Suy
Niệm bài đọc Thứ Ba Tuần thứ 28 Thường Niên
Trong bài đọc thứ Nhất hôm nay, Thánh Phaolô nhắc nhở Giáo Đoàn Rôma rằng họ được cứu bởi vì họ có niềm tin vào Chúa Kitô và Tin Mừng. Thánh Phao lô cũng nói rằng chúng ta biết được Thiên Chúa là do bởi những công trình mà Chúa đã tạo ra trong thế giớ và trong cuộc sống của chúng ta..
Trong bài Tin Mừnh, Chúa Giêsu đã khiển trách những người Pharisêu
vì lòng đạo đức giả của họ, họ thờ phượng Thiên Cha bằng
môi miệng trong nhiều quy tắc: họ có hàng đống
luật lệ như nhỡng
toa thuốc vô tận về sự thanh tẩy và sự sạch sẽ của
họ với những nghi thức bề ngoài như
việc chuẩn bị thức ăn và cách ăn uống. Tuy
nhiên, lòng của họ thì "đầy tham
lam và ác độc."
Điều quan trọng thực
sự chính là những gì chúng
ta đang làm bằng tất cả trái tim, lòng nhiệt huyết
và cuộc sống của chúng ta.
Lạy Chúa, xin giúp chúng con hiểu biết về Chúa nhiều ơn
thêm và có ược tấm
lòng quảng ại và từ bi. Xin Chúa giúp
chúng con lạy Chúa, đừng bao giờ để con đi tìm lỗi của người
khác nhưng
giúp chúng biết yêu thương lại. Xin Chúa giúp
chúng con biết thông cảm
và không xét đoán người khác trong động cơ và hành động của họ. Xin Chúa dạy
chúng con biết khiêm tốn và rộng lượng.
REFLECTION
Tuesday 28th Ordinary Time:
In the first reading Paul reminds the
Church in Rome that they are saved by their belief in Christ and the Good News.
Paul also says that we know God from his works, the world he had created..
In the Gospel reading Jesus reprimands the Pharisees for their hypocrisy
in their many rules: they have endless prescriptions about ritual purity and
cleanliness, about preparing food and eating. Yet they are "full of greed
and evil." What is truly important is what we are in our hearts and inmost
being.
Lord, help me to become more understanding and compassionate. Help me, Lord, not to be a fault-finder but a loving person instead. Help me to be discerning and yet not judgmental of others in their motives and actions. Teach me to be humble and generous.
Tuesday of the Twenty-Eighth Week in
Ordinary Time
After Jesus had spoken, a Pharisee invited him to dine at his home. He entered and reclined at table to eat. The Pharisee was amazed to see that he did not observe the prescribed washing before the meal. The Lord said to him, “Oh you Pharisees! Although you cleanse the outside of the cup and the dish, inside you are filled with plunder and evil. You fools!” Luke 11:37–40
It’s hard to imagine Jesus calling someone a fool. But that’s exactly what He did. This Pharisee had just finished listening to Jesus give a series of teachings and then invited our Lord to His home for dinner in an apparent gesture of kindness. But as the passage unfolds, it’s clear that this Pharisee is no friend of Jesus. Instead, his hospitality and kindness are a cloak for the evil within his soul.
Why does Jesus respond so fiercely, calling the Pharisee a fool? Because this Pharisee is filled with hypocrisy. His exterior actions do not flow from a heart filled with charity and faith. Instead, his exterior actions are a show. He is a fraud. He, like many of the Pharisees, was very concerned with various external rituals, such as scrupulously washing his hands before he ate. He believed that doing so was a sign of his holiness and closeness to God. But it wasn’t. His heart was one that was filled with judgment and self-righteousness. He looked down on others and elevated himself. In doing so, he deceived others and even deceived himself.
The central message we must take from this is that we must diligently focus upon that which is in our hearts. Our hearts, our interior life, must be blooming with love of God and others. We must place all of our efforts on cultivating a sincere life of virtue within. This is done by prayer and humility. Humility will open our eyes to see the truth of who we are. Prayer will strengthen us to change as we see that which needs to be changed within. Only then, when we see clearly the truth of who we are and prayerfully rely upon grace obtained by prayer, will we be able to become people of true integrity and holiness. And only then will our interior holiness be made manifest externally in our actions.
Reflect, today, upon these powerful words of Jesus: “You fools!” Don’t be offended by these words; they are words of love from our Lord. They are His fierce attempt to wake this Pharisee up and lead him away from his hypocrisy. Listen to these words as if they were also spoken to you. Every one of us can humbly benefit from this loving chastisement from Jesus. Every one of us needs to humbly be transformed more fully interiorly. Let Jesus’ words speak to you and reveal to you the ways that you need to change. Perhaps your pride has led you to an interior practice of judgment of others. Perhaps it has blinded you to sins that you need to confess. If you can listen to these words as if they were spoken to you, then Jesus’ fervor will reach you, and your eyes will be opened to that which is in your soul that needs to be changed. Do not turn a blind eye to this. Be open, be humble and listen.
My fervent Lord, You spoke words of love in many ways. At times You were gentle and at times You were firm. Please give me the grace and humility I need to be open to Your firm rebukes of love. Help me to sincerely see the ways in which I need to change my life so that Your grace will transform my interior life, flowing over into my actions. I love You, dear Lord. Help me to love You more. Jesus, I trust in You.
Tuesday 28th Ordinary Time: 2024
Opening Prayer: Lord God, do not let me follow the way of foolishness that leads to death and separation from you. Do not let me be a hypocrite. I pray that I may grow in true holiness through the gift of your grace and truly serve my brothers and sisters in need.
Encountering the Word of God
1. The Tradition of Washing Before a Meal: On the way to Jerusalem, Jesus accepted the invitation of a Pharisee to dine at his home. The Pharisee, Luke tells us, was amazed that Jesus did not observe the prescribed washing before a meal. This washing was not something commanded in the Law of Moses but was a tradition that was observed by the Pharisees in Jesus’ day. What the Law of Moses actually prescribed was that priests needed to wash their hands and feet before offering a sacrifice (Exodus 30:17-21). The priests also needed to wash before eating their share of the sacrifice (Numbers 18:11-13). These rules for the priests, however, were extended to all meals by the tradition of the Pharisees, who wanted every meal to be a religious act and a symbol of Jewish identity.
2. Clean Outside and Dirty Inside: Jesus takes the opportunity to reveal
the foolishness of the Pharisees. They were meticulous in observing their
traditions, but their hearts were far from God. They cleaned the exterior of
their dishes and cups, but interiorly, they were filled with evil. Jesus
teaches that, instead of being filled with plunder and unrighteous wealth, the
Pharisees ought to be detached from earthly treasure, give alms to the poor,
and be clean interiorly. All three things are important. It is good to give
alms and follow God’s precepts, but only when we are filled and empowered with
God’s grace and virtue are those good actions meritorious for salvation and
eternal life.
3. Faith Working through Love: In the Letter to the Galatians, Paul compares
the Old Law of Moses to a yoke of slavery. This slavery is opposed to the
freedom that comes from faith in Jesus Christ. Throughout his letter, Paul
argued that accepting the yoke of the Law of Moses as a requirement for
salvation is to reject Christ as the sole foundation of our redemption and
spiritual life (Ignatius Catholic Study Bible: New Testament, 339). Paul
also teaches that faith alone is insufficient to justify the sinner. Our faith
in Jesus Christ needs to work through and flourish in grace-empowered works of
charity and love. If our faith does not manifest itself and bear fruit in
merciful love, then it is a dead faith that cannot justify or save us or keep
us in a right relationship with God.
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, your grace and the virtues
of faith, hope, and charity enable me to do the good works that merit eternal
life with you. Give me your grace always. Do not let me become wrapped up in
myself or glory in what I have accomplished, but refer all to you and your
Father in gratitude.
Tuesday 28th Ordinary Time:
Introductory Prayer: Lord, I believe you are present here as I turn to you in prayer. I trust and have confidence in your desire to give me every grace I need to receive today. Thank you for your love. Thank you for your immense generosity toward me. I give you my life and my love in return.
Petition: Lord, you call me not just to a
conversion of exterior actions and ways of living, but to a conversion of
heart, a conversion of always loving more. Grant me this grace of
conversion.
Encountering Christ:
1. Law for the Law’s Sake: The Pharisees placed great emphasis on fulfilling the Mosaic Law down to its last iota. They also had many more customs and regulations to ensure that they were adequately fulfilling the Law—layer upon layer of laws to enforce laws. Their mental checklist of laws fulfilled and regulations completed was impressive and a source of pride and satisfaction that they were living as they were supposed to. But they were missing the point. The Mosaic Law was intended to free them for worship, delivering them from slavery to pagan gods and from slavery to sin. When the Law (and the added customs and regulations) became an end in itself, it was truncated and severed from the One to whom it was meant to lead. Today in the Catholic Church, there are enough laws, customs, and regulations to make even the most rigorous Pharisee proud. The danger is that we can fall into one of two traps. First, we can adhere to them with such vigor that we lose sight of the One they are freeing us to worship. We don’t allow our hearts and minds to be educated and formed by them; we just follow them blindly. We wind up cleaning the outside of the cup and stopping there, without going on to see God’s love and let it purify our hearts.
2. The Second Trap: The second trap we can fall into is at the
other extreme: to give ourselves an easy pass by presuming that “if my
heart is in the right place, I don’t need to worry about all these rules and
such.” With a lax attitude we permit ourselves to ease up on fulfilling these
laws which in truth will free us. “I know today is Sunday and I should go to
Mass, but it’s vacation! God knows I’m a good person.” Yet it is in
the Sunday Mass that we receive the many graces necessary toward our being that
“good person”. The commandment to keep the Sabbath holy, as with any of the Ten
Commandments and customs of the Church, is there to lead us to God. These free
us from our often confused, subjective conclusions about how we should worship
God and live our lives.
3. Cleaning the Cup: “Charity covers a multitude of sin” (1 Peter
4:8). This is how St. Peter rephrased the words of Christ, “But as to what
is within, give alms, and behold, everything will be clean for you.” The
Law of love is the most important of all the commandments of the Lord. In
Chapter 12 of the Gospel of Mark, Christ responds to a scribe’s question about
the first of all the commandments: “The first is this: ‘Hear, O Israel! The
Lord our God is Lord alone! You shall love the Lord your God with all your
heart, with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength.’ The
second is this: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no other
commandment greater than these.” Love of God and neighbor is both the source
and the summit of the Law of the Old Covenant and of the New. Living these two
greatest commandments purifies and cleanses our hearts—the inside of the cup.
So, when Christ says to give alms, he is telling the Pharisees to love their
neighbors. Then their hearts will be clean.
Conversation with Christ: Lord, I want my heart always to be focused on
you. I need your guidance, for I can’t do it alone. I need you to teach me
how to love you, how to worship and serve you. The laws you give me free me and
guide me toward you. Help me to see your hand leading me ever closer to you.
Resolution: If there is a rule or custom of the Church
that I don’t understand or don’t practice, I will read up on it to better
understand how it frees me and guides me in my relationship with Christ.
Tuesday 28TH ORDINARY
Đối với Thiên Chúa điều nào quan trọng
hơn, bàn tay sạch bế ngoài hay cái sạch từ bên trong, trong tâm hồn của chúng
ta. Trong bài Tin Mừng hôm nay, Chúa Giêsu quở trách những người Pha-ri-si đã
chấp chứa những tư tưởng xấu xa mà làm cho ô uế cả tâm linh, như tham lam, kiêu
ngạo, ghen ghét, hờn dận, tự kiêu, và ham muốn vật chất. Chúa Giêsu dạy chúng
ta tha thứ là một việc bác ái tự đến từ tấm lòng nhân hậu, thuơng yêu. Có những
người trong như có vẻ bề ngoài, phô trương nhưng đó chỉ là những thứ giả hình, mà
không phải thật sự. Có những thứ giả hình nhìn bề ngoài chúng ta không thể nhận
ra, nhưng nếu nhận xét từ bên trong lòng họ đầy những giả dối . Họ cố chấp và
không bao giờ biết tha thứ. Do đó, họ không bao giờ tha thứ cho người khác. Tâm
hồn chúng ta vẫn còn nặng thù hận, cố chấp, chưa biết tha thứ là được bắt nguồn
từ những thói quen của chúng ta tự cho mình là trung tâm của vũ trụ. Khi chúng
ta không thể nghĩ xa hơn chính chúng ta, chúng ta không
Reflection Luke 11:37-41
Which is more important to God? Clean hands or a clean mind and heart? In the Gospel reading today, Jesus chided the Pharisees
for harboring evil thoughts that make us unclean spiritually such as greed,
pride, bitterness, envy, arrogance, and the like.
Jesus didn’t care much for what people might say or what is politically correct, whether we like it or not. These are not criteria on which Christians should base their decisions. Jesus clearly condemns double morality, which clearly seeks convenience or deception, as He said in Gospel: “you clean the outside of the cup and the dish, but inside yourselves you are full of greed and evil. Fools” (Lk 11:39).
God's word, as usual, questions us about customs and habits of our daily life, when we end up converting trivia into “values”, to disguise our sins of arrogance, selfishness and conceit, while attempting to “globalize” morals with political correction in order to avoid being out of tune or being marginalized.
There is time our hearts are still bitter and heavy, tempt us want to revenge rather than forgive.
- Un-forgiveness is rooted in our habit of thinking self-centered thoughts.
- When we cannot think beyond ourselves we cannot forgive.
When we freely give and give generously to those in need we express love, compassion, kindness, and mercy. And if our heart is full of love and compassion, then there is no room for envy, greed, bitterness, and the like. Let us allow God's love to transform our heart, mind, and actions toward our neighbors and others.
Trong bài đọc thứ Nhất hôm nay, Thánh Phaolô nhắc nhở Giáo Đoàn Rôma rằng họ được cứu bởi vì họ có niềm tin vào Chúa Kitô và Tin Mừng. Thánh Phao lô cũng nói rằng chúng ta biết được Thiên Chúa là do bởi những công trình mà Chúa đã tạo ra trong thế giớ và trong cuộc sống của chúng ta..
Lord, help me to become more understanding and compassionate. Help me, Lord, not to be a fault-finder but a loving person instead. Help me to be discerning and yet not judgmental of others in their motives and actions. Teach me to be humble and generous.
After Jesus had spoken, a Pharisee invited him to dine at his home. He entered and reclined at table to eat. The Pharisee was amazed to see that he did not observe the prescribed washing before the meal. The Lord said to him, “Oh you Pharisees! Although you cleanse the outside of the cup and the dish, inside you are filled with plunder and evil. You fools!” Luke 11:37–40
It’s hard to imagine Jesus calling someone a fool. But that’s exactly what He did. This Pharisee had just finished listening to Jesus give a series of teachings and then invited our Lord to His home for dinner in an apparent gesture of kindness. But as the passage unfolds, it’s clear that this Pharisee is no friend of Jesus. Instead, his hospitality and kindness are a cloak for the evil within his soul.
Why does Jesus respond so fiercely, calling the Pharisee a fool? Because this Pharisee is filled with hypocrisy. His exterior actions do not flow from a heart filled with charity and faith. Instead, his exterior actions are a show. He is a fraud. He, like many of the Pharisees, was very concerned with various external rituals, such as scrupulously washing his hands before he ate. He believed that doing so was a sign of his holiness and closeness to God. But it wasn’t. His heart was one that was filled with judgment and self-righteousness. He looked down on others and elevated himself. In doing so, he deceived others and even deceived himself.
The central message we must take from this is that we must diligently focus upon that which is in our hearts. Our hearts, our interior life, must be blooming with love of God and others. We must place all of our efforts on cultivating a sincere life of virtue within. This is done by prayer and humility. Humility will open our eyes to see the truth of who we are. Prayer will strengthen us to change as we see that which needs to be changed within. Only then, when we see clearly the truth of who we are and prayerfully rely upon grace obtained by prayer, will we be able to become people of true integrity and holiness. And only then will our interior holiness be made manifest externally in our actions.
Reflect, today, upon these powerful words of Jesus: “You fools!” Don’t be offended by these words; they are words of love from our Lord. They are His fierce attempt to wake this Pharisee up and lead him away from his hypocrisy. Listen to these words as if they were also spoken to you. Every one of us can humbly benefit from this loving chastisement from Jesus. Every one of us needs to humbly be transformed more fully interiorly. Let Jesus’ words speak to you and reveal to you the ways that you need to change. Perhaps your pride has led you to an interior practice of judgment of others. Perhaps it has blinded you to sins that you need to confess. If you can listen to these words as if they were spoken to you, then Jesus’ fervor will reach you, and your eyes will be opened to that which is in your soul that needs to be changed. Do not turn a blind eye to this. Be open, be humble and listen.
My fervent Lord, You spoke words of love in many ways. At times You were gentle and at times You were firm. Please give me the grace and humility I need to be open to Your firm rebukes of love. Help me to sincerely see the ways in which I need to change my life so that Your grace will transform my interior life, flowing over into my actions. I love You, dear Lord. Help me to love You more. Jesus, I trust in You.
Opening Prayer: Lord God, do not let me follow the way of foolishness that leads to death and separation from you. Do not let me be a hypocrite. I pray that I may grow in true holiness through the gift of your grace and truly serve my brothers and sisters in need.
1. The Tradition of Washing Before a Meal: On the way to Jerusalem, Jesus accepted the invitation of a Pharisee to dine at his home. The Pharisee, Luke tells us, was amazed that Jesus did not observe the prescribed washing before a meal. This washing was not something commanded in the Law of Moses but was a tradition that was observed by the Pharisees in Jesus’ day. What the Law of Moses actually prescribed was that priests needed to wash their hands and feet before offering a sacrifice (Exodus 30:17-21). The priests also needed to wash before eating their share of the sacrifice (Numbers 18:11-13). These rules for the priests, however, were extended to all meals by the tradition of the Pharisees, who wanted every meal to be a religious act and a symbol of Jewish identity.
Introductory Prayer: Lord, I believe you are present here as I turn to you in prayer. I trust and have confidence in your desire to give me every grace I need to receive today. Thank you for your love. Thank you for your immense generosity toward me. I give you my life and my love in return.
1. Law for the Law’s Sake: The Pharisees placed great emphasis on fulfilling the Mosaic Law down to its last iota. They also had many more customs and regulations to ensure that they were adequately fulfilling the Law—layer upon layer of laws to enforce laws. Their mental checklist of laws fulfilled and regulations completed was impressive and a source of pride and satisfaction that they were living as they were supposed to. But they were missing the point. The Mosaic Law was intended to free them for worship, delivering them from slavery to pagan gods and from slavery to sin. When the Law (and the added customs and regulations) became an end in itself, it was truncated and severed from the One to whom it was meant to lead. Today in the Catholic Church, there are enough laws, customs, and regulations to make even the most rigorous Pharisee proud. The danger is that we can fall into one of two traps. First, we can adhere to them with such vigor that we lose sight of the One they are freeing us to worship. We don’t allow our hearts and minds to be educated and formed by them; we just follow them blindly. We wind up cleaning the outside of the cup and stopping there, without going on to see God’s love and let it purify our hearts.
Jesus didn’t care much for what people might say or what is politically correct, whether we like it or not. These are not criteria on which Christians should base their decisions. Jesus clearly condemns double morality, which clearly seeks convenience or deception, as He said in Gospel: “you clean the outside of the cup and the dish, but inside yourselves you are full of greed and evil. Fools” (Lk 11:39).
God's word, as usual, questions us about customs and habits of our daily life, when we end up converting trivia into “values”, to disguise our sins of arrogance, selfishness and conceit, while attempting to “globalize” morals with political correction in order to avoid being out of tune or being marginalized.
There is time our hearts are still bitter and heavy, tempt us want to revenge rather than forgive.
- Un-forgiveness is rooted in our habit of thinking self-centered thoughts.
- When we cannot think beyond ourselves we cannot forgive.
When we freely give and give generously to those in need we express love, compassion, kindness, and mercy. And if our heart is full of love and compassion, then there is no room for envy, greed, bitterness, and the like. Let us allow God's love to transform our heart, mind, and actions toward our neighbors and others.
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