
suffered and so became the fount of salvation for all who believe in you. Teach
me to understand this logic of love so dear to your heart.
Resolution: Lord,
today by your grace I will read and reflect on Philippians 2:1-11.
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