Friday, June 7, 2024

Suy Niệm Lễ Kính Trái Tim Vô Nhiễm Đức Mẹ Maria

Suy Niệm Lễ Kính Trái Tim Vô Nhiễm Đức Mẹ Maria

 Trong cuộc đời của Đức Mẹ Maria, có lẽ Mẹ đã không thể hiểu được là mình sẽ phải gánh chịu những kinh nghiệm đau khổ, đặc biệt là việc khi Đức Maria vẫn không thể hiểu được câu hỏi trả lời của Chúa Giêsu khi ngài mới lên 12 tuổi : "Thì tại sao tìm con? Lại còn không biết là con phải ở lại nơi nhà Cha con sao?" "(Lc. 2:49). Đức maria dù không hiểu được lời Chúa Giêesu muốn nói gì trong lúc ấy, nhưng Mẹ đã trân trọng giữ mãi những lời ấy trong lòng, Mẹ đã suy niệm và tìm hiểu thêm về ý nghĩa sâu xa trong câu nói của Chúa Giêsu và sứ mệnh của mẹ mỗi ngày. Qua các Tin Mừng, chúng ta Đức Maria là người đã được giới thiệu là người đã biết nghe Lời Chúa và đã thực thì lời Chúa (Lc. 8: 19-21). Mối quan hệ của Mẹ Maria với Chúa Giêsu dựa trên mối quan hệ của mẹ phải lệ thuộc vào kế hoạch của Thiên Chúa và mối quan hệ của người con thảo của Chúa Giêsu với Chúa Cha trên trời và sự vâng phục Ngài. Đây là một ưu tiên mà Đức Maria đã hiểu biết được qua thời gian. Vâng, Chúa Giêsu dường như đã sửa sai câu hỏi của mẹ khi Mẹ đã lo lắng, trách Ngài khi làm cho cha mẹ phải lo lắng 3 ngày đêm để tìm kiến Ngài.i, (2: 48-49).
Điều đáng chú ý ở đây là những lời đầu tiên của Chúa Giêsu được ghi lại trong Tin Mừng Thánh Luca. Đức Maria sẽ suy ngẫm và cố nghiền mgẫm để hiểu những đau đớn với thời gian, vì đó là đường lối và là cách Thiên Chúa thực sự chứ không phải cách mà chúng ta muốn. Chấp nhận Chúa Giêsu là con, thì đức Maria cũng phải sẵn sàng chấp nhận là việc ưu tiên hàng đầu của mẹ là đầu hàng sở thích á nhân để vâng phục theo thánh ý của Thiên Chúa Cha.
Hôm nay chúng ta mừng kính trọng thể Trái Tim Vô Nhiễm Nguyên Tội của Đức Maria, chúng ta thực sự dùng cơ hội này để mừng kính sự khiếm tốn, từ bỏ tất cả mọi ssụ trong cuộc sống để chấp nhận và vâng phục Thiên Chúa của Đức Maria, Mẹ Maria đã học để sống với những câu hỏi, Mẹ đã kiên nhẫn để chịu đựng tất cả những gì chưa được giải quyết trong cuộc sống của Mẹ cho đến một ngày nào đó thật xa vời khi tất cả mọi thứ được bày tỏ và tỏ lộ.
Lạy Mẹ Maria, xin mẹ cầu bầu cùng Chúa cho chúng con. để chúng con có được một quải tim giống như trái tim của Mẹ.
 
Feast of the Immaculate Heart of Mary;
Mary’s incomprehension must have been an agonizing experience, especially at not being able to understand Jesus’ answer: “How it it that you sought me? Did you not know that I must be in my Father’s house,” (Lk. 2:49). Mary is presented in this text (as in previous texts 1:29; 2:19) as one who keeps treasuring, interpreting and seeking the deeper meaning of Jesus and his mission. Later she is presented as one who hears the Word and does it.( 8:19-21)
Mary’s relationship with Jesus based on maternal ties is sub-ordinated to the Divine plan and to Jesus’ filial relationship to his heavenly Father and obedience to Him. This is a priority she learns to understand with time. Yes, Jesus seems to correct his mother’s questioning as to his whereabouts, in this dialogue between mother and son, (2:48-49).
Significantly these are the first recorded words of Jesus in Luke’s Gospel. Mary will learn to understand painfully with time that God’s ways are really not our ways. To receive Jesus as son is to accept and welcome his priority of obedient surrender to the Father’s will.
Today’s feast of the Immaculate Heart of Mary truly captures and celebrates Mary’s obedient surrender to God's will in her life as she learned to live the questions, patiently bearing all that was unsolved in her life, till the distant day when everything is revealed. Mother Mary make my heart like unto Yours
 
Feast of the Immaculate Heart of Mary 2024
He went down with them and came to Nazareth, and was obedient to them; and his mother kept all these things in her heart. Luke 2:51
Over and over, the Scriptures reveal to us that the Blessed Virgin Mary “kept all these things in her heart.” What things? She continually pondered the great mystery of the life of her Son as His sacred life unfolded before her eyes.
A mother’s love is strong. Many times, a mother is more aware of the details of her child’s life than even the child itself. She is attentive, consoling, present, tender and loving. This was who Mary was to her divine Son, Jesus.
Mother Mary did not have full knowledge of every divine reality. She did not gaze upon the Most Holy Trinity with her eyes as she walked the earth. She did not have the full knowledge of the plan of the Father. But she did walk through life with the perfection of faith. She also knew the many truths of Heaven and earth through her Immaculate Heart. Her heart was a heart filled with every virtue. She loved with a love that was indescribable. And what she especially pondered in her Immaculate Heart, over and over throughout life, was the pure and perfect love she had for her Son. To her, this love left her in amazement. She was continually in a state of holy awe as she interacted with her Son, gazed upon His sacred life, and watched Him advance in “wisdom and age and favor before God and man” (John 2:52). The love in her heart was a lesson to herself. She continually deepened her knowledge of God through the pondering of the perfect love placed in her heart by her God. And this God, her Savior, was her Son.
We celebrate today the Memorial of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. Though there are many feasts throughout the year in which we honor this holy daughter of God, this celebration is an opportunity for us all to ponder her pondering heart.
A human heart is not just physical, it is also spiritual. It is the spiritual source of our love of God and others. From our heart flows either virtue or vice, love or hate, generosity or selfishness. As we honor the Immaculate Heart today, we are called to look at the ideal of what should live within our own hearts and what should flow forth from them. The perfection of all virtue is what must ideally flow from every human heart throughout time. And it is the heart of our Blessed Mother that will teach us how to internalize those virtues so as to become an instrument of the love of God to others.
Reflect, today, upon the spiritual perfection of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. Perfection is difficult to comprehend in our fallen state. But the more we look to the ideal, the more we will desire that ideal. And the more we desire that ideal, the more we will obtain it. Allow yourself today to ponder the ideal heart as it resided in the Mother of God and ask for her to intercede for you so that you will more fully imitate her.
Most Immaculate Heart of Mother Mary, you reveal to us the perfect way to love your Son and to be devoted to Him. Fill me with the love you had for your Son by interceding for me. Thank you for the witness you gave to us all and help us to imitate the countless virtues that flowed from your heart. Immaculate Heart of Mary, pray for us. Jesus, I trust in You.
 
The Immaculate Heart of the Blessed Virgin Mary 2024
Opening Prayer: Lord God, you began to dwell in my heart when I was baptized. What an awesome and wonderful gift! Remain in my heart, abide there, and make it yours. I offer myself to you today and only want to enjoy your love forever.
Encountering the Word of God 
1. The Sacred Heart of Jesus: When we contemplate the three members of the Holy Family, we can see how they had hearts that were sacred, immaculate, and chaste. The Heart of Jesus is called “sacred,” and means that it is holy, consecrated, and set apart. The Hebrew word for holy in the Bible is kadosh, which means set apart. In the Genesis story of creation, God hallowed the seventh day (the Sabbath) and set it apart for himself. This teaches us that “God shared his holiness with his creation, and with it came peace, fruitfulness, and integrity” (Hahn, Holy is His Name, 26). In Exodus, God revealed his name and his holiness – his transcendence, his otherness, and his power – to Moses and the People of Israel. “In Exodus God takes up residence among his people – not as one of them (not yet) but permanently with them in the holy place. … Holiness is now an earthly reality, visible as fire and audible as thunder but also visible by association in pots and pans, slaughtered animals, and tent cloth” (Hahn, Holiness is His Name, 39). At Mt. Sinai, Israel was set apart from all other nations and called to be a kingdom of priests and a holy nation (Exodus 19:6). Under David and Solomon, the people occupied the holy land and built a holy temple in a holy city. In the New Testament, God’s holiness is made incarnate in Jesus: “The child to be born will be called holy, the Son of God” (Luke 1:35). Jesus is the Holy One of God. God became man to save us from sin so that we could be holy and share in his holiness. When we contemplate the Sacred Heart of Jesus, we contemplate God’s merciful love and the invitation made to us to share in God’s holiness through the Son and in the Spirit.
2. The Immaculate Heart of Mary: Yesterday, we celebrated the Sacred Heart of Jesus and contemplated the manifestation of God's merciful love in Jesus Christ. Today, we celebrate the Immaculate Heart of Mary and contemplate the great things that God accomplished in Mary and that he wants to accomplish in us. Unlike Mary’s pure and immaculate heart, our hearts are marked by sin; we are wounded and tend toward evil. The fruit of the tree tempts us with false delight. Like Paul, we end up committing the evil things we don’t want to do and not doing the good things that we should do. When we see our heart and find that it is attached to sin, we should not get discouraged. That is what the devil wants. Our misery is not the end; it is only the beginning. Just as God brought his people out of the misery of Egyptian slavery, so also he brings us out of the slavery of sin. He patiently awaits our response to his call. He wants to transform the misery of our heart through his merciful love into purity of heart so that we can see him: “Blessed are the pure of heart, for they shall see God.” While the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception celebrates especially how her heart and soul were preserved from any stain of original sin, today’s memorial celebrates how she kept her heart without stain. When we look at Mary, who intercedes for us now before God, we contemplate in her the Church that has already reached perfection. In Mary, the Church exists without spot or wrinkle. In her, the Church is already the all-holy (CCC, 829). She is the image and beginning of the perfected Church, and she shines forth on earth as a sign of hope and comfort to us, the pilgrim People of God (CCC, 972).
3. The Chaste Heart of Joseph: Jesus’ heart is called “sacred,” Mary’s heart is called “immaculate,” and Joseph’s heart is called “chaste.” Chastity differs from celibacy. Not everyone is called to be celibate, but all are called to be chaste. The virtue of chastity opposes the vice of lust. While lust is a disordered desire for sexual pleasure, chastity is the successful integration of sexuality within the person (CCC, 2337). The heart is of utmost importance. It is the place of our decision-making: we can choose to commit adultery in our heart or we can choose to love God with all our heart. “The heart is the dwelling-place where I am; where I live; according to the Semitic or Biblical expression, the heart is the place ‘to which I withdraw.’ The heart is our hidden center, beyond the grasp of our reason and of others; only the Spirit of God can fathom the human heart and know it fully. The heart is the place of decision, deeper than our psychic drives. It is the place of truth, where we choose life or death. It is the place of encounter, because as image of God we live in relation; it is the place of covenant.” Joseph’s heart is truly a model for us of fatherly protective love and spousal chaste love.
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, sanctify my heart so that I may love you with an undivided love, cleanse my heart so that I may have a worthy dwelling for you, purify my heart so that I may love my brothers and sisters as I should.
Living the Word of God: The story of the finding of Jesus in the Temple offers us a glimpse of Mary’s Immaculate Heart. When she and Joseph realized Jesus was missing, she didn’t blame Joseph, get angry with him, or give him the silent treatment. She didn’t yell at Jesus when she found him. Rather than accuse Jesus, she first asked him a question and told him that they had been looking for him with great anxiety. How do I react in stressful or difficult situations? Do I immediately begin to accuse others, blame others, judge others, and criticize them? Or do I first seek, like Mary, to understand what is going on? How can I imitate Mary today?
 
The Immaculate Heart of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Opening Prayer: 
Dear Mary, thank you for keeping the stories about Jesus in your Immaculate Heart. Pray for me, dear Mother, that I may have a heart like yours, a heart that is open to receiving Christ and bearing him to the world.
Encountering Christ:
1. Losing and Finding: Many parents have experienced the preteen years, around age twelve, as a time when they experience “losing” their little child while also “finding” a glimpse of the adult that he or she will become. We can imagine Mary and Joseph having this experience with Jesus in this Gospel passage. When they found the boy Jesus in the temple, he was listening and questioning the teachers there, showing the depth of his knowledge, understanding, and wisdom, even at his young age. Notice that Mary and Jesus both talked about his father. Mary told Jesus that she and his father, Joseph, had been looking for him. Jesus replied that he “must be in my Father’s house,” referring to God the Father. This may have been one of the first revelations of Jesus’s true identity as the Son of God after his miraculous birth. This thought may have been an additional pain to Mary and Joseph as they realized in a more profound way how they would soon have to give him up (or “lose” him) to his divine purpose.
2. She Kept These Things: Mary did not dwell on her anxiety or sadness about losing Jesus or what his mission would hold for him. Instead, she “kept” or “pondered” these things in her Immaculate Heart. We can learn to ponder in our hearts like Mary, too. Pondering implies contemplation, which is the act of considering something thoughtfully for a length of time. When we find ourselves ruminating on a problem, emotion, or situation, we can try to move it out of our head and into our heart to ponder and pray about it. Praying the rosary daily is an excellent way to move things that trouble or concern us from our head, through our hands, to the beads of the rosary, and into our heart to ponder. Once there, we can invite Jesus and Mary to console us and ask the Holy Spirit to bring us the gifts we need to deal with the situation or emotion at hand. The rosary is also meant for contemplating the mysteries of Christ’s life. This is exactly what Mary was doing when she kept the mysterious events of Jesus’s life in her heart. These stories must have come through Mary to Luke, whose Gospel holds most of the infancy narratives. How else would Luke have learned what happened at the Annunciation, the Visitation, the Nativity, the Presentation of Jesus, and the Finding of the Child Jesus? We have these precious memories of Jesus’s childhood because of our Mother Mary’s heart, which kept them safe to reveal to us.
3. A Heart Like Mary’s: Mary told St. Bernadette at Lourdes, “I am the Immaculate Conception.” The image of Mary’s Immaculate Heart is surrounded by white flowers, pierced with a sword, and crowned with flames. Our beautiful Mother’s heart is burning with love for God, her Father; the Holy Spirit, her spouse; and Jesus, her beloved Son. It blooms with white flowers because it is fruitful, beautiful, and completely pure. It is pierced with a sword because of the pain she endured watching her Son suffer and die for us, recalling the words of Simeon: “a sword will pierce through your own soul also” (Luke 2:35). May our hearts be like hers, full of love for God and others; pure, fruitful, and beautiful; and not afraid to suffer for Our Lord.
Conversing with Christ: Dear Jesus, thank you for the gift of our Blessed Mother. Thank you for preserving her as the Immaculate Conception. Thank you for giving Mary as a mother to St. John and to us, her children, for all generations. What a generous gift you gave us from the cross. Help me to love and honor Mary as my mother. Give me the gifts of the Holy Spirit to help me imitate her virtues.
Resolution: Lord, today by your grace I will pray a rosary, asking Mary to give me a heart like hers.
 
Saturday Feast of the Immaculate Heart of Mary; Gospel: Lk 2: 41 - 51
Every year the parents of Jesus went to Jerusalem for the Feast of the Passover, as was customary. And when Jesus was twelve years old, he went up with them according to the custom for this feast. After the festival was over, they returned, but the boy Jesus remained in Jerusalem and his parents did not know it.
They thought he was in the company and after walking the whole day they looked for him among their relatives and friends. As they did not find him, they went back to Jerusalem searching for him, and on the third day they found him in the Temple, sitting among the teachers, listening to them and asking questions. And all the people were amazed at his understanding and his answers.
His parents were very surprised when they saw him and his mother said to him, "Son, why have you done this to us? Your father and I were very worried while searching for you." Then he said to them, "Why were you looking for me? Do you not know that I must be in my Father's house?" But they did not understand this answer.
Jesus went down with them, returning to Nazareth, and he continued to be subject to them. As for his mother, she kept all these things in her heart.
 
Reflection:
Today is the memorial of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. The gospel reading is an account of the finding of Jesus in the temple. Such a familiar theme in every parent's life! A child in his /her teen years goes off into the night and does not come home till morning without responding to the parents' frantic calls or texts. Every parent suffers a little, dies a little, until the child is safely home.
Mary's rebuke seemed natural, "Your father and I were very worried while searching for you."
Jesus reply was perplexing, though a foretaste of his future destiny, which echoes Simeon's words to Mary at Jesus' presentation in the temple: "while a sword will pierce your own soul." (Lk 2:35a)
Jesus' mission takes precedence over family ties. Jesus understood that the time was not yet ripe for their full understanding of his role as Messiah, and so he went home with them and was a dutiful son. These things, Mary kept in her heart. She might not have understood, but she trusted in Jesus' words and God's plan for her family.
Let us turn to Mary in those moments when nothing seems to be going right, especially in rearing our children in the complex world that we live in. Let us implore her intercession and compassion for our loved ones, and trust in our heart that they are in good hands. Pray unceasingly; it is our best armor. With the Blessed Virgin beside us, we can feel her gentle presence enveloping us in her loving maternal embrace.

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