Friday, October 31, 2025

Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ Sáu tuần thứ 30 Thường Niên

Suy Niệm Tin Mừng Thứ Sáu tuần thứ 30 Thường Niên
Là một Người Do Thái ngoan đạo, Chúa Giêsu tôn trọng luật pháp của Do Thái. Tuy nhiên, Ngài cũng chỉ ra cho chúng ta thấy rõ những trường hợp ngoại lệ mà mà luật lệ của con người quá khắt khe hơn luật của Thiên Chúa. Luật ngày Sa-bát là được làm ra không có nghĩa để làm khổ con người, được lập ra cho có lệ vì lợi ích riêng của một nhóm người giàu có, có học và làm khổ những người khác vì nghèo đói hay ít học.
Trong trường hợp ngày hôm nay, Chúa Giêsu thấy sự cần thiết để cứu chữa một người đang sống trong đau khổ vì sự tàn tật, đau bệnh trên thân xác lẫn tâm hồn…. Sự cần thiết để cứu chữa này sẽ giúp cho anh ta mau chóng vượt thoát được cái sự đau khổ chắc chắn là còn cần thiết phải thực hiện hơn là chỉ ngôi yên mà giữ luật cho đúng cách.
Luật được tạo ra là để duy trì và giúp cho xã hội và nhân loại được tốt đẹp hơn có nghĩ là Luật pháp cần phải được thực hành một cách đúng với sự công chính và trong cách vô tư, nếu như chúng ta thực hành luật pháp đúng theo như mặt đạo đức đó, thì Luật pháp chắc chắn sẽ để đem lại lợi ích cho tất cả mọi người, se trong thế giới của chúng ta sẽ có một nền hoà bình vĩnh cửu. Vì thế tất cả các những việc làm và hành động của chúng ta phải được thực hiện trong tình yêu, trong sự ngay thẳng và nghiêm minh, chính trực.
Lạy Chúa, xin lấp đầy chúng con với tình yêu của Chúa và đừng để cho chúng con phải bao giờ từ bất bình, phê phán với người khác, nhưng luôn luôn khoan dung và rộng lượng với người khác.
 
REFLECTION
As a devout Jew, Jesus respects the law. But, he also points out that there are exceptions to being too strict. The laws of the Sabbath were not meant to be followed for the sake of being followed. In today's instance, Jesus saw the need to cure the man with dropsy. The need to cure and help another outweighed the need to comply with the letter of the law.
Laws were created to maintain order. But love supersedes any law. If a greater good can be achieved from bending the law, then perhaps it should be done especially if doing so morally benefits others. All action should be done out of love
 
Friday of the Thirtieth Week in Ordinary Time
On a sabbath Jesus went to dine at the home of one of the leading Pharisees, and the people there were observing him carefully. Luke 14:1
Jesus accepted an invitation from this prominent Pharisee to dine at his house. The people at the dinner were “observing him carefully.” It’s somewhat easy to picture the scene. For most people, being invited to a dinner with many strangers who are observing them carefully may leave them feeling quite uncomfortable and self-conscious. But Jesus showed up with perfect confidence and an unwavering commitment to share the Gospel. One thing we can learn from this dinner and Jesus’ disposition at it is that uncomfortable situations are actually great opportunities to share your faith. 
We will all have times when we are put in an uncomfortable situation. Imagine, for example, being invited to a party for a distant relative or a new neighbor. You decided to attend and knew that you would know very few people there. The tendency for those who are shy would be to show up, find someone they know, and then spend the rest of the time with that person. But consider what Jesus did. He probably knew very few people at this dinner. Jesus’ primary purpose in attending was not to just relax and have a fun time while He met new friends. Instead, His primary purpose was to preach His saving message to those in need. Thus, He went to those in need and did so with confidence.
Whether you are one who likes to socialize and meet new people, or are one who dreads such settings, consider the simple fact that these settings are wonderful opportunities to share your faith. Like our Lord, if you are willing to put yourself out there, entering situations that are new and unfamiliar, then you may start to discover that the opportunities abound. New settings and new people are new opportunities to evangelize. True, they are also opportunities to make new friends and enjoy yourself. But if you have a heart set on the desire to share the Gospel, then you will regularly look for new opportunities in which you can somehow share your faith with others.
Reflect, today, upon this simple Gospel scene of Jesus attending a dinner, with many people He did not know, for the purpose of sharing the faith with them. Imagine yourself joining our Lord at this meal. How would you have felt? Would you have been self-conscious and uncomfortable? Or would you have seen it as an opportunity to share the Gospel? Reflect upon how zealous you are in your efforts to evangelize others and recommit yourself to this holy endeavor. Tell our Lord you are ready and willing to be used by Him wherever He sends you and then try to see every new adventure and experience in life as a new opportunity to share Christ’s saving message with others.
My saving Lord, You desire that Your saving message be shared far and wide, to the ends of the earth. Please fill me with zeal for souls. Give me an unwavering desire to share the Gospel with everyone I meet. Please use me, dear Lord, in the way You desire, so that Your love and mercy will be brought to those in need. Jesus, I trust in You.
 
Friday of the 30th Week in Ordinary Time 2025
Opening Prayer: Lord God, every Sunday, I praise you for your work of creation. Every Sunday, I praise you for sending your Son to redeem us from sin and death. Every Sunday, I thank you for sending your Spirit to sanctify your people and bring us into the heavenly Kingdom.
Encountering the Word of God
1. Curing on the Sabbath: Jesus is on his way to Jerusalem and stops at the home of a leading Pharisee on the Sabbath to have a meal. This is the third time in the Gospel of Luke that he has a meal at the home of a Pharisee (see Luke 7:36 and 11:37). Once again, the question about working and healing on the Sabbath arises. In today’s passage, there is a contrast between the “leading Pharisee” and the “man suffering from dropsy.” Dropsy was a condition often associated in the ancient world with insatiable thirst. The man with dropsy thirsts for water, but the leading Pharisee thirsts for honor. Jesus often corrects the Pharisaical view of religious practice and asks whether it is lawful to cure on the Sabbath (Luke 6:9). Once again, Jesus uses the teaching technique of the lower to the greater: If you can pull a son or ox out of a cistern on the Sabbath (see Deuteronomy 22:4), then why can’t you pull a man out of dropsy on the Sabbath. This alludes to the original purpose of the Sabbath to commemorate God’s rest and the call of human beings to share in this divine rest and life.
2. The Children of Israel: Today, in the First Reading, we begin to read Romans 9-11, one of the most difficult passages in the New Testament to understand. In these three chapters, Paul begins a profound theological meditation on God’s unwavering faithfulness to his covenant promises. Paul concentrates on the promise to restore the twelve tribes of Israel, even as the Gentiles are being included in salvation history. In Romans 9, Paul anguishes over unbelieving Israel and their rejection of Jesus as the Messiah. In his anguish, Paul knows that the Scriptures testify to God’s sovereign election through figures like Jacob and Esau. Jacob and Esau were both grandsons of Abraham. Jacob represents the faithful remnant, and Esau those who reject the Lord and his plan. The faithful remnant of Israel is also exemplified by the 7,000 faithful Israelites in Elijah’s day. Even though the majority of the northern Kingdom of Israel was worshipping false gods, there was a small, but faithful, remnant of 7,000. This faithful core prefigures the Church’s role in fulfilling Israel’s vocation. Romans 10 shifts to the universality of righteousness by faith and Paul’s typological reading of Deuteronomy 30. The chapter contrasts the law’s external demands with the Incarnate Word’s nearness in Christ, accessible through confession and belief that unites heart and mouth in covenant obedience. Israel’s partial “stumble” over accepting Jesus as the Messiah paradoxically provokes jealousy, spurring the Gospel’s spread to the Gentiles, while affirming that salvation remains rooted in Israel’s scriptures and calling.
3. All Israel will be Saved: In Romans 11, Paul contemplates the mystery of Israel’s temporary hardening as a divine strategy to graft Gentiles into the olive tree of Israel. This ensures the fullness of both peoples’ ingathering into the Kingdom before Christ’s return, culminating in the triumphant declaration that “all Israel will be saved” (Romans 11:26). Drawing on the prophets Isaiah and Ezekiel, Paul says that “all Israel will be saved,” but this doesn’t mean that each individual Israelite will be saved, but that the Israelites scattered among the Gentile nations will be brought into the Church and the salvation of Jesus Christ. In Romans 11:33-36, Paul defers to divine wisdom and reminds his readers that God’s plan offers mercy to all – Jews and Gentiles alike. Paul warns against arrogance and urges humility, support for Israel, and hope in covenant restoration as the capstone of salvation history.
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, you have revealed profound mysteries about salvation. I trust that you will bring me to share in the salvation you have merited for us. Raise me up with your grace and enable me to love as you did.

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