Trong
bài Tin Mừng
hôm nay, chúng ta được mời gọi mạnh dạn
đứng lên để làm
chứng cho Thiên Chúa. Trong thời đại của
chúng ta ngày
nay, chúng ta hầu như không còn nghe thấy có những người bị ném vào hầm cho sư tử ăn thịt, hay bị giết vì đức tin vào Chúa
Giêsu Kitô. Lịch sử của Giáo
hội Việt Nam cho chúng
ta biết là rất nhiều người Việt Nam ở trong những thế kỷ từ 17 đến 20 đã phải
từ bỏ mạng sống của
họ vì thập giá hay vì danh Chúa Giêsu Kitô. Đấy là những vị
tử đạo thực sự. Ngày này, những người
tử đạo thật sự là những người có lòng tin mạnh mẽ vào sự thật, chân lý và dám đứng lên để bảo vệ cho nền hoà
bình và chân lý với lòng dũng cảm và niềm tin, hạnh
phúc và hòa bình, họ
dám chấp nhận một thực tế phũ
phàng cho cuộc sống của họ. Nhiều gia đình có thể bị phân chia vì sự khác biệt về
niềm tin, nhưng những người làm
chứng cho tình yêu của Thiên Chúa, sẽ đem tình yêu đó chiếu toả đến những
người khác với một tình yêu vô vị lợi và không có điều kiện .
Trong thời điểm hiện tại, Làm thế nào chúng
ta có thể làm chứng cho tình yêu của Thiên Chúa trong
cuộc sống của chúng ta? Làm
bổn phận công dân, đóng thuế một cách đầy đủ. Tham dự thánh lễ ngày Chủ nhật hàng tuần. Hãy tìm hiếu và học hỏi lời Chúa. Hãy tôn
trọng sự sống của con người từ lúc mới được thụ thai cho đến khi chết một cách
tự nhiên, Không chung sống, “gần gũi” với người khác phá (không quan hệ tình dục) trước khi hôn phối, hoặc dùng thuốc ngừa thai, mặc dù mọi người khác chung quang đang làm điều đó. Mọi người có thể cười và nhạo bắng chúng ta khi chúng ta mặc những bộ quần áo kín đáo,
không hở hang như những các cô gái trong thời buổi hôm nay. Hãy vâng lời cha mẹ, thầy cô giáo, các linh mục và những
người quyền thế. Tóm
tăt là chúng ta hãy cố gắng tuân theo các điều răn của Chúa dạy và yêu thương nhau
như Chúa Kitô đã yêu thương chúng ta.
"Lạy Chúa Giêsu Kitô, bởi
cái chết của Chúa trên thập tự
giá, Chúa đã chuộc tội chúng con và đã cứu chuộc toàn thế giới. Xin Chúa khỏa lấp tâm hồn chúng con với niềm
hy vọng để mang lại niềm vui, lòng can đảm, và
sự táo bạo để chứng kiến chân
lý, sự thật về tình yêu của Chúa đã dành cho những
người tội lỗi như chúng con được chiến thắng những quyền lực của tội lỗi, Satan, và sự chết. "
Reflection:
Today's Gospel is inviting us strongly to bear witness to
God. In this day and age, we hardly hear of people being fed to the lions
or slaughtered because of their faith in Jesus Christ. The history of the
primitive church tells us of so many accounts of people who gave up their lives
in the name of Jesus Christ. These are the real martyrs. The true kind of
martyr who believes strongly in the truth and stands up to it, with courage and
faith, happily and peacefully accepting the reality of his/her life. Families
may be divided because of differences of beliefs but the one who bears witness
to the love of God, radiates this love so much so that he/she can love
unconditionally the other person.
How can we be witnesses in this present time to the love of God in
our lives? Pay taxes correctly. Go to mass on Sunday. Be studious.
Be Pro-life. Say no to pre-marital sex or to drugs even if everyone is doing
it. People may laugh at you saying you are too modest in dressing because you
are wearing a skirt that is knee-length when all other girls are wearing skirts
one foot above the knees. Be obedient to your parents, to the teachers,
to the priests and those in authority. In short obey the commandments and love
one another as Christ has loved us.
Wednesday of the Thirty-Fourth Week in Ordinary Time
“Remember, you are not to prepare your defense beforehand, for I
myself shall give you a wisdom in speaking that all your adversaries will be
powerless to resist or refute.” Luke 21:14–15
This line is embedded in today’s Gospel in which Jesus makes it
clear that His followers will be persecuted. Many of them will be seized, sent
to prison, hated and even be put to death. For some, this will even happen at
the hands of their own family. But Jesus tells them this to prepare them and to
let them know that these persecutions will enable them to give testimony to
Jesus. The Gospel passage above explains how they are to do this.
First of all, giving “testimony” especially means they are to be a
witness to Christ. And one of the best ways such a witness is fulfilled is
through the various forms of martyrdom. To be a martyr is to be a witness. And
those who suffer persecution for the sake of Christ, and then respond to that
persecution in accord with the wisdom and inspiration of Jesus, are true
martyrs. It’s helpful to note that if one is persecuted and responds with anger
or returns the violence in accord with their own irrational will, then they are
no martyr. They simply become what they have received. They become angry and
bitter people. Being a martyr requires both unjust treatment and a response to
that mistreatment in accord with God’s will. For that reason, though persecution
is never initiated by God, it does offer the Christian an opportunity to deeply
conform themself to Christ by responding as He dictates.
Jesus says that responding to persecution requires that we not
prepare a defense beforehand. In part, this is because there is great
temptation one experiences when persecuted by another. It is very
understandable that when a person experiences persecution in any way, they will
encounter anger and be tempted to fight back in a way that is uncharitable and
only furthers the disorder. Responding to persecution in accord with the will
of God requires great attentiveness to the promptings of the Holy Spirit, great
humility, and unwavering charity directed at the one doing the persecution.
Therefore, Jesus makes the promise that He will be with you in such situations
and will give you “a wisdom in speaking that all your adversaries will be
powerless to resist or refute.” What a grace! But this grace is only available
to those who rely completely upon Christ, and not upon their own disordered
passions and emotions.
Reflect, today, upon this promise from Jesus. Some will encounter
little persecution in their lives at various times. But others will encounter
severe persecution in various ways, even from their family. Reflect upon any
ways that you have experienced the unjust treatment of another and then reflect
upon your response. Were you able to immediately forgive? Were you able to set
aside your anger, wounded pride and desire for revenge? Were you able to keep
your eyes on Christ and rejoice that you have been found worthy to share in the
ridicule, persecutions and sufferings that Jesus endured? Pray that you will
always be open to the grace of this promise of Jesus so that you will always
respond to everyone in accord with the wisdom of God.
My persecuted Lord, though You were perfect in every way, You
endured much cruelty in Your earthly life. The injustice You endured is beyond
our comprehension. But Your response to such persecution was perfect. You were
able to transform all ill-treatment into grace and mercy, offered especially
for those who mistreated You. Give me the grace I need to imitate Your perfect
response and to always rely upon Your wisdom and guidance alone. Jesus, I trust
in You.
Wednesday 34th Ordinary Time 2023
Opening
Prayer: Lord God, I believe in
you and in your words, even when they are difficult. Open my heart to
understand the supernatural meaning of the Gospel. Strengthen me when I am
afraid, and give me a love that is stronger than death. Amen.
Encountering Christ:
Praise in a Fiery
Furnace: The sufferings we
undergo are not irrelevant to the witness we give concerning Jesus Christ. We
all tend to look beyond a speaker’s words to his actions, his way of life. We
ask ourselves if the way he lives lends credibility to his message. In today’s
Gospel, Jesus says explicitly that persecutions and imprisonments will lead to
our giving testimony. The one follows from the other. In Daniel 3, the three
young men thrown into the fiery furnace were miraculously preserved, and sang
praise to God. “And they walked about in the midst of the flames, singing hymns
to God and blessing the Lord.” It is precisely their position of weakness in
the midst of persecution that lends their praise of God its authority, causing
the Babylonian king to convert.
Cross That Leads
to Life: Christ can exhort us
to bear suffering bravely because he first bore it himself. In his Passion he
took on the sins of the world and suffered through to the end, his own death.
Christ does not demand what we cannot bear, nor what he himself has not already
undergone. What’s more, he says that “not a hair on your head will be
destroyed,” because he knows that our suffering leads to eternal life. This is
again prefigured in the book of Daniel: “And the satraps, the prefects, the
governors, and the king’s counselors gathered together and saw that the fire
had not had any power over the bodies of those men; the hair of their heads was
not singed, their mantles were not harmed, and no smell of fire had come upon
them.”
Because of My
Name: “They will have you led
before kings and governors because of my name…You will be hated by all because
of my name.” We know that the divine name is eponymous for God himself. When we
suffer because of the one we love, the suffering can be transformed into joy.
The Apostles gave us this example: “Then the Apostles left the presence of the
council, rejoicing that they were counted worthy to suffer dishonor for the
name. And every day in the temple and at home they did not cease teaching and
preaching Jesus as the Christ” (Acts 5:41-42). Christ wants to give us this
supreme freedom that the Apostles had, the freedom we receive when we love
ardently.
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, into your hands I commend my spirit.
You know the obstacles and disappointments I face. You are aware of my
setbacks, limitations, and failings. I offer everything to you so that you can
transform it into a fount of grace and seeds of eternal life.
Resolution: Lord,
today by your grace I will take stock of those things which trouble me or cause
me pain and offer them back to you.
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