Monday, December 4, 2023

Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ Tư Tuần thứ Nhất Mùa Vọng

Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ Tư Tuần thứ Nhất Mùa Vọng (Matthew 15:29-37)

Bài Tin Mừng hôm nay, cho chúng ta thấy Chúa Giêsu đã có hai hành động mà cả hai hành động đó đều được đến qua lòng nhân hậu và từ bi của Thiên Chúa. Dân chúng và những người đang mang tất cả và đủ các thứ bệnh tật như bại liệt, xứt mẻ, đui mù, câm điếc và tất cả các thử bệnh khác…
Họ đến và ngồi dưới chân của Chúa Giêsu với lòng tin và hy vọng là Chúa sẽ cứu chữa họ được khỏi tất cả các bệnh tật. Những người này là những người đầy đau khổ, đau khổ vì tinh thần lẫn thể xác, họ đang cần những ơn lành của Chúa. Trái tim của Chúa đã cho họ, Ngài đã cứu chữa họ và ban cho họ những nhu cầu cần thiết riêng cho mỗi người, Ngài đã cho họ phục hồi sức khỏe trong thân xác lẫn tâm hồn. Họ đã ở lại với Chúa trong ba ngày mặc dù bị đói khát thực ăn phần xác, nhưng họ cảm thấy no đủ trong tinh thần vì họ đã có Chúa ở với họ. Họ không than thở với cơn đói khát của thân xác, Nhưng Chúa đã nhận thấy nhu cầu thân xác của họ và với lòng nhân từ của Ngài, nên ngài đã chủ động tìm cách ban phát của ăn thể chất  để bồi dưỡng thân xác họ.      
Hôm nay, Chúa Giêsu cũng đã nhận thấy những nhu cầu cần thiết cho thể xác và tâm hồn của chúng ta Như 2000 năm trước, Chúa Giêsu cũng có khả năng chữa lành tất cả những bệnh tật nơi chúng ta. Ngài có thể ban cho chúng ta những ơn phúc và những thứ cần thiết cho cuộc sống riêng của mỗi người tuỳ theo nhu cầu riêng của mỗi người chúng ta, Ngài cũng có thể tha thứ và cứu chữa chúng ta thoát khỏi được tất cả những tội lỗi và những mặc cảm tội lỗi đang khoả lấp trong linh hồn của chúng ta bằng hy vọng và niềm vui sống lại của Ngài, Chúng ta chỉ cần trở lại với Ngài trong niềm cảm tạ và biết ơn, trong tình yêu, trong đức tin, và sự mong muốn sức mạnh của lòng nhân hậu của Ngài sẽ tuân trào trên chúng ta để Ngài đem sức mạnh và niềm vui trọn vẹn của Ngài đến với chúng ta.
Hôm nay chúng ta đang sống trong Mùa Vọng. Chúng ta phải nên nhớ rằng Chúa Giêsu là Emmanuel, Thiên Chúa ở cùng chúng ta, và Ngài giúp ban cho chúng ta có được những nhu cầu cần thiết riêng cho mỗi người chúng ta.
 
REFLECTION
The incident described in this today's Gospel puts before us two of Jesus' acts, both of which flow from the deep sense of compassion that God has bestowed on him. The crowd that assembled about him had brought their sick, crippled, deformed, blind, mute and those beset with yet other diseases. They laid them at his feet and he cured them all. They were people suffering, people in need. His heart went out to them. He responded to their need, he gave them wholeness and health.    The crowd had been with him for three days and had had nothing to eat. He then sees their need and his compassion moves him to take the initiative. He knows they are hungry and if he dismisses them now he knows they might grow faint on their way home. And so he moves to satisfy their need for nourishment.
Jesus is as compassionate and as loving today as he was during his public ministry. He is aware of our needs as he was of the crowds' needs 2,000 years ago. Today too, Jesus has the same healing powers he had when he walked this earth. He can provide us with the material blessings we need; he can also deliver us from sin and guilt and fill us with the joy of his risen life. We need only turn to him in thanksgiving, in love and in faith, and his eager, beneficent powers will flow over us, bringing us too wholeness and health. We are in the season of Advent. We must remember that Jesus is Emmanuel, God with us, helping us in our need.
 
Wednesday of the First Week of Advent
Then he took the seven loaves and the fish, gave thanks, broke the loaves, and gave them to the disciples, who in turn gave them to the crowds. They all ate and were satisfied. They picked up the fragments left over–seven baskets full.   Matthew 15:36–37
This line concludes the second miracle of the multiplication of the loaves and fishes as told by Matthew. In this miracle, seven loaves and a few fish were multiplied to feed 4,000 men, not counting the women and children. And once everyone ate and was satisfied, seven full baskets remained.
It’s hard to underestimate the effect that this miracle had on those who were actually there. Perhaps many did not even know where the food came from. They just saw the baskets being passed, they took their fill, and passed the rest on to others. Though there are many important lessons we can take from this miracle, let’s consider one of them.
Recall that the crowds had been with Jesus for three days without food. They were amazed at Him as He taught and continually healed the sick in their presence. They were so amazed, in fact, that they showed no sign of leaving Him, despite the obvious hunger they must have been experiencing. This is a wonderful image of what we must seek to have in our interior life.
What is it that “amazes” you in life? What is it that you can do hour after hour without losing your attention? For these first disciples, it was the discovery of the very Person of Jesus that had this effect upon them. How about you? Have you ever found that the discovery of Jesus in prayer, or in the reading of Scripture, or through the witness of another, was so compelling that you became engrossed in His presence? Have you ever become so engrossed in our Lord that you thought of little else?
In Heaven, our eternity will be spent in a perpetual adoration and “amazement” of the glory of God. And we will never tire of being with Him, in awe of Him. But too often on Earth, we lose sight of the miraculous action of God in our lives and in the lives of those around us. Too often, instead, we become engrossed in sin, the effects of sin, hurt, scandal, division, hatred and those things that lead to despair.
Reflect, today, upon these first disciples of Jesus. Ponder, especially, their wonder and awe as they stayed with Him for three days without food. This draw of our Lord must take hold of you and overwhelm you so much that Jesus is the one and only central focus of your life. And when He is, all else falls into place and our Lord provides for your many other needs.
My divine Lord, I love You and desire to love You more. Fill me with a wonder and awe for You. Help me to desire You above all things and in all things. May my love of You become so intense that I find myself trusting You always. Help me, dear Lord, to make You the center of my entire life. Jesus, I trust in You.
 
Wednesday 1st week of Advent 2023
Opening Prayer: Lord Jesus, as I begin this prayer, I try to lift my heart up to you. I know you are delighted by my prayer today, and I will try to pray as best I can. That doesn’t mean I’m not lame or blind or hurting, but I’m fully confident that you will speak to me and even heal me, through the grace of prayer and the sacraments.
Encountering Christ:
1. Both Feet on the Ground: Advent lends itself to deep meditation on the Incarnation. Today, Jesus’s humanity comes out quite clearly. He walked along the seashore, as we like to do in moments of peace. He labored up a mountain, and probably sweat while doing it—as we toil when working. He felt the crush and smelled the crowd that pursued him, vying for his time and attention as our families vie for ours. Amidst our challenges, Christ does not forget us. Not only does his heart have compassion on us in our spiritual trials, but he takes into consideration our poor, beleaguered bodies as well. At times, he orders us to rest: “Just sit down!” he commanded the crowd.
2. Where in the World?: Like the crowd in the Gospel, we have also now been with Christ for these first three days of Advent. Perhaps we also feel that we have nothing to eat, that our efforts so far have been barren and that we might faint along the way to Christmas. The intense demands on our time and energy is so great that we can feel harassed or simply inadequate. With the disciples, we groan, “Where could we ever get enough bread in this deserted place to satisfy such a crowd?” Our Lord doesn’t insist that we have all of our own resources to persevere. He simply works miracles with what little we freely give him.
3. Deep Satiety: Christ gave thanks, broke the loaves, and gave them to his disciples in a manner heavily laden with Eucharistic symbolism. The Eucharist is the true food given us by God. It is existential food, which means that it gives meaning to our lives. When we eat bread, our stomachs are filled; when we eat Christ, all that we are and all that we desire is filled. The Eucharist is the solution to those persistent inner longings that we all have: longings for friendship, for love, for self-giving, for adventure, for meaning. As St. John Paul II said, “Jesus Christ is the answer to the question posed by every human life.”
Conversing with Christ: Jesus, help me to refocus on you and on the gift of your Body and Blood. Time and again I tiptoe around, tinkering with foolish things that will not satisfy my hunger for life, for truth, for meaning. Thank you for inviting me again to the mountaintop! Renew my desire to receive you in the Eucharist, so that I can feed those around me with your love.
Resolution: Lord, today by your grace I will make a visit to you in the tabernacle, or if that’s not feasible, I will make a spiritual communion. 

No comments:

Post a Comment