Ash Wednesday Suy Niệm thứ Tư Lễ Tro.
Chúng ta là những người Công Giáo,
chúng ta nhận ra nhu cầu của
chúng ta là phải thừa nhận tội lỗi của chúng ta đã phạm nghịch cùng Thiên Chúa và chúng ta sự
cần sự ăn năn hối
cải. Vì thế Giáo Hội có những
mùa đặc biệt sự ăn chay sám hối trong mùa Chay.
Mùa Chay là một lời nhắc nhở lành mạnh cho chúng ta rằng chúng ta là những người tội lỗi: như thánh Gioan đã viết: "Nếu chúng ta nói, 'Chúng ta không có tội,' chúng ta lừa dối mình, và lẽ thật
không ở trong chúng ta." (1 Ga 1: 8) Mùa Chay là thời gian để phản ánh
trung thực và giúp
chúng ta đạt niềm tin tưởng vào sự ăn năn thống hối trước
mặt Thiên Chúa từ nhân và tha thứ.
Tro được ghi dấu trên trán chúng ta trong ngày hôm nay như là một dấu
hiệu của sự ăn năn vì
tro đã được dùng trong việc ăn năn
rất cổ xưa. Có rất nhiều tài liệu trong Kinh Thánh đã ghi nhận là vị vua và quý tộc, thậm chí của toàn thành phố,
đã ngồi trong đống tro
và mặc bao gai, để làm việc đền tội. Tro tượng trưng cho một sự từ bỏ những sự ác và canh tân đời sống, tượng trưng cho những gì là
thấp hèn và khiêm tốn trong sự tương phản với vẻ hùng
vĩ và sức mạnh của thế gian. Do đó, Tro được sức trên đầu chúng ta vào thứ tư đầu Mùa Chay (Ngày đầu của 40 ngày) để biểu hiệu
tinh thần sám hối của
chúng ta trong sự khiêm tốn, sám hối và ăn năn chính là hành tình giúp
chúng ta bước vào Mùa Chay thánh.
Phụng vụ hôm nay
nhắc nhở chúng ta rằng Mùa Chay không phải
là chỉ dấu hiệu bên ngoài như dấu tro được bôi trên
trán. Qua bài
Tin Mừng, Chúa Giêsu cảnh cáo
chúng ta về những
nguy cơ về sự “nguy hiểm” trong việc bố thí, hay việc cầu nguyện cũng như trong việc ăn chay của chúng
ta. Đừng rình rang, linh đình khoe khoang trong việc bố thí, cầu nguyện hay ăn
chay "để những người khác có thể nhìn thấy bởi vì Chúa biết được những gì chúng
ta làm. Chúa
Giêsu đã dạy cho chúng ta biết về sự nguy hiểm trong những hành động đạo đức giống như bọn pharisêu là bọn đạo đức giả, và Chúa mời gọi chúng ta đến với Mùa Chay với tâm hồn và
trái tim chân thành trong sự thống hối.
We Christian recognizes our need to
acknowledge our sinfulness and the need for repentance. we have special seasons
for penitential fasting during the season of Lent.
The Lenten season is a healthy
reminder for us that we are sinners: as John wrote, "If we say, 'We have
no sin,' we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us." (1 Jn 1: 8)
Lent is a time for honest reflection and trusting repentance before the
compassionate and forgiving God.
It is therefore fitting that at the beginning of Lent the most visible
symbol is that of ashes on our foreheads to signify the interior spirit of
humble penance and repentance of our Lenten observance.
In the blessing of the ashes the Church prays that the Lord may
"pour out the grace of your blessing on your servants who are marked with
these ashes, that, as they follow the Lenten observances, they may be worthy to
come with minds made pure to celebrate the Paschal Mystery of your Son."
On
the Friday after Ash Wednesday the first reading from Isaiah reminds us that
lying in sackcloth and ashes does not make our fasting acceptable: "See
the fast that pleases me: breaking the fetters of injustice and unfastening the
thongs of the yoke; setting the oppressed free and breaking every yoke. Fast by
sharing your food with the hungry, bring to your house the homeless; clothe the
man you see naked and do not turn away from your own kin." (Is 58: 6- 7)
Ash Wednesday (Year C)
“But when you give alms, do not let your left hand know what your right
is doing…But when you pray, go to your inner room, close the door, and pray to
your Father in secret. But when you fast, anoint your head and wash your
face…” Matthew 6:3; 6; 17
One Church Father explains that almsgiving, prayer and fasting are three
acts that help us to combat the three temptations that Jesus overcame in the
desert. First, our Lord overcame gluttony when the evil one tempted Him to turn
stones into bread to satiate His hunger after fasting for 40 days. Second, our
Lord overcame vainglory when the evil one took Him to the parapet of the temple
and tempted Him to throw Himself down so that the angels of God would save Him,
proving His divinity. Third, our Lord overcame greed when the evil one took Him
up a high mountain and showed Him all the kingdoms of the world, promising to
give them to Jesus if He worshiped him.
Today’s Gospel identifies the three ways that we are able to overcome
these same temptations of gluttony, vainglory and greed. Almsgiving, or
generosity, is the cure for greed. Prayer within the “inner room” of your soul
is the cure for vainglory. Fasting is the cure for gluttony.
As Lent begins, we are also invited into the desert for 40 days. We are
invited to face the many temptations we endure in life so as to overcome them
by the power of God. If you struggle with one of these above-mentioned
temptations, all of them, or some similar temptation, the cure is found when
the temptation is identified and the contrary virtue is embraced.
Do you struggle with greed? If so, consider being generous this Lent. God
has promised to provide for your needs. He has not promised earthly wealth, but
He has promised to care for you. There is great freedom found in believing that
promise. One way to more fully trust in God’s providence is to generously give
of your money to those in need. Don’t hesitate to do so if this is your
struggle.
Do you struggle with a desire for vainglory and have an inordinate desire
to prove your worth to others? If so, turn to prayer. It is in personal prayer,
within that “inner room” of your heart, where God will meet you and reveal to
you your true value and worth. As you discover your dignity in prayer, you will
find you have no need to prove that dignity and value to others through
prideful means.
Do you struggle with gluttony and seek to satiate your longings by the
excessive consumption of food and drink? If so, the cure will be found in
fasting. Denying your disordered appetites has great spiritual value. Fasting
intermingled with prayer opens your soul to seek satisfaction only in God, and
not in the flesh.
Reflect, today, upon that which needs to be your primary focus this Lent.
What is it that keeps you from God? What temptations do you struggle with the
most? Perhaps greed, vainglory or gluttony is among your struggles. If so, then
do not hesitate to commit yourself to the cures this Lent. The end result will
be that “your Father who sees in secret will repay you.”
My freeing Lord, help me to see my greatest sins this Lent and to begin
the process of overcoming them. Please reveal to me the virtues I need to
embrace so as to be freed of these burdens and to grow more firmly in my love
of You and others. Jesus, I trust in You.
ASH
WEDNESDAY 2025
Opening
Prayer: Lord God, at the beginning
of this season of Lent, I ask that you help me live these forty days in a
spirit of repentance, contrition, and self-denial. I want to be victorious in
the battle against sin, and I know that I can be with your grace.
Encountering
the Word of God
1.
Combatting Greed with Almsgiving: As
we begin the season of Lent, we can contemplate how the three practices of Lent
help us combat the seven deadly sins. The first practice mentioned in today’s
Gospel – taken from Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount – is almsgiving. This pious
practice seeks to combat the deadly sin of greed (or avarice). Instead of
seeking to amass earthly wealth and possessions, we need to see ourselves as
administrators and stewards of the good things God has provided and given to
us. We will be called to give an account of how we administered them. Instead
of focusing on building up earthly wealth, we need to give priority to storing
up heavenly treasure with God through almsgiving.
2.
Combatting Pride, Envy, and Wrath with Prayer: The second Lenten practice of prayer helps in the
battle against pride, envy, and wrath (anger). The one who truly prays to God
recognizes that they depend completely on God and that they are not
self-sufficient. Prayer is the humble requesting of good things from God. The
prideful do not humble themselves to ask for help. Prayer also combats the
deadly sin of envy. We fall into envy when we want the good that others have to
be taken from them and given to us. Cain, for example, was envious of his
brother Abel. Instead of seeking to emulate his brother and offer the best of
the first fruits to God, Cain rose up against his brother and slew him in the
field. When we truly pray, we strive to see all things from God’s perspective,
and this helps us appreciate the good in others rather than be envious of it.
Finally, prayer combats the deadly sin of wrath or anger. The one who prays
learns the all-important lesson of patient love. Instead of lashing out when offended
by someone, prayer helps us pause and ask how we can “do unto others what we
would have them do unto us.”
3.
Combatting Gluttony, Lust, and Sloth with Fasting: The third Lenten practice is fasting. First, it
combats the sin of gluttony. By denying ourselves and fasting from good things,
like food, our will is strengthened to say no to bad things. Second, it combats
the sin of lust. This is because gluttony and lust are sins connected to
disordered sensual pleasure. Even the sin of sloth is connected to disordered
sensuality. We are not pure spirits, and our bodies crave the release of
dopamine. Fasting from certain foods, drinks, sugar, gambling, social media
likes, and shopping reduces our cravings for this release of dopamine, lowers
our sensitivity to this stimulation, and can reset our reward system. Instead
of seeking the fleeting hit of pleasure, we can focus through the practices of
almsgiving, prayer, and fasting on building lasting relationships with God and
others.
Conversing
with Christ: Lord Jesus, I want to
accompany you in the wilderness during these forty days and forty nights. I
desire to learn from you and understand how to combat the temptations of the
devil. Strengthen my will to seek always the will of your Father.
ASH
WEDNESDAY
Opening
Prayer: Heavenly Father, you
see exactly who I am, and you still desire an intimate relationship with me.
You invite me to come to you in my weakness and allow you to mold me into the
person that I was created to be. Lord, as this Lenten season begins, grant me
the grace to humbly accept your invitation to conversion, leaving behind any
hypocrisy.
Encountering
Christ:
Lenten
Pillars: The three-part
structure of today’s Gospel neatly presents the traditional “pillars” of the
upcoming season of Lent. Jesus is inviting us to engage, in a special way, in
prayer, fasting, and almsgiving. Our Lord is well aware of our tendency toward
self, and wants to spur an interior conversion away from “self” and towards
“the other.” May we live this season of Lent with the fortitude to do without,
and in solidarity with those who must routinely do without. May our hearts be
inflamed and give generously to the Lord, confident, as St. Ignatius of Loyola
once proclaimed, that he cannot be outdone in generosity.
Dust
to Dust: Despite neatly laying
out the trio of pillars for our good Lenten preparation, one portion of today’s
Gospel might seem out of place on Ash Wednesday. Today a great number of the
faithful will be carrying out their daily responsibilities with a smudge of ash
visible to all. On this particular day, the ashes lingering on our foreheads
(or atop our scalps in some European countries) proclaim our communion with
other Christians who, sinful like us, are seeking an interior conversion this
Lenten season. Let us humbly echo the psalm response today, “Be merciful, O
Lord, for we have sinned,” and wear our ashes humbly as a visible sign that we
follow Jesus.
Being
Seen in Secret: What is the
cost of setting aside a bit more time for prayer? For giving up something? For
offering assistance to those in need? Maybe my time scrolling on my smartphone
is reduced, or my appetites have less instant gratification, or my bank account
has a smaller sum of “mad money” at the end of the month. A more profound
question, and one which Our Lord answers three times, is what will we gain?
Nothing we do earns us a place in Heaven; this is God’s free and unmerited gift
to those who desire communion with him. But the humble acts of prayer, fasting,
and almsgiving, particularly when done in secret, beautifully reflect the
desire to unite ourselves to Christ, who, thrice, in this Sermon on the Mount
passage, assures us that “your Father who sees in secret will repay you.”
Conversing
with Christ: Lord, thank you
for this time of prayer with you, and for clearly enumerating what will be best
for me during this Lent. When I look at my face in the mirror and see the ashes
on my forehead, I am reminded of my mortality, and that everything I have is an
unmerited gift from you. Please know that I am grateful to you for my very
existence and that I long to see your divine and pristine face when you call me
home.
Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ Tư Lễ Tro
Hôm nay thứ Tư Lễ Tro, chúng ta bắt đầu một
cuộc hành trình vào Mùa Chay mới, một cuộc hành
trình kéo dài bốn mươi ngày và dẫn chúng ta đến trong sự chiến thắng hân hoan của Chúa Phục Sinh. Sự chay tịnh chúng ta giữ trong Mùa Chay sẽ
giúp chúng ta gặt hái được những thành quả tốt đẹp trong mùa chay tịnh này như chúng ta hoàn thành cuộc hành
trình này trong chiến thắng, Bằng với con tim và tâm hồn chân
thành của chúng ta, chúng ta hăng hái tham gia vào những việc làm công chính, bằng cách biết nhận ra những nỗi đau khổ của những người đang đói khổ chung quanh và biết rộng lượng giúp họ, cũng như nâng đỡ và bố thí cho những người đang có nhu
cầu cần thiết. Chúng ta có thể giúp cho xã hội của
chúng ta đang sống được trở nên tốt đẹp hơn bằng những việc làm tốt, bằng tấm lòng từ tâm với cả tình yêu để cuối cùng chúng ta cũng sẽ nhận được các phần thưởng của
cuộc sống trong một xã hội hài hòa.
Trong bài đọc thứ hai nhắc nhở chúng ta biết là bây giờ là thời gian để chúng ta hòa giải với Thiên Chúa qua Đức Kitô. Điều này được thực hiện bằng cách
sống tốt, với lòng đạo đức cùng với những hành vi
trong một ý nghĩ tinh khiết. Hành động bên ngoài trở
thành một biểu hiện của thực tại trong nội tâm của chúng ta. Cuộc sống toàn vẹn này là lý do tại sao Chúa Giêsu đòi hỏi chúng ta phải biết hy
sinh trọn vẹn tâm
hồn của chúng ta. Cuộc hành trình vào Mùa Chay, chính là
một cuộc đồng hành với Chúa
qua việc ăn chay, cầu nguyện với Chúa Giêsu bốn mươi đêm ngày ăn chay, cầu nguyện trong sa mạc, đây là nguyên nhân giúp chúng ta biết sẵn
sàng mở rộng tân hồng của chúng ta, để chúng ta biết mang khát vọng sâu xa nhất của tâm hồn và mang vào sự hòa hợp với những niềm ước mong của Thánh tâm (trái
tim rất thánh) củaChúa Giêsu
Ash Wednesday SG -2016
Today, Ash Wednesday, we begin a new
Lenten journey, a journey that lasts forty days and leads us towards the joyful
victory of Easter. The discipline of Lent allows us to reap the fruits of this
season as we finish this journey towards victory. We apply our hearts and minds
by engaging in righteous deeds, by knowing the pain of hunger and providing for
those in need. We affect society with good deeds so that eventually we receive
the reward of living in a harmonious society.
The
second reading reminds us that it is time to be reconciled with God in Christ.
This is done by living out the piety of covenant behaviour with a pure
intention and motive. Outward actions become an expression of our inner
reality. This life of integrity is the reason why Jesus asks us to rend our
hearts. The Lenten journey, which is an imitation of Jesus’ forty days of
fasting in the desert, is supposed to open our hearts, bringing their deepest
desires into harmony with the desires of Jesus' sacred heart.
Merciful saviors, guide us with Your
Holy Spirit to begin this Lenten journey in order to cultivate a genuine piety
motivated by divine love alone.
No comments:
Post a Comment