Suy
NiệmTin Mừng Thứ Hai, tuần 27 Thường Niên.
Bài Tin Mừng hôm nay nhắc nhở chúng ta về ba vấn đề: lề luật, tình yêu và cuộc sống vĩnh cửu. Vấn đề chính yếu nhất đó là tình yêu. Tình yêu có thể đưa con người đạt tới hạnh phúc vĩnh cửu, và tình yêu sẽ giúp con người chu toàn mọi lề luật. Không có tình yêu con người không thể tìm thấy sự sống đời đời. Không có tình yêu thì mọi luật lệ chỉ là một cái ách đè nặng con người.
 
Như trong đoạn Tin Mừng hôm nay, Người Thông luật Do thái trong câu chuyện thật sự đã làm chúng ta ngạc nhiên về câu hỏi của Chúa Giêsu, nhưng sau khi khen ngợi ý tưởng Chúa, và rồi sau đó anh ta đã hơi bất ngờ với lời tóm tắt của Chúa Giêsu là "Anh trả lời đúng lắm. và cứ làm như vậy thì anh sẽ được sống".(Lk 10:28). Vì vậy, anh ta muốn chứng tỏ bản thân đạo đức và sự hiểu biết của mình và nên anh ta đã cố gắng để tiếp tục thảo luận. Nhưng tại thời điểm này, Chúa Giêsu đã dạy cho anh ta và tất cả chúng ta ai là láng giếng của chúng ta? Qua câu chuyện ngụ ngôn của Chúa Giêsu đã kể hôm nay, cho thấy tình yêu thương và lòng thương xót của Thiên Chúa rộng lớn như thế nào đối với mọi người, không phân biệt màu da, tôn giáo...Chúa Giê-su cho chúng ta biết gì về tình yêu thương thật sự đối với người lân cận? Trước tiên, chúng ta phải sẵn sàng giúp đỡ ngay cả khi người khác tự mang rắc rối cho mình do lỗi hoặc sơ suất của họ.
 
 
 
Lạy Chúa, Chúng con cần đôi mắt với lòng từ bi của Chúa hôm nay, Xin giúp chúng con biết nhìn xa hơn sự thiển cận riêng của mình. Xin Chúa đưa chúng con ra khỏi cái cái rốn vũ trũ của chính bản thân của chúng con. Và giúp chúng con nhìn thấy nhu cầu cần thiết của những người chung quanh. Xin Chúa thay đổi trái tim của chúng con, được giống như trái tim của Chúa để chúng con được thấy như Chúa đã thấy, và biết xúc động như trái tim của Chúa, để mọi hành động của chúng con được giống như Chúa. Chúng con chỉ mong có thể được như thế thôi, Lạy Chúa.
 
 Reflection
The many different ways in which Jesus responds to people make a very interesting study and spiritually repays much reflection as it helps us to understand better how God deals with us in different situations and enables us to grow in awareness of God’s presence in our lives and so open our hearts to God's liberating truth and creative love. As in today’s Gospel passage, Jesus not infrequently answers a question by asking another question. This is not any kind of condescending pettiness but a rather effective pedagogical method: rather than receive a ready-made answer from a master, it is more profitable in general that we be formed to reflect on our own experience. The man in today’s story was obviously taken aback at Jesus’ question followed by praise and finally his somewhat abrupt summing up “Do this and you shall live”. So he wished to justify himself and tried to continue the discussion. At this point, Jesus assumed his role as a teacher and answered with the parable of the Good Samaritan.
The phrase “Good Samaritan” has entered into all our language and societies in some way — an indication that Jesus spoke deeply to human experience.
Lord, grant us the grace to reflect on Your words and our life experiences and so learn how to inherit everlasting life.
 
 Monday
27th Ordinary Time 2024
The question is very good. We should all seek to understand, with all our hearts, what we must do to inherit eternal life. Of course the problem is that this scholar of the law did not ask this question with sincerity and openness. Rather, he asked Jesus this question to test our Lord. This scholar, as well as other scribes, Pharisees, Sadducees and elders, was envious of Jesus and sought to find fault with Him. This scholar appeared to be concerned that Jesus was teaching contrary to the Law of Moses. But what does our Lord do? He says nothing more than to put the question back to the scholar, asking him, “What is written in the law? How do you read it?” The scholar answers correctly, according to the Law of Moses, and Jesus responds to him, “You have answered correctly; do this and you will live.” Thus, the test was passed.
What’s interesting and helpful to ponder in this exchange is the way Jesus responds to this scholar. Because Jesus knew the scholar’s heart, and because He knew that this scholar was not asking with humility and openness, Jesus responded with great prudence, inviting the scholar of the law himself to answer his own question. Though we are not able to read another’s heart in the way our Lord did, we should learn a lesson from Him on how to respond to others who have as their goal to trick, trap, test, and twist our words if they disagree with us. This is especially important in matters of faith and morality. If you are striving to live the Gospel with all your heart and you encounter the “testing” of others as a result of the holy life you are striving for, ponder Jesus’ actions here. Too often, when another challenges us or tests us, we become defensive and even offended. As a result, we can enter into arguments back and forth that bear little or no fruit. Jesus did not argue. He did not allow this test to trip Him up. Rather, He only offered responses that could not be doubted. Jesus knew that this scholar was not interested in the deepest spiritual truths. He was only interested in finding fault. Therefore, the deeper and fuller Gospel message could not be offered.
We should also learn from this passage the importance of coming to Jesus with an open heart, sincerely seeking the deepest spiritual answers to life. We ought never test Jesus. Instead, in humility, we must believe that He is the source of all truth and that He has every answer in life that we seek.
Reflect, today, upon two things. First, reflect upon how completely open you are to all that Jesus has to say. If you were to ask our Lord this question, “What must I do to inherit eternal life?,” what would Jesus say to you? Would He only be able to offer you general answers in the form of questions? Or would Jesus see the open and sincere nature of your heart and be able to speak in great depth and detail to you? Second, reflect upon anyone with whom you constantly have to defend yourself for the practice of your faith. If this is your experience, perhaps reexamine your approach, realizing that the deepest pearls of your faith should only be shared with those who are sincerely open and are seeking to embrace them with all their heart.
My deep and wise Lord, You and You alone have every answer to life. You and You alone can reveal to me all that I need to know in life so as to achieve holiness and fulfillment. Please open my heart so that I can come to You with humility and sincerity, open to all that You wish to reveal to me. Jesus, I trust in You.
 
 Monday
27th Ordinary Time 2024
1. Loving Our Neighbor: The Scribes and the Pharisees often sought to put Jesus to the test. They hoped that he would contradict himself or teach something against the Law. They hoped that this would prove his doctrine to be false. The lawyer in today’s passage thought that he was an expert in the law but showed that he was only a novice. He did not realize that before him stood not a mere man but the Son of God. Saint Cyril of Alexandria writes that the Christ was depicted in many ways in the Old Testament, but that this was hidden to the lawyer: “In many ways Emmanuel is depicted to you by the shadowing of Moses. You saw him there sacrificed as a lamb, yet conquering the destroyer and abolishing death by his blood. You saw him in the arrangement of the ark, in which the divine law was deposited. In his holy flesh, he was as in an ark, being the Word of the Father, the Son that was begotten of him by nature. You saw him as the mercy seat in the holy tabernacle, around which stood the seraphim. He is our mercy seat for pardon of our sins” (Cyril of Alexandria, Commentary on Luke, Homily 68).
 
 Monday
27th Ordinary Time
 
Jesus Wants Us to Live: Jesus’s response to the curious scholar who correctly answered his own question should fill us with hope: Do this and you will live. A full life, a meaningful life, a fulfilling life—isn’t that the deepest desire of every human heart? Isn’t that the desire we find at the core of every other desire? All the choices we make, all the decisions and the sacrifices we make, are made because we think they will help us live life more fully, more satisfactorily, more happily. This core desire of ours is also Christ’s core desire for us: “I came that they might have life, and have it more abundantly” (John 10:10). He created us. He wrote this core desire into the depths of our souls. He wants to satisfy it. In fact, that’s why he came to earth: to give us the light and grace to know and to follow the path to a more and more fulfilling life both here on earth and forever in heaven. All we need to do is follow that path—Christ’s path. Nothing else really matters. How firmly do I believe that? How courageously am I willing to give that direction to my daily life?
Bài Tin Mừng hôm nay nhắc nhở chúng ta về ba vấn đề: lề luật, tình yêu và cuộc sống vĩnh cửu. Vấn đề chính yếu nhất đó là tình yêu. Tình yêu có thể đưa con người đạt tới hạnh phúc vĩnh cửu, và tình yêu sẽ giúp con người chu toàn mọi lề luật. Không có tình yêu con người không thể tìm thấy sự sống đời đời. Không có tình yêu thì mọi luật lệ chỉ là một cái ách đè nặng con người.
Như trong đoạn Tin Mừng hôm nay, Người Thông luật Do thái trong câu chuyện thật sự đã làm chúng ta ngạc nhiên về câu hỏi của Chúa Giêsu, nhưng sau khi khen ngợi ý tưởng Chúa, và rồi sau đó anh ta đã hơi bất ngờ với lời tóm tắt của Chúa Giêsu là "Anh trả lời đúng lắm. và cứ làm như vậy thì anh sẽ được sống".(Lk 10:28). Vì vậy, anh ta muốn chứng tỏ bản thân đạo đức và sự hiểu biết của mình và nên anh ta đã cố gắng để tiếp tục thảo luận. Nhưng tại thời điểm này, Chúa Giêsu đã dạy cho anh ta và tất cả chúng ta ai là láng giếng của chúng ta? Qua câu chuyện ngụ ngôn của Chúa Giêsu đã kể hôm nay, cho thấy tình yêu thương và lòng thương xót của Thiên Chúa rộng lớn như thế nào đối với mọi người, không phân biệt màu da, tôn giáo...Chúa Giê-su cho chúng ta biết gì về tình yêu thương thật sự đối với người lân cận? Trước tiên, chúng ta phải sẵn sàng giúp đỡ ngay cả khi người khác tự mang rắc rối cho mình do lỗi hoặc sơ suất của họ.
Lạy Chúa, Chúng con cần đôi mắt với lòng từ bi của Chúa hôm nay, Xin giúp chúng con biết nhìn xa hơn sự thiển cận riêng của mình. Xin Chúa đưa chúng con ra khỏi cái cái rốn vũ trũ của chính bản thân của chúng con. Và giúp chúng con nhìn thấy nhu cầu cần thiết của những người chung quanh. Xin Chúa thay đổi trái tim của chúng con, được giống như trái tim của Chúa để chúng con được thấy như Chúa đã thấy, và biết xúc động như trái tim của Chúa, để mọi hành động của chúng con được giống như Chúa. Chúng con chỉ mong có thể được như thế thôi, Lạy Chúa.
The many different ways in which Jesus responds to people make a very interesting study and spiritually repays much reflection as it helps us to understand better how God deals with us in different situations and enables us to grow in awareness of God’s presence in our lives and so open our hearts to God's liberating truth and creative love. As in today’s Gospel passage, Jesus not infrequently answers a question by asking another question. This is not any kind of condescending pettiness but a rather effective pedagogical method: rather than receive a ready-made answer from a master, it is more profitable in general that we be formed to reflect on our own experience. The man in today’s story was obviously taken aback at Jesus’ question followed by praise and finally his somewhat abrupt summing up “Do this and you shall live”. So he wished to justify himself and tried to continue the discussion. At this point, Jesus assumed his role as a teacher and answered with the parable of the Good Samaritan.
The phrase “Good Samaritan” has entered into all our language and societies in some way — an indication that Jesus spoke deeply to human experience.
Lord, grant us the grace to reflect on Your words and our life experiences and so learn how to inherit everlasting life.
The question is very good. We should all seek to understand, with all our hearts, what we must do to inherit eternal life. Of course the problem is that this scholar of the law did not ask this question with sincerity and openness. Rather, he asked Jesus this question to test our Lord. This scholar, as well as other scribes, Pharisees, Sadducees and elders, was envious of Jesus and sought to find fault with Him. This scholar appeared to be concerned that Jesus was teaching contrary to the Law of Moses. But what does our Lord do? He says nothing more than to put the question back to the scholar, asking him, “What is written in the law? How do you read it?” The scholar answers correctly, according to the Law of Moses, and Jesus responds to him, “You have answered correctly; do this and you will live.” Thus, the test was passed.
What’s interesting and helpful to ponder in this exchange is the way Jesus responds to this scholar. Because Jesus knew the scholar’s heart, and because He knew that this scholar was not asking with humility and openness, Jesus responded with great prudence, inviting the scholar of the law himself to answer his own question. Though we are not able to read another’s heart in the way our Lord did, we should learn a lesson from Him on how to respond to others who have as their goal to trick, trap, test, and twist our words if they disagree with us. This is especially important in matters of faith and morality. If you are striving to live the Gospel with all your heart and you encounter the “testing” of others as a result of the holy life you are striving for, ponder Jesus’ actions here. Too often, when another challenges us or tests us, we become defensive and even offended. As a result, we can enter into arguments back and forth that bear little or no fruit. Jesus did not argue. He did not allow this test to trip Him up. Rather, He only offered responses that could not be doubted. Jesus knew that this scholar was not interested in the deepest spiritual truths. He was only interested in finding fault. Therefore, the deeper and fuller Gospel message could not be offered.
We should also learn from this passage the importance of coming to Jesus with an open heart, sincerely seeking the deepest spiritual answers to life. We ought never test Jesus. Instead, in humility, we must believe that He is the source of all truth and that He has every answer in life that we seek.
Reflect, today, upon two things. First, reflect upon how completely open you are to all that Jesus has to say. If you were to ask our Lord this question, “What must I do to inherit eternal life?,” what would Jesus say to you? Would He only be able to offer you general answers in the form of questions? Or would Jesus see the open and sincere nature of your heart and be able to speak in great depth and detail to you? Second, reflect upon anyone with whom you constantly have to defend yourself for the practice of your faith. If this is your experience, perhaps reexamine your approach, realizing that the deepest pearls of your faith should only be shared with those who are sincerely open and are seeking to embrace them with all their heart.
My deep and wise Lord, You and You alone have every answer to life. You and You alone can reveal to me all that I need to know in life so as to achieve holiness and fulfillment. Please open my heart so that I can come to You with humility and sincerity, open to all that You wish to reveal to me. Jesus, I trust in You.
1. Loving Our Neighbor: The Scribes and the Pharisees often sought to put Jesus to the test. They hoped that he would contradict himself or teach something against the Law. They hoped that this would prove his doctrine to be false. The lawyer in today’s passage thought that he was an expert in the law but showed that he was only a novice. He did not realize that before him stood not a mere man but the Son of God. Saint Cyril of Alexandria writes that the Christ was depicted in many ways in the Old Testament, but that this was hidden to the lawyer: “In many ways Emmanuel is depicted to you by the shadowing of Moses. You saw him there sacrificed as a lamb, yet conquering the destroyer and abolishing death by his blood. You saw him in the arrangement of the ark, in which the divine law was deposited. In his holy flesh, he was as in an ark, being the Word of the Father, the Son that was begotten of him by nature. You saw him as the mercy seat in the holy tabernacle, around which stood the seraphim. He is our mercy seat for pardon of our sins” (Cyril of Alexandria, Commentary on Luke, Homily 68).
Jesus Wants Us to Live: Jesus’s response to the curious scholar who correctly answered his own question should fill us with hope: Do this and you will live. A full life, a meaningful life, a fulfilling life—isn’t that the deepest desire of every human heart? Isn’t that the desire we find at the core of every other desire? All the choices we make, all the decisions and the sacrifices we make, are made because we think they will help us live life more fully, more satisfactorily, more happily. This core desire of ours is also Christ’s core desire for us: “I came that they might have life, and have it more abundantly” (John 10:10). He created us. He wrote this core desire into the depths of our souls. He wants to satisfy it. In fact, that’s why he came to earth: to give us the light and grace to know and to follow the path to a more and more fulfilling life both here on earth and forever in heaven. All we need to do is follow that path—Christ’s path. Nothing else really matters. How firmly do I believe that? How courageously am I willing to give that direction to my daily life?

 
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