Saturday, June 29, 2024

Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Lẽ Kính Thánh Phêrô – Phaolô Tông Đồ

Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Lẽ Kính Thánh Phêrô – Phaolô Tông Đồ
Để thực sự trở thành một môn đệ, một tín hữu của Chúa Giêsu có ý nghĩa gì?  Bài phúc âm hôm nay cho thấy một số điều kiện đòi hỏi mà chúng ta cần phải có để được Chúa Giêsu mời gọi để làm người đối tác trong sứ mệnh cứu độ của Ngài.
Một điều kiện cần có lòng Tin để có thể hoàn toàn sự tin tưởng vào sự quan phòng của Thiên Chúa. Trong trường hợp một người nói là muốn trở thành môn đệ của Chúa. Chúa Giêsu đã nói với ông ta rằng muốn theo Chúa thỉ từ bỏ tất cả, ngay cả những điều tối thiểu cần thiết cho cuộc sống cững chẳng cần. Như việc kiếm nơi trú ẩn hang ngày cũng chẳng cần thết “on Người không có chỗ tựai đầu. “
            Điều kiện thứ hai thậm chí còn khó khăn hơn khi Chúa Giêsu nói có vẻ thô lỗ với một người có trách nhiệm chon cất người Cha. Phản ứng của Chúa Giêsu với người đàn ông này hầu như khá xúc phạm và không được nhạy cảm. Làm thế nào mà kẻ chết có thể chôn kẻ chết? Tuy nhiên, qua sự suy ngẫm thêm chúng ta bằng cách nào đó có thể thấy được cái lý do tại sao Chúa Giêsu đã nhận xét như vậy. Chúa Giêsu khuyến cáo là những xu hướng của chúng ta là tìm cách để hợp lý hóa và trì hoãn các quyết định của chúng ta như là một cách để biện minh cho hành động của chúng ta. Khi làm như vậy, chúng ta bỏ lỡ thông điệp của Chúa Giêsu, Đấng muốn thể hiện sự khẩn cấp trong việc thực hiện sứ mệnh cứu độ. Điều quan trọng là bây giờ. Có nhiều việc phải làm để công bố Tin Mừng của tình yêu và lòng thương xót của Thiên Chúa. Mặc dù chúng ta tôn trọng người chết, thời gian trần thế của họ là hơn và do đó, những gì trở nên quan trọng và cấp bách là những gì thúc đẩy cuộc sống và sự hiện diện của Chúa Giêsu ở giữa chúng ta.
            Cuối cùng, Chúa Giêsu muốn các môn đệ phải tập trung hoàn toàn vào nhiệm vụ. Chúng ta biết rất rõ là chúng ta có thể bị phân tâm rất nhiều trong những mối quan tâm và sự lo lắng trong cuộc sống. Tuy nhiên, khi những gì đang bị đe dọa trong nhiệm vụ liên quan đến sự cứu rỗi của chúng ta và đó chính là Đức Giêsu, Đấng kêu gọi chúng ta, mọi thứ khác chỉ là thứ yếu.
            Tất cả những điều kiện đã nói ở trên mô tả những thách thức mà Chúa Giêsu muốn gởi tới cho những ai muốn được theo Ngài. Những điều kiện đó quả thực là quá khó khăn và đòi hỏi chúng ta phải đồng hành với Chúa Giêsu trong sứ vụ của Ngài, nhưng hãy yên tâm phần thưởng dành cho chúng ta rất lớn. Chúng ta đã sẵn sàng để theo Chúa Giêsu Chưa? Ngài đang chờ đợi sự đáp ứng của chúng ta.
 
REFLECTION’
What does it really mean to become a disciple, a follower of Jesus? The gospel passage suggests a number of requirements when one is called by Jesus to become a partner in his mission of salvation.
One requirement is to be able to trust fully in God's providence. In the first instance of this person wanting to be a disciple, Jesus tells him that even something basic like shelter is not assured as even the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head.
The second condition is even more challenging in that Jesus seems to be rude to someone who feels the responsibility to bury his father first. His response to the man is quite insulting and insensitive. How can the dead bury the dead? Yet, it is only through further reflection that we can somehow see the reason why Jesus made such a remark. Jesus challenges our tendency to rationalize and procrastinate our decisions as our way to justify our actions. In doing so, we miss the message of Jesus who wants to show the urgency in fulfilling the mission of salvation. What is important is the now. There is much to be done to proclaim the good news of the love and mercy of God. Though we respect the dead, their earthly time is over and thus, what becomes important and urgent is what promotes life and the presence of Jesus in our midst.
Finally, Jesus wants his followers to be totally focused on the mission. People cannot be faint-hearted or wishy-washy in their commitment as their progress to be totally dedicated to the mission will be lacking and lukewarm. We know very well how we can be distracted with so many concerns and anxieties in life that are legitimate and reasonable. Yet, when what is at stake is the mission regarding our salvation and it is Jesus who calls us, everything else is secondary. There is some truth to one book entitled: "God is first. You are second. I am third."
All the aforementioned describe the challenges of Jesus to anyone who desires to become his follower. It is indeed arduous and demanding to be companions of Jesus in his mission, but rest assured the rewards are great. Are we ready to follow Jesus? He is only waiting for our response?
Jesus entered the house of Peter, and saw his mother-in-law lying in bed with a fever. He touched her hand, the fever left her, and she rose and waited on him. Matthew 8:14–15
 given the witness of Peter’s mother-in-law to answer that question. It should be noted that Jesus was on a continual mission of healing. In fact, before arriving at the house of Peter, Jesus had just healed aHow do we properly respond to the action of God in our lives? In the passage above, we are centurion’s servant. When the centurion came to Jesus stating that he was not even worthy to have Him enter his house, Jesus saw the centurion’s faith and healed his servant from a distance. After arriving at the house of Peter, we are told that many people brought to Jesus those who were possessed by demons, and Jesus healed them all. But between the healing of the servant and the healings of the many, another healing occurred. The response to this healing sets for us a wonderful example.
Peter’s mother-in-law was ill and in bed with a fever. It’s unclear just how ill she was, but the fact remains that she was ill to the point of being in bed. Notice, first, that Jesus was not even asked to heal her. Rather, He “saw” her ill and in bed, approached her of His own choosing, “touched her hand,” and she was healed.
Within the same sentence describing Jesus’ healing, we are told that “she rose and waited on him.” First of all, “she rose.” This should be seen as a symbolic depiction of what we must do when we are touched by grace. The grace of God, when it is given to us, must have the effect of causing us to rise. We rise from sin when we confess that sin and receive forgiveness, especially in the Sacrament of Reconciliation. We rise up every time God enters our lives to give us direction, clarity and hope. To rise is to be strengthened to dispel the burden that sin and confusion causes. We rise in strength, renewed and determined to go about the will of God.
After this woman rose, she “waited” on Jesus. This is the reason we rise up when touched by grace. We are not given God’s grace so that we can go back to our sin, or pursue our own ventures, or do our own will. We rise so that we can serve our Lord and His holy will. In a sense, Jesus’ actions in our lives impose upon us a holy burden. But it is a burden that is light. It’s an obligation to serve and give ourselves to our Lord to attend to Him, His holy will, and to all that He calls us to do.
Reflect, today, upon this threefold action of the Gospel. See Jesus approaching you and touching you in your prayer. Know that He comes to you not only because you pray to Him but out of His own initiative when He sees you will respond. Then consider your response. Rise from that which keeps you down.
Let God’s grace free you from the burdens you carry. And as He grants you this grace, determine to wait on Him and to serve His will alone. The service of our Lord is what we are made for, and doing so will enable us to continually receive His grace through His touch of love.
My merciful Jesus, You continually come to me, approaching me to reach out and touch me with Your grace. You desire my healing and strengthening every day. Help me to be open to all that You wish to bestow and please free me from all that keeps me down. May I rise up in service of You and Your holy will so that Your Kingdom may be built up more fully through me. Jesus, I trust in You.
 
Saturday 12th in Ordinary Time 2024
Opening Prayer: Lord God, I believe that Jesus is the Christ and your eternal Son. You sent him to establish the Church as the seed and beginning of your Kingdom. Through Peter and the apostles and the disciples you spread your Kingdom to the ends of the earth. Reign in my heart!
Encountering the Word of God
1. Peter and Paul: Peter was a fisherman who became the Rock on which Jesus built his Church; Paul was a tentmaker, who became the Apostle whom Jesus sent to the Gentiles. Peter denied Christ, but then turned and strengthened his brethren; Paul persecuted the Church, the Body of Christ, but then turned and brought the Gospel to the ends of the earth. Both men experienced Christ, responded to him generously, and ultimately gave witness to him through their martyrdom in Rome: Peter was crucified upside down on the Vatican Hill; Paul was beheaded along the Via Ostiense. Peter is a man who is deeply conscious of his sin and experiences how his sin offends his God. His weakness and failings often bring him to tears of repentant love and a deeper trust in the Lord. Paul, on the other hand, knows that he is weak, but enjoys the struggle of life. He wants to do battle, run the race, fight the good fight. He trusts not in himself, but in the love of Christ, who can conquer all things.
2. Peter’s Mission: Both Peter and Paul received special commissions from Jesus Christ. Pope Benedict XVI pointed out that Peter was given his task on three different occasions (Homily, June 29, 2009). First, in the Gospel of Matthew, Peter confesses that Jesus is the Messiah and Son of God and, in response, Jesus tells Peter that he “will be the rocky foundation on which he will build the edifice of the Church; he will have the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven to open or close it to people as he sees fit; lastly, he will be able to bind or to loose, in the sense of establishing or prohibiting whatever he deems necessary for the life of the Church” (Benedict XVI, June 7, 2006). Second, in the Gospel of Luke, during the Last Supper, Jesus tells Peter: “When you have turned again, strengthen your brethren” (Luke 22:32). These words foretell the weakness of Simon Peter, who was to deny to a maid and a servant that he knew Jesus. “Through this fall, Peter – and with him the Church of all times – has to learn that one’s own strength alone does not suffice to build and guide the Lord’s Church” (Benedict XVI, June 29, 2006). Jesus’ words also promise Peter’s conversion; Jesus will look at Peter (Luke 22:61) and bring him reconciliation and salvation. Third, in the Gospel of John, the risen Jesus entrusts his flock to Peter. He would preside over the flock in charity by following Christ and being open to the action of the Spirit. Peter, then, is the Rock who is called to strengthen his brethren and care for the flock like a shepherd. Peter’s faith began in his experience of Jesus, was founded on the mystery of Jesus’ death and resurrection, advanced by the working of the Holy Spirit, and, after his death, gave way to the beatific vision in the glory of heaven.
3. Paul’s Mission: Paul is an Apostle by vocation, by the will of God: his conversion was not the result of a development of thought or reflection, but the fruit of divine intervention, an unforeseeable, divine grace (Benedict XVI, October 25, 2006). The only thing that mattered to him was serving Jesus Christ and his Gospel. He dedicated himself to make the Gospel known, to announce the grace destined to reconcile men with God, self, and others. He never tired of proclaiming that we are justified through faith in Jesus Christ. The works of the Old Law do not justify and make us righteous. After his conversion on the road to Damascus, he “no longer lives for his own justice. He lives for Christ and with Christ: in giving of himself, he is no longer seeking and building himself up” (Benedict XVI, November 8, 2006). We are united to Christ by faith and are led by the Spirit to the fullness of love. Paul recognized Peter as one of the pillars of the Church. He respected him but did not hesitate to defend the truth of the Gospel. He confronts Peter and argues in favor of freedom from the Law: “In the light of the encounter with the Risen Christ, Paul realized that as soon as they adhered to the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Gentiles no longer needed as a hallmark of justice either circumcision or the rules that governed food and the Sabbath: Christ is our justice, and all things that conform to him are ‘just.’ No other signs are necessary in order to be just” (Benedict XVI, October 1, 2008). We are free when we conform our lives to Christ, are guided by faith, and serve our brothers.
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, enlighten my mind and guide me to know my mission and how to place the talents you gave me at the service of your Kingdom. I reaffirm my faith in you today as the Son of God. Be with me always as I walk toward eternal life with you.
Living the Word of God: The lives of Peter and Paul teach us that we each have different personalities, sensibilities, gifts, and ways of encountering Jesus and responding to him. Holiness is essentially union with God through Jesus Christ in the Holy Spirit. At the same time, our holiness is personal; as Jacques Philippe writes: “there are as many forms of holiness, and hence also ways to holiness, as there are people. For God, each person is absolutely unique. Holiness is not the realization of a given model of perfection that is identical for everyone” (Philippe, In the School of the Holy Spirit, 17-18). To be holy we need to understand that God will reveal his path to us by degrees, through the inner promptings of the Holy Spirit. Both Peter and Paul are models for us, as they both allowed themselves to be guided by the Spirit through many trials and sufferings. Both now enjoy the heavenly glory of God and intercede for us before the throne of grace.

Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ bẩy Tuần 12Thường Niên

Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ bẩy Tuần 12Thường Niên- Gn 18:1-15,  Mt 8:5-17
            “Thưa Ngài, tôi chẳng đáng Ngài vào nhà tôi, nhưng xin Ngài chỉ nói một lời là đầy tớ tôi được khỏi bệnh” Tin Mừng hôm nay, nói về tình yêu của vị chỉ huy có uy quyền, tự tin, nhưng có một đức tin khiêm nhường. Mối quan tâm sâu sắc của ông đối với tôi tớ của ông, Ông rất lo lắng về người tôi tớ của mình, và trước cử chỉ khiêm tốn (thấp hèn) khi ông ta đến Chúa Giêsu để xin cứu chưa cho người đầy tớ của ông, Vị chỉ huy này tự nhận thấy thân phận của mình thấp hèn trước mặt Chúa và cảm thấy bản thân mình bất xứng, ông thể hiện đức tin của mình trước mặt Chúa Giêsu và trước mặt tất cả những người có mặt, Chính vì đức tin và tấm lòng khiêm nhường đó mà Chúa Giêsu đã hứa chữa lành cho người đầy tớ của ông ta. Chúng ta có thể tự hỏi điều gì thúc đẩy Chúa Giêsu đã làm cho phép lạ đê cứu ngươi đấy tớ của ông này. Chúng ta hay thường cầu xin Chúa nhưng ít khi được chúa ban ơn cho những gì mình xin, mặc dù chúng ta biết Ngài là luôn luôn lắng nghe!  Vậy, tại sao Chúa không ban cho chúng ta những gì chúng ta xin?
            Có phải là chúng ta đã cầu xin Chúa không đúng cách, như cách cầu xin của vị chỉ huy trên đã làm ? Lời cầu nguyện của ông không ích kỷ, nhưng rất khiêm nhường, tỏ lòng biết thương yêu người dưới quyền và tự tin. Thánh Phêrô Crysologus nói: “Sức mạnh của tình yêu không xem xét khả năng (...). Tình yêu không phân biệt cũng không cân nhắc, tình yêu không cần hiểu lý do, Tình yêu không từ chối trước khi bất khả, cũng không dừng bước trước những khó khăn đe dọa”. Đó có phải là những lời cầu nguyện của chúng ta?
            “Tôi chẳng đáng Chúa vào nhà của tôi  ...” (Mt 08:08). Đây là câu trả lời của vị chỉ huy, Chúng ta có cảm thấy thế nào khi nghe một người chỉ huy quân đội có bao nhiêu uy quyền trong tay mà nói với Chúa một câu như thế này? Niềm tin của chúng ta có được như thế? Thánh Maximus nói: “Chỉ có đức tin mới có thể giải thích bí ẩn này. Đức tin đúng là kiến thức, là sự hiểu biết sâu rộng. Đức tin là các căn nguyên vượt qua tầm hiểu biết của con người, vì đức tin thực sự làm cho chúng ta những điều vượt quá trí tuệ và sự hiểu biết”. Nếu đức tin của chúng ta được như vậy, Chúng ta sẽ chỉ cần nghe: “Con cứ về đi! con tin thế nào thì được như vậy! “Và ngay giờ đó, người đầy tớ được khỏi bệnh. »(Mt 08:13
 
Meditation:
What kind of faith and trust does the Lord Jesus want you to place in him? In Jesus’ time the Jews hated the Romans because they represented everything the Jews stood against – including pagan beliefs and idol worship, immoral practices such as abortion and infanticide, and the suppression of the Israelites' claim to be a holy nation governed solely by God's law. It must have been a remarkable sight for the Jewish residents of Capernaum to see Jesus’ conversing with an officer of the Roman army. Why did Jesus not only warmly receive a Roman centurion but praise him as a model of faith and confidence in God? In the Roman world the position of centurion was very important. He was an officer in charge of a hundred soldiers. In a certain sense, he was the backbone of the Roman army, the cement which held the army together. Polybius, an ancient write, describes what a centurion should be: "They must not be so much venturesome seekers after danger as men who can command, steady in action, and reliable; they ought not to be over-anxious to rush into the fight, but when hard pressed, they must be ready to hold their ground, and die at their posts."
            The centurion who approached Jesus was not only courageous, but faith-filled as well. He risked the ridicule of his cronies by seeking help from an itinerant preacher from Galilee, and well as mockery from the Jews. Nonetheless, he approached Jesus with confidence and humility. He was an extraordinary man because he loved his slave. In the Roman world slaves were treated like animals rather than people. The centurion was also an extraordinary man of faith. He wanted Jesus to heal his beloved slave. Jesus commends him for his faith and immediately grants him his request.
            Are you willing to suffer ridicule in the practice of your faith? And when you need help, do you approach the Lord Jesus with expectant faith?  “Heavenly Father, you sent us your Son Jesus that we might be freed from the tyranny of sin and death. Increase my faith in the power of your saving word and give me freedom to love and serve others with generosity and mercy as you have loved me.”
 
Saturday of the Twelfth Week in Ordinary Time
Jesus entered the house of Peter, and saw his mother-in-law lying in bed with a fever. He touched her hand, the fever left her, and she rose and waited on him. Matthew 8:14–15
How do we properly respond to the action of God in our lives? In the passage above, we are given the witness of Peter’s mother-in-law to answer that question. It should be noted that Jesus was on a continual mission of healing. In fact, before arriving at the house of Peter, Jesus had just healed a centurion’s servant. When the centurion came to Jesus stating that he was not even worthy to have Him enter his house, Jesus saw the centurion’s faith and healed his servant from a distance. After arriving at the house of Peter, we are told that many people brought to Jesus those who were possessed by demons, and Jesus healed them all. But between the healing of the servant and the healings of the many, another healing occurred. The response to this healing sets for us a wonderful example.
Peter’s mother-in-law was ill and in bed with a fever. It’s unclear just how ill she was, but the fact remains that she was ill to the point of being in bed. Notice, first, that Jesus was not even asked to heal her. Rather, He “saw” her ill and in bed, approached her of His own choosing, “touched her hand,” and she was healed.
Within the same sentence describing Jesus’ healing, we are told that “she rose and waited on him.” First of all, “she rose.” This should be seen as a symbolic depiction of what we must do when we are touched by grace. The grace of God, when it is given to us, must have the effect of causing us to rise. We rise from sin when we confess that sin and receive forgiveness, especially in the Sacrament of Reconciliation. We rise up every time God enters our lives to give us direction, clarity and hope. To rise is to be strengthened to dispel the burden that sin and confusion causes. We rise in strength, renewed and determined to go about the will of God.
After this woman rose, she “waited” on Jesus. This is the reason we rise up when touched by grace. We are not given God’s grace so that we can go back to our sin, or pursue our own ventures, or do our own will. We rise so that we can serve our Lord and His holy will. In a sense, Jesus’ actions in our lives impose upon us a holy burden. But it is a burden that is light. It’s an obligation to serve and give ourselves to our Lord to attend to Him, His holy will, and to all that He calls us to do.
Reflect, today, upon this threefold action of the Gospel. See Jesus approaching you and touching you in your prayer. Know that He comes to you not only because you pray to Him but out of His own initiative when He sees you will respond. Then consider your response. Rise from that which keeps you down. Let God’s grace free you from the burdens you carry. And as He grants you this grace, determine to wait on Him and to serve His will alone. The service of our Lord is what we are made for, and doing so will enable us to continually receive His grace through His touch of love.
My merciful Jesus, You continually come to me, approaching me to reach out and touch me with Your grace. You desire my healing and strengthening every day. Help me to be open to all that You wish to bestow and please free me from all that keeps me down. May I rise up in service of You and Your holy will so that Your Kingdom may be built up more fully through me. Jesus, I trust in You.
 
Saturday 12th in Ordinary Time 2024
Opening Prayer: Lord God, I believe that Jesus is the Christ and your eternal Son. You sent him to establish the Church as the seed and beginning of your Kingdom. Through Peter and the apostles and the disciples you spread your Kingdom to the ends of the earth. Reign in my heart!
Encountering the Word of God
1. Peter and Paul: Peter was a fisherman who became the Rock on which Jesus built his Church; Paul was a tentmaker, who became the Apostle whom Jesus sent to the Gentiles. Peter denied Christ, but then turned and strengthened his brethren; Paul persecuted the Church, the Body of Christ, but then turned and brought the Gospel to the ends of the earth. Both men experienced Christ, responded to him generously, and ultimately gave witness to him through their martyrdom in Rome: Peter was crucified upside down on the Vatican Hill; Paul was beheaded along the Via Ostiense. Peter is a man who is deeply conscious of his sin and experiences how his sin offends his God. His weakness and failings often bring him to tears of repentant love and a deeper trust in the Lord. Paul, on the other hand, knows that he is weak, but enjoys the struggle of life. He wants to do battle, run the race, fight the good fight. He trusts not in himself, but in the love of Christ, who can conquer all things.
2. Peter’s Mission: Both Peter and Paul received special commissions from Jesus Christ. Pope Benedict XVI pointed out that Peter was given his task on three different occasions (Homily, June 29, 2009). First, in the Gospel of Matthew, Peter confesses that Jesus is the Messiah and Son of God and, in response, Jesus tells Peter that he “will be the rocky foundation on which he will build the edifice of the Church; he will have the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven to open or close it to people as he sees fit; lastly, he will be able to bind or to loose, in the sense of establishing or prohibiting whatever he deems necessary for the life of the Church” (Benedict XVI, June 7, 2006). Second, in the Gospel of Luke, during the Last Supper, Jesus tells Peter: “When you have turned again, strengthen your brethren” (Luke 22:32). These words foretell the weakness of Simon Peter, who was to deny to a maid and a servant that he knew Jesus. “Through this fall, Peter – and with him the Church of all times – has to learn that one’s own strength alone does not suffice to build and guide the Lord’s Church” (Benedict XVI, June 29, 2006). Jesus’ words also promise Peter’s conversion; Jesus will look at Peter (Luke 22:61) and bring him reconciliation and salvation. Third, in the Gospel of John, the risen Jesus entrusts his flock to Peter. He would preside over the flock in charity by following Christ and being open to the action of the Spirit. Peter, then, is the Rock who is called to strengthen his brethren and care for the flock like a shepherd. Peter’s faith began in his experience of Jesus, was founded on the mystery of Jesus’ death and resurrection, advanced by the working of the Holy Spirit, and, after his death, gave way to the beatific vision in the glory of heaven.
3. Paul’s Mission: Paul is an Apostle by vocation, by the will of God: his conversion was not the result of a development of thought or reflection, but the fruit of divine intervention, an unforeseeable, divine grace (Benedict XVI, October 25, 2006). The only thing that mattered to him was serving Jesus Christ and his Gospel. He dedicated himself to make the Gospel known, to announce the grace destined to reconcile men with God, self, and others. He never tired of proclaiming that we are justified through faith in Jesus Christ. The works of the Old Law do not justify and make us righteous. After his conversion on the road to Damascus, he “no longer lives for his own justice. He lives for Christ and with Christ: in giving of himself, he is no longer seeking and building himself up” (Benedict XVI, November 8, 2006). We are united to Christ by faith and are led by the Spirit to the fullness of love. Paul recognized Peter as one of the pillars of the Church. He respected him but did not hesitate to defend the truth of the Gospel. He confronts Peter and argues in favor of freedom from the Law: “In the light of the encounter with the Risen Christ, Paul realized that as soon as they adhered to the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Gentiles no longer needed as a hallmark of justice either circumcision or the rules that governed food and the Sabbath: Christ is our justice, and all things that conform to him are ‘just.’ No other signs are necessary in order to be just” (Benedict XVI, October 1, 2008). We are free when we conform our lives to Christ, are guided by faith, and serve our brothers.
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, enlighten my mind and guide me to know my mission and how to place the talents you gave me at the service of your Kingdom. I reaffirm my faith in you today as the Son of God. Be with me always as I walk toward eternal life with you.
Living the Word of God: The lives of Peter and Paul teach us that we each have different personalities, sensibilities, gifts, and ways of encountering Jesus and responding to him. Holiness is essentially union with God through Jesus Christ in the Holy Spirit. At the same time, our holiness is personal; as Jacques Philippe writes: “there are as many forms of holiness, and hence also ways to holiness, as there are people. For God, each person is absolutely unique. Holiness is not the realization of a given model of perfection that is identical for everyone” (Philippe, In the School of the Holy Spirit, 17-18). To be holy we need to understand that God will reveal his path to us by degrees, through the inner promptings of the Holy Spirit. Both Peter and Paul are models for us, as they both allowed themselves to be guided by the Spirit through many trials and sufferings. Both now enjoy the heavenly glory of God and intercede for us before the throne of grace.
 
 
Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ bẩy Tuần 12Thường Niên- Gn 18:1-15Mt 8:5-17
Lời Nguyện: Lạy Chúa Giêsu, khi chúng con bước vào giờ cầu nguyện này, chúng con xin Chúa ban cho chúng con có được một đức tin sâu sắc hơn và nồng nhiệt hơn vào Chúa. Đối với Chúa, tất cả mọi thứ đều có thể; biến đổi và chữa lành vết thương của trái tim chúng con.
Gặp gỡ Chúa Kitô:
            Đến gần Chúa Giê-su:
“Một người sĩ quan quân đội Lamã đến gần Chúa Giêsu và cầu xin Ngài.” Chúa Giêsu lluôn dễ tiếp cận. người sĩ quan này không ngại đến với Chúa và chúng ta cũng vậy. Sự hiện thân này chỉ dạy cho chúng ta bài học này là Thiên Chúa đã trở thành người để Ngài có thể dễ tiếp cận con con người chúng ta hơn, Giữa chúng ta và Thiên Chúa không khoảng cách xa vời nữa. Chúng ta là con cái của Ngài, không những chỉ là những người dân sống trên trái đất.
            Khi còn nhỏ, chúng ta có đặc ân đến với Chúa Giêsu với bất cứ điều gì chúng ta có trong lòng. Vậy tại sao đôi khi chúng ta lại ngần ngại không mang đến cho Chúa bất cứ điều gì trong tâm hồn và lòng trí của chúng ta, dù lớn hay nhỏ? Một đứa trẻ có thể ngụy trang được nhu cầu chăm sóc, yêu thương hoặc tình cảm của mình không? Vì thế chúng ta cũng không nên dấu diếu Thiên Chúa những gì gì trong lòng của chúng ta.
            Những Lời Vượt Thời Gian:
“Lạy Chúa, con không xứng đáng để Chúa vào nhà của con; nhưng xin Chúa phán mộ lời… ”Bằng những lời này, vị sĩ quan Lamã đã tỏ lộ đức tin của ông ta vào Chúa Giê-su và cho ông ta có uy quyền đối với những người khác, nhưng ông ta không tự phụ, mà còn khiêm tốn. Ông tin rằng Chúa Giê-su có thể chữa lành người tôi tớ của ông chỉ bằng một lời nói. Ông ta không cho rằng ông ta xứng đáng để Chúa Giêsu đến nhà mình; Ông ta không phải là người Do Thái mà là lính Lamã mà dân Do Thái rất ghét sợ. Chúa Giê-su đã nhận ra những đức tin và lòng khiêm tốn này nơi anh ta: “Quả thật, Ta bảo các ngươi, Ta không thấy một lòng tin mạnh mẽ như vậy trong Israel.”.
Chúng ta có đức tin và lòng khiêm tốn này khi chúng ta nói chuyện với Chúa Giê-su không?
            Quyền năng của Đấng Christ:
“Ngài trừ thần dữ bằng một lời nói và chữa lành hết mọi người ốm đau." Chúa Giê-su có thể hoạt động trong cuộc sống của những người có đức tin và lòng khiêm tốn. Khi chúng ta phó thác mọi sự cho Chúađể Ngàihoàn toà làm chủ cuộc sống của chúng ta, thì Ngài có thể làm những điều đáng kinh ngạc trong cuộc sống của chúng ta. Không chỉ chữa lành bệnh tật về thể chất của chúng ta, mà Chúa Giêsu còn muốn chữa lành chúng ta về mặt tinh thần vì tâm hồn của chúng ta là nơi thường xuyên bị tổn thương nhiểu nhất.  
            Điều quan trọng là chúng ta phải mở lòng đón nhận sự chữa lành hoàn toàn của Ngài, để nhờ lời Ngài mà chúng ta thoát khỏi mọi hình thức trói buộc hoặc những thói quen xấu, và giúp chúng ta được khả năng biết yêu thương và phục vụ Ngài một cách tự do. Tất cả chúng ta cần phải phó thác các khía cạnh trong cuộc sống của mình cho Chúa Giêsu.    
            Đối thoại với Đấng Christ:
Lạy Chúa, hơn bất cứ điều gì, Ngài muốn phục hồi con để kết hợp hoàn hảo với chính Ngài. Con cũng muốn điều đó. Xin giúp con gạt bỏ niềm kiêu hãnh của mình sang một bên và mở rộng trái tim hoàn toàn đón nhận sự hàn gắn của Chúa để con có thể cảm nghiệm được trọn vẹn tình yêu trong Chúa.
  Lạy Chúa, hôm nay nhờ ân điển của Chúa, con sẽ thực hiện một hành động chân thành của đức tin, đầu hàng một điều gì đó rất khó khăn đối với con.
 
 
Saturday 12th in Ordinary Time
Opening Prayer: Dear Jesus, as I enter this time of prayer, I ask you to grant me a deeper and more ardent faith in you. For you, all things are possible; transform and heal the wounds of my heart. 
Encountering Christ:
Approaching Jesus: “A centurion approached him and appealed to him.” Jesus is always approachable. The centurion wasn’t afraid to come to him and neither should we be. The incarnation teaches us just this lesson. God became man so that he could be more accessible, not distant. We are his children, not simply land-dwellers. As children, we have the privilege of coming to Jesus with whatever is on our heart. So why do we sometimes hesitate to bring him whatever is on our mind, on our heart, big or small? Does a child disguise his or her need for care, love, or affection? Nor should we.
Timeless Words: “Lord, I am not worthy to have you enter under my roof; only say the word…” By these words, the centurion revealed that he had faith in Jesus and that, despite his authority over others, he wasn’t presumptuous, but humble. He believed that Jesus could heal by saying only a word. He didn’t presume that he was worthy to have Jesus come to his home; he was a non-Jew. Jesus recognized these qualities in him: “In no one in Israel have I found such faith.” Do we have this kind of faith and humility when we talk to Jesus?
The Power of Christ: “He drove out the spirits by a word and cured all the sick.” Jesus can work in the lives of those with faith and humility. When we surrender to him and get out of the way–as it were–he can do amazing things in our lives. More than just healing our physical ailments, Jesus wants to heal us spiritually because that’s where the greatest damage is all-too-often present. It is important that we open ourselves up to his complete healing, so that at his word we are free from all forms of bondage or addiction, and are made capable of loving and serving him in freedom. We all need to surrender aspects of our lives to Jesus. What holds us back today? 
Conversing with Christ: My Lord, more than anything, you want to restore me to perfect union with yourself. I want that too. Help me to put aside my pride and to open my heart fully to your healing touch so that I may experience the fullness of your love and divine friendship. 
Resolution: Lord, today by your grace I will make a sincere act of faith, surrendering something very challenging for me.
 
Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ bẩy Tuần 12Thường Niên
Đôi khi chúng tôi nghĩ rằng các vị tiên tri thời Cựu ước thường hay mang những lời tiêu cực tới cho dân Do Thái, nhưng những lời huấn dụ gay gắt của Thiên Chúa qua các tiên tri thường là những lời cảnh báo luôn đi kèm với những lời khuyến khích họ sữa đổi để tìm đến niềm hy vọng trong sự tha thứ của Thiên Chúa.  Vì Thiên Chúa không thể quên được chính mình và những thứ thuộc về Ngài, 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 bao giờ hết,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 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 giờ 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 chẳg 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 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 đổ ra ngoài hết…..
            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 mớ 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 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.
 
Reflection:
"Is there anything that is impossible for the God? (Gen 18: 14) This was the reply of the Lord to Sarah's skepticism that she would bear a child in her old age. Time and time the Lord has shown his faithfulness and power over things that do not seem humanly possible. Miracles of healing, conversion, how events conspire resulting in outcomes that only he could have wrought.  
 Let us not underestimate God and put limits on his power to surprise and amaze us. Let the words of Scripture reassure us of his infinite love for his people. As one develops the habit of thumbing through his living Word, we get to know our Lord more and more. And we are ever more convinced that nothing is too marvelous for him to do!  
     Harassed with everyday cares? Somehow, it all works out, we are able to sleep the sleep of the just, and in the morning, we are ready to face another day. Saddled with problems? The Lord will send people, veritable "angels" who can lift the burden for and along with us. Scared of a medical procedure? Let your prayer or mantra be, "Only you, O Lord, suffices," as St. Teresa of Avila affirmed. The Lord is above any pain, any trial that can be inflicted on us in this world. What a marvelous God we have!

Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ Sáu tuần thứ 12 Thường Niên

Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ Sáu tuần thứ 12 Thường Niên

Qua bài Tin Mừng hôm nay, chúng ta thấy những cách mà Chúa Giêsu đã đối xử với mọi người khác nhau, Trong câu chuyện hôm nay về người bệnh phong cùi, Theo luật Do Thái thì người mắc bệnh này không được phép đến gần bất cứ người Do Thái nào vì sẽ gây ô uế cho người đó và người đó phải được thanh tầy trước bước vào đèn thờ. Như những bài Tin Mừng thì Chúa Giêsu đã không ngại ngùng đến gần họ, và sẵn sàng chữa lành bệnh phong cùi của họ. Điều trái ngược với cách thức mà Ngài đã phản ứng với người cha của cậu bé bị quỷ ám (Mc 9:23) khi người ấy nói với Ngài "Lạy Chúa, Chúa có thể làm được bất cứ điều gì, xin thương xót chúng tôi và giúp chúng tôi." Chúa Giêsu có lẽ đã trả lời phần nào đột ngột hay ít nhất một cách nghiêm nghị: “Nếu có thể!... mọi sự đều là có thể cho người tin!"  Tức thì cha đứa bé kêu lên mà nói: "Tôi tin! Nhưng xin hãy đáp cứu lòng tin yếu kém của tôi!" (Mc 9:25).
            Những phản ứng khác nhau của Chúa Giêsu cũng cho chúng ta thấy những cách khác nhau trong những lời, lòng tin và cách cầu xin của những người đã xin Chúa thực hiện những yêu cầu của họ, Những người bệnh phong cùi đã không dám nói bất cứ điều gì vì dám đặt câu hỏi về khả năng của Chúa, nhưng người bệnh phong cùi này đã biết phó thác và đặt tất cả niềm tin tưởng vào sự quan phòng của Chúa Giêsu. Còn người đàn ông kia đã không đến với Chúa để cầu xin cho chính mình mà đến để cầu xin cho người con yêu dấu của mình, trong những lúc mà ông ta đang tuyệt vọng và đang tìm kiếm sự cưu giúp.
            Trong sự tuyệt vọng của ông ta, ông ta đã dùng những lời gần như đay nghiến chính mình. nhưng trong thực tế, trong thăm tâm của ông ta có lẽ đã không có ý như thế.  Do đó chúng ta đã được dạy để cầu nguyện với lòng khiêm tốn, kiên nhẫn, bền bĩ, và dịu dàng như là dấu hiệu của niềm tin đó cho phép chúng ta đón nhận và tận hưởng những ân sủng của Thiên Chúa. Lạy Chúa Giêsu, theo như Thiên ý và ân sũng của Chúa, Xin Chúa tẩy sạch chúng ta sạch mọi tội lỗi.
 
Reflection:
It is instructive to consider the different ways in which Jesus deals with people. In this story of the leper, recounted by Matthew, Mark and Luke. Jesus responds gently and promptly to the leper's indirect request for healing.  This contrasts with the way in which he reacted to the father of the boy possessed by a demon (Mark 9:23) who said: “If you can do anything, have pity on us and help us.” Jesus answered somewhat abruptly perhaps or at least sternly: “‘If you can?’ Everything is possible to anyone who has faith. ‘Immediately the boy’s father cried out,’ I do have faith.  Help the little faith I have!’”
Jesus’ different reactions also reveal to us the different ways in which the two men made their request. The leper did not say anything to appear to question Jesus’ ability to cure him but left everything to Jesus’ good will. The other man was not making a request for himself but for his son and was obviously desperately looking for help. His desperation added a sharpness to his words which he perhaps did not intend. We are thus taught to pray with humility and patience and gentleness as signs of the faith which allows us to receive and enjoy God’s graces. Lord Jesus, according to Your gracious will, cleanse us of all sin.
 
Friday of the Twelfth Week in Ordinary Time
When Jesus came down from the mountain, great crowds followed him. And then a leper approached, did him homage, and said, “Lord, if you wish, you can make me clean.” Matthew 8:1–4
To do homage to another is to publicly express reverence and respect. This is what this leper did to Jesus. He “did him homage.” But the leper went even further. He also expressed his certain faith that Jesus could cure him if He wished to do so. And Jesus did desire this. Jesus stretched out His hand to touch the leper and pronounced the words, “I will do it. Be made clean.” And with that, the leper was cleansed.
The first thing to note in this passage is that Jesus “touched” the leper. This was a forbidden practice, since lepers were unclean, and touching them could spread their disease. But Jesus broke the norm and touched the man, revealing to him his innate dignity.
It’s interesting to consider the question: Who paid whom a greater act of homage? Was the act of homage shown by the leper greater? Or the act of touching and cleansing the leper greater? Though we need not compare these two acts, it is helpful to reflect upon the profound fact that Jesus did show a form of homage to this unclean leper.
As was said above, to do homage to another is to publicly express reverence and respect to them. Without a doubt, Jesus did just this. He not only honored the leper by His touch and healing, but He publicly expressed His love and respect for this man through this act.
Of course, the homage we owe to God is unique. It is the homage of worship. We must bow down before Him, surrendering our lives in total abandonment and trust. We must honor Him as God and express our love accordingly. But, in addition to Jesus showing His almighty power by this miracle, He also sets for us an example of how we must treat others. Every person, because they are made in the image and likeness of God, deserves our utmost respect, and they deserve to receive that respect in a public way. We must continually seek to honor and respect others and express that honor and respect for others to see. This is especially difficult when the person we are called to show respect for is considered by others as “unclean.” The leper is only a symbol of the many types of people whom the world considers unclean and unworthy. Criminals, the poor, the confused, the sinner, the homeless, the political opponent and every other person in our world deserves our utmost respect and reverence. Doing so does not justify their sin; rather, it cuts through the surface and looks at their innate dignity.
Reflect, today, upon the act of homage done by this leper to Jesus. And then reflect upon the act of homage Jesus offers this leper by publicly confirming his innate dignity. Who in your life is represented by this leper? Who is “unclean” because of the condition of their life, the sin they commit, or the public stigma they have? Whom is God calling you to reach out and touch with love and respect, for others to see? Seek out the leper in your life and do not be afraid to imitate this holy act of homage exemplified by our Lord.
My holy Lord, You are worthy of all adoration, glory and homage. You and You alone deserve our worship. Help me to continually discover Your hidden presence in the lives of those around me. Help me, especially, to see You in the leper of our day. May my love and respect for them flow from my love for You and become an imitation of Your act of love for all. Jesus, I trust in You.
 
Friday 12th Ordinary Time 2024
Opening Prayer: Lord God, I wish to be made clean with all my heart. You sent your Son to cleanse me and wash away my sins with his blood. He is the true Lamb sacrificed for our sins. He is my brother and Redeemer, who paid my debt of sin and brought me home to you.
Encountering the Word of God
1. The First of Ten Great Works of the New Moses: Matthew 8 begins the narrative section of Book Two of Matthew’s Gospel. While Book One, Matthew 3-7, announced the Kingdom, Book Two, Matthew 8-11, concerns the establishment of the Kingdom. It covers Jesus’ miracles and his commissioning and instruction of the twelve apostles. Jesus, the New Moses, comes down from the mountain after his sermon to perform the first of ten great works and signs that reveal the nature of the kingdom he has announced. The 10 great works of the New Moses recall the 10 plagues the old Moses mediated to Egypt. Jesus first cures a leper, who exhibits great faith in Jesus and his divine power. Jesus is not made ritually unclean by touching the leper; rather Jesus’ holiness transforms the uncleanliness of the leper and makes the Leper clean. In his Incarnation, the Son is not made unclean by assuming our human nature. He became like us in all things but sin. He was not contaminated by his solidarity with us. Through his passion, Jesus transforms our human nature, he merits for us the Spiritual Bath that will cleanse us of our sins. We are made clean in the waters of Baptism because it is our share in the action by which our human nature was transformed, namely the passion, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
2. Liturgical Worship in the New Kingdom: Jesus announces his kingdom with a call to repentance. Through the gift of God’s grace, we turn from a life of sin and enter into communion with God. Christ, the high priest taken from among men, has made us a new people, a kingdom of priests. Jesus tells the leper to show himself to the priest so that he can be reintroduced into the community of worship. Through our Baptism and our Confirmation we are introduced into the Liturgy of God’s Kingdom: we now share in the thanksgiving sacrifice of the Son of God; we truly worship the Father through the Son and in the Holy Spirit.
3. From the Babylonian Exile to Jesus: In the First Reading, King Zedekiah’s rebellion against Nebuchadnezzar, the King of Babylon, led to the destruction of the city of Jerusalem, the palace of the king, the Temple of the Lord, and the walls of the city in 587 B.C. Jeremiah prophesied that the exile of Judah in Babylon would last for seventy years: “When seventy years are completed for Babylon, I will visit you, and I will fulfill to you my promise and bring you back to this place” (Jeremiah 29:10-11). God promised to restore Israel and give them a Davidic king to establish peace and justice in the land. What is more, “the restored reign of the Davidic king is joined, in Jeremiah's prophecy, to an inner transformation that accomplishes a new passover: ‘Behold, the days are coming, says the Lord, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah, not like the covenant which I made with their fathers when I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt, my covenant which they broke, though I was their husband, says the Lord’ (31:31-32). Israel’s death will be followed by resurrection” (Levering, Ezra & Nehemiah, 41). King Nebuchadnezzar will have a dream of a statue and the prophet Daniel will have a dream of four beasts that symbolize the succession of four kingdoms, leading to the establishment of the Kingdom of God on earth. The golden head and the lion represent the Neo-Babylonian empire (612-539 B.C.), the silver chest and the bear represent the Medo-Persian empire (539-331 B.C.), the bronze torso and the leopard represent the Greek empire (331-63 B.C.), and the iron legs and ten-horned beast represent the Roman empire. During the time of the Roman Empire, God sent his Son to establish his Kingdom, a Kingdom which will never be destroyed.
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, you have made me clean through Baptism to worship you in Spirit and in truth. I now share in your death and resurrection and am a member of your Kingdom. Extend your reign in my heart, in my family, and in my community.
Living the Word of God: What do I need Jesus to make clean in my life? Where is there leprosy that only Jesus can heal in and through the Sacrament of Reconciliation?
 
Friday 12th Ordinary Time
Opening Prayer: Lord, I ask you to touch my heart that I may pray for what I ought, be made clean, and be filled with your love.
Encountering Christ:
Homage: “A leper approached, did him homage...” This poor man was totally alone and, as a leper, he was forbidden to come within 6 feet (4 cubits) of another person. He was also required to announce he was unclean so that no one would approach him. How humiliating for the poor suffering man. Yet, in this case, the leper broke all the rules to approach Jesus and do him homage. We rarely, if ever, have to make this kind of sacrifice to offer God praise and worship. We have multiple options for daily Mass nearby, adoration chapels, and access to the sacraments. May we never take for granted the myriad of opportunities we have been given to do homage to the Lord. 
Do You Wish It? “Lord, if you wish, you can make me clean.” This leper desperately wanted to be cured, yet he approached the Lord in homage and asked, “If you wish.” What humility! Here is a lesson for us. When we pray, we don’t tell God what we want or think is best. Instead, we totally surrender to his will for us. Do we want what God wants for us or what we want? Pope Benedict XVI once was asked, “How does the Pope pray?” “The pope,” he said, “is a beggar before God!” A true beggar trusts totally in God’s benevolent will. 
Be Made Clean: It seems in this passage that the leper’s will was perfectly aligned with God’s will. He was made clean. We all want a resounding answer of “yes” to our prayer, but we need to be completely opened to how God wishes to answer us. We let God be God, knowing that he sees things much more clearly than we ever will. “To accept whatever, he gives. And to give whatever it takes, with a big smile. This is the surrender to God” (St. Teresa of Calcutta). Will we let him do it his way?
Conversing with Christ: Lord, I do want to be cleansed of all sin and attachment to this world but I also recognize my struggle to give you complete control. I want what you want, Lord! I surrender myself completely to your merciful hands.
Resolution: Lord, today by your grace I will be mindful of surrendering all my petitions and desires completely into God’s hands without condition.