Suy
Niệm Tin Mừng Thừ Năm Tuần 31 Thường Niên. Luke 15:1-10.
Trong bài Tin Mừng hôm nay, Thánh Luca mô tả Thiên Chúa không phải là người ưa thích báo thù hay muốn trừng phạt con người, nhưng là một Thiên Chúa đầu yêu thương, Ngài hằng mong tìm kiếm những con người tội lỗi để đem họ về trong ơn cứu rỗi. Thiên Chúa đang tìm kiếm chúng ta, những con người tội lỗi, và yếu kém đức tin! Trong bài dụ ngôn hôm nay, Chúa Giêsu đuợc mô tả như một người mục tử nhân từ đang tìm kiếm con chiên đi lạc trong sa mạc. Và khi tìm thấy được nó, anh ta không tức giận, la mắng hay trừng phạt nó vì cái tội đi lang thang để bị lạc bày, nhưng anh ta đã đặt nó trên vai và mang nó về nhà với niềm vui hớn hở. Tương tự như vậy, Thánh Luca tiếp tục miêu tả Thiên Chúa như người phụ nữ tìm đồng tiền bị mất của mình. Cô quét nhà, thắp đèn cho sáng, cô đã bỏ ra hằng giờ và cố công để tìm cho ra đồng bạc bị mất của mình. Mặc dù đồng bạc ấy có giá trị không bằng cái công đã bỏ ra đi tìm, và có thể cô còn tốn tiền nhiều hơn cái giá trị của đồng tiền trong việc ăn mừng với bạn bè làng xóm sau khi cô đã tìm thấy được đồng bạc ấy.
Kitô giáo của
chúng ta chú trọng về việc
Thiên Chúa tìm kiếm chúng
ta, con người tội lỗi hơn là việc chúng ta đi
tìm kiếm Thiên Chúa: việc Thiên Chúa tha thứ, đón
nhận, và mời gọi chúng ta đến
với Bí Tích Thánh Thể. Kinh
Thánh mời gọi chúng ta suy ngẫm về những gì chúng ta có thể đã vô tình đánh mất. Có lẽ chúng
ta đã đánh mất một cái gì đó đọc
đường trong cuộc sống vất vả, cam go,
hay chúng
ta bị thất lạc
những gí đó trong một cuốc sống đầy bon chen vật chất, hoặc chúng ta đã vô tình hay
cố ý bỏ lại sau
lưng những gì đó vì cuộc sống đầy vội vã, và đua chạy với đồng tiền, danh
vọng.. Chúng ta đã mất những gì? Chúng
ta cỏn thiếu những gì cho
cuộc sống của chúng ta? Thiên Chúa đang tìm
kiếm chúng ta, đang
chờ đợi chúng
ta và sẵn sàng chào đón và
đưa chúng ta về nhà
Chúa.
Hãy đến với với tâm hồn thống hối và ăn năn. Lạy
Chúa, linh hồn chúng
con đang mong
chờ và
đợi Chúa, xin
cho chúng con biết
vtin tưởng vào lời Chúa
đã hứa.
Thursday 31st Ordinary
Time Rom. 14:7-12; Lk. 15:1-10
Contrary to some fire
and brimstone preaching, our God does not delight in sending people to Hell. In
fact, God grieves when people turn away from him. Our God does not cast us out.
God leaves the door unlocked and we can freely choose to stay or go or even
come home as we please.
The gospel today portrays God, not as vengeful and punishing, but as a God who searches for sinners so he can save them. God is searching for us! In the first parable Jesus describes a shepherd searching for a lost sheep in the desert. When he finds it, he does not scold or punish it for wandering off and becoming lost, but puts it on his shoulders and brings it home with great joy.
Likewise, Luke portrays God as a woman searching for her lost coin. She sweeps the house, lights a lamp. She spends more time and energy searching for her coin than it is probably worth and probably spends more than its value in celebrating its finding with her friends.
Christianity is more about God seeking us than it is about us seeking God: about God forgiving, welcoming, and inviting us to the Eucharist, sinners though we all are. The scriptures invite us to reflect upon what we may have unknowingly lost. What is missing? Perhaps something we dropped or have misplaced or accidentally left behind or maybe just gradually fell away unnoticed. Perhaps something was taken from us. What have we lost? What’s missing? God is looking for us, waiting to welcome us home. My soul is waiting for the Lord, I count on his word.
Thursday of the Thirty-First Week in Ordinary Time
“What man among you having a hundred sheep and losing one of them would not leave the ninety-nine in the desert and go after the lost one until he finds it? And when he does find it, he sets it on his shoulders with great joy and, upon his arrival home, he calls together his friends and neighbors and says to them, ‘Rejoice with me because I have found my lost sheep.’” Luke 15:4–6
Some of the great saints point out that the number one hundred represents perfection. One hundred refers to the perfection of the Kingdom of God, which represents not only all of the saints in Heaven but also the angels. The one lost sheep represents all of humanity as we make our way through this life. Jesus, of course, is the Shepherd Whose attention turns to fallen humanity on a diligent search for us so as to carry us home.
First, notice that the Shepherd does not search for the one stray sheep out of anger but out of concern and love. Understanding this is essential if we are to have a correct understanding of how our Lord sees us when we stray. We must see His deep concern, His diligence in searching, and His unwavering commitment to find us in our straying condition. This is not a God Who sits back in judgment and anger but a God Who came to us, took on our fallen human nature, and endured all suffering so as to find us and bring us home.
Notice also that in this parable, the Shepherd places the lost sheep on His shoulders and carries the sheep home. Oftentimes we can fall into the trap of thinking that we must make our way back to God by our own effort. But the truth is that God is always there, waiting to pick us up and carry us home. Our duty is to surrender to His merciful hands and to stop running. This is done by turning to Him and allowing Him to come to us and minister to us. The primary effort is on the part of our Lord once we surrender ourselves into His gentle Hands.
Finally, notice that the rejoicing mentioned in this parable is on the part of the Shepherd. Of course we also will rejoice at being picked up and carried home to the perfection of God’s Kingdom, but our rejoicing is done in response to the joy of our Lord. It is His joy we are invited to share in. It is His heart that is filled with gratitude as we allow Him to tenderly carry us home. “Rejoice with me because I have found my lost sheep,” He says.
Reflect, today, upon this holy image of the Good Shepherd. As you ponder this parable and imagery, be attentive to the various thoughts, memories, emotions and fears that are evoked within you. Each one of us is different, and our Lord deeply desires to come to each one of us right where we are, in the midst of our sins. Pondering the compassion of this Good Shepherd will open the door for our Lord to speak to you and to invite you personally to come to Him, turning away from the ways that you personally have strayed. Do not run away. Remain in confidence as He comes to you. Listen to His voice and say “Yes” to Him as He lifts you up to carry you home.
My gentle Jesus, You are the Good Shepherd. You love me and search for me with diligence and fidelity. May I trust You enough to stop running from You and hiding from Your gentle voice. Please come to me, pick me up, place me on Your shoulders and carry me home. Jesus, I trust in You.
Thursday 31st Ordinary
Time 2024
Opening Prayer: Lord God, I pray that you may find me when I am lost. For my part, I will seek you in all good things. I am thankful for the gift of your grace that empowers me to do good works.
Encountering
the Word of God
1. The Parable of the Lost Sheep: In the Gospel of Luke, Jesus prepares for the Parable of the Prodigal Son and his Older Brother (Luke 15:11-32) by telling two parables. The Parable of the Lost Sheep (Luke 15:3-7) focuses on God’s concern for sinners who are like the younger, prodigal son. The twist in the parable is that the shepherd leaves the ninety-nine. Any sensible shepherd would just cut their losses. They still have 99 sheep, losing one is no big deal. God, however, is not a sensible shepherd. He is madly in love with each one of us. He knows each one of us by name. We are each precious to God, and he will do whatever it takes to bring us back into the flock of his sheep.
2. The Parable of the Lost
Coin: The second parable, the Parable of the Lost Coin (Luke 15:8-10),
applies especially to those who are like the Pharisees and scribes. They
haven’t wandered far like the lost sheep. They are in the house of God, but
they are lost too! Just as Jesus seeks out the lost sheep, he will seek out the
lost coin. We are familiar with both groups of people. We know family members,
friends, coworkers, and others who have fallen into “sins of the flesh” and
have left the Church. We also know people who remain in the Church but are like
the scribes and Pharisees. They refuse to welcome sinners, they judge them no
matter what they do, and they relate to God more like an accountant than a
Father. Instead of growing in love for God and their brothers and sisters, they
check off boxes of external pious practices and are confidently self-righteous
because of all the sins they are avoiding. They refuse to celebrate God’s
mercy. They are lost in the House of God and need to be found. Jesus asks us to
imitate the merciful father, who goes to the older son and asks him to
celebrate the return of his brother and welcome him into the family once more.
He asks us to imitate the woman who searches her house for the lost coin and
calls all her friends and neighbors to rejoice with her when she finds it.
3.
Legal Righteousness vs. Divine Righteousness: In the Letter to the Philippians, Paul puts
the congregation on guard against Judaizing missionaries, who, should they make
their way to the city of Philippi, would likely pressure them to receive
circumcision. Paul argues that he, as an Israelite of the tribe of Benjamin and
an observant Pharisee, was circumcised according to the Law. He contrasts that
legal righteousness based on the Law of Moses with the surpassing divine
righteousness that comes from Jesus Christ. Circumcision was only a symbolic
ritual of something greater yet to come. This something greater is the
Sacrament of Baptism, which incorporates us into Christ, washes away our sin,
and makes us children of God. We are not to place our confidence in our flesh
or the legal righteousness of the Old Law. We are to be confident in the divine
righteousness we have received through faith in Jesus Christ under the New
Covenant. “For Paul, legal righteousness is not a saving righteousness because
it depends on human effort apart from the inward grace of God” (Ignatius
Catholic Study Bible: New Testament, 361).
Conversing
with Christ: Lord
Jesus, I trust in you. You offer me the wonderful gift of divine righteousness.
When I stray, you do not abandon me but seek me out as a Good Shepherd and
bring me home on your shoulders.
Thursday 31st Ordinary
Time
Opening Prayer: Lord God, I love you very much. I want to spend this time with you, to hear what you have to tell me. I need your Gospel, and I need your message of mercy. Grant me your grace and hear my prayer.
Encountering Christ:
Starting to Complain: The Pharisees and scribes began to complain
about Jesus’ behavior: “He focuses way too much on sinners!” They felt that his
emphasis on mercy was exaggerated. They thought that religion was about being
good and pure; so why all the focus on the moral outcasts? God will always have
a special love for sinners and those who suffer. And he’s always going to ask
us to be his instruments of mercy for those people. That can be a difficult
reality. Sometimes we can sometimes feel like being faithful to God’s will is
too costly. When we recognize this sentiment in our hearts, face it honestly,
and bring it to God he will bless and enlighten, restore and redeem us.
Left in the Desert: Jesus left ninety-nine good sheep to go
searching for one miserable wanderer. In my contemplation, Jesus seems to ask
me, “Wouldn’t you go after the one sheep?” Well, I wouldn’t. I don’t think I
would leave my friends alone and vulnerable to try to rescue an enemy.
Rereading this passage, we learn that God searched for the lost sheep to show
us how much he loves every single one of us individually. He also shows us how
much we are supposed to love each other: “As I have loved you, so you also
should love one another.” God is challenging us to stay close to the Shepherd
so that we grow in mercy.
Called
to Rejoice: God called upon the ninety-nine to rejoice.
We are to rejoice and make merry over every repentant brother, every time
someone accepts God’s mercy. How hard this can be for us if we have been
wounded by that person in some way! Only by God’s grace can we extend mercy the
way that Jesus does. When we pray for that gift, our stone hearts melt and we
are led from unforgiveness and judgment to peace and authentic joy.
Conversing
with Christ: Lord Jesus, I have experienced your mercy in
my own life and, with a heart full of gratitude, I want to be able to extend
your mercy to others. Reaching out this way can be difficult for me! Unite me
to your merciful heart, so that I may become more merciful.
Meditation Thursday 31st Ordinary Time
Do you ever feel resentful or get upset when
someone else gets treated better than you think they deserve? The scribes and
Pharisees took great offense at Jesus because he went out of his way to meet
with sinners and he treated them like they were his friends. The Pharisees had
strict regulations about how they were to keep away from sinners, lest they
incur ritual defilement. They were not to entrust money to them or have any
business dealings with them, nor trust them with a secret, nor entrust orphans
to their care, nor accompany them on a journey, nor give their daughter in
marriage to any of their sons, nor invite them as guests or be their guests.
They were shocked with the way in which Jesus freely received sinners and ate
with them. Sinners, nonetheless, were drawn to Jesus to hear him speak
about the mercy of God. Jesus characteristically answered the Pharisees' charge
with a parable or lesson drawn from everyday life.
What does Jesus'
story about a lost sheep and a lost coin tell us about God and his kingdom?
Shepherds normally counted their sheep at the end of the day to make sure all
were accounted for. Since sheep by their very nature are very social, an
isolated sheep can quickly become bewildered and even neurotic. The shepherd's
grief and anxiety is turned to joy when he finds the lost sheep and restores it
to the fold. The housewife who lost a coin faced something of an economic
disaster, since the value of the coin would be equivalent to her husband's
daily wage. What would she say to her husband when he returned home from work?
They were poor and would suffer greatly because of the loss. Her grief and
anxiety turn to joy when she finds the coin. Both the shepherd and the
housewife "search until what they have lost is found." Their
persistence pays off. They both instinctively share their joy with the whole
community. The poor are particularly good at sharing in one another's sorrows
and joys. What was new in Jesus' teaching was the insistence that sinners must
be sought out and not merely mourned for. God does not rejoice in the loss of
anyone, but desires that all be saved and restored to fellowship with him. That
is why the whole community of heaven rejoices when one sinner is found and
restored to fellowship with God. Seekers of the lost are much needed today. Do
you persistently pray and seek after those you know who have lost their way to
God?
"Lord Jesus, let your light dispel the darkness that what is lost may be found and restored. Let your light shine through me that others may see your truth and love and find hope and peace in you. May I never doubt your love nor take for granted the mercy you have shown to me. Fill me with your transforming love that I may be merciful as you are merciful."
Thursday 31st
Ordinary Time
Opening Prayer: Dear Lord, I thank you for the grace to be able to spend time with you. Strengthen my faith and inflame my love. Help me to listen attentively to your word, and to be open in both mind and heart. May I continue to seek you out more each day, and may I allow myself to be found by you, the Good Shepherd.
Encountering
Christ:
1. Lost Sheep: It is easy to imagine a single sheep becoming distracted, disoriented, and lost. Once separated from the flock, it is in danger of not finding its way back, or worse, being attacked by wolves. While such a situation is troublesome, a shepherd really couldn’t be angry at an irrational animal for its actions. However, when man strays from God, he does so by his own free choice. He is responsible; he does not accidentally stray from God due to innocent ignorance. That makes the patience of Christ all the greater than that of a shepherd; he is not pursuing an ignorant animal, but rather a willful and errant soul. That is why St. Paul marveled, “God proves his love for us in that while we were still sinners Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8). Francis Thompson’s “Hound of Heaven” expresses the errant soul’s perspective well: "I fled Him, down the nights and down the days; I fled Him, down the arches of the years; I fled Him, down the labyrinthine ways… But with unhurrying chase, And unperturbed pace… They beat-and a Voice beat… “All things betray thee, who betrayest Me.’’
2.
“No Need of Repentance”: The shepherd left the ninety-nine sheep
to seek the lost one. These are those who “have no need of repentance.” Here
Our Lord is speaking with a sense of irony since we are all in need of
conversion. While we may be “in the fold” of the church and practicing our
faith, our conversion remains an ongoing process. However, it is a real danger
to begin to think of oneself as “fully” converted, or as having arrived at
moral “perfection.” This seems to be Christ’s point in another passage where
the Pharisee prayed “‘O God, I thank you that I am not like the rest of
humanity–greedy, dishonest, adulterous–or even like this tax collector. I fast
twice a week, and I pay tithes on my whole income.’ But the tax collector stood
off at a distance and would not even raise his eyes to heaven but beat his
breast and prayed, ‘O God, be merciful to me a sinner’” (Luke 18:11-13). It was
the tax collector who went home justified (see Luke 18:14).
3.
“Rejoice with Me”: “Rejoice with me because I have found my
lost sheep.” It is wonderful to hear from Jesus about the joy found in heaven
with the recovery of the lost sheep. The church also celebrates such good news.
However, the once lost and now recovered sheep may be tempted not to rejoice.
He or she will be grateful for Our Lord’s help, but often that individual
struggles with letting go of the guilt associated with his or her past. In
extreme cases, the person may even question if he or she was truly forgiven.
“But I was so bad—how could I be forgiven?” This is why Our Lord affirms that
his mercy is precisely for sinners—like Peter who denied him, like the woman
caught in adultery, and like the good thief on the cross. The greater the sins,
the greater the conversion, and, therefore, the greater the gratitude. “Rejoice
with me!”
Conversing
with Christ: Dear Lord Jesus, I know that I am a
sinner. As such, I am so grateful to you for patiently and continuously
offering your mercy to me. May I neither despair of, nor presume of, your
mercy. Increase my reliance upon your grace to strengthen me in the face of
temptation and difficulties. Also help me to be your instrument to communicate
your goodness to souls in need of your mercy.
Comment:
There will be more rejoicing in heaven over one repentant sinner
Today, the evangelist of God's mercy imparts two parables of Jesus that lighten up his divine behavior towards those sinners returning to the right path. With the human image of joy, he reveals God's goodness finding pleasure in the homecoming of those who moved away from sin. It is like coming back to the Father's home (as more distinctly will say at Lk 15:11-32). «For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved» (Jn 3:17), and He did it while welcoming those that, full of confidence, «were seeking the company of Jesus (...), to hear what He had to say» (Lk 15:1), as He healed their soul as the doctor heals the body of the ailing (cf. Mt 9:12). While the Pharisees believed they were so righteous and felt they needed no doctor, it is actually for them —the evangelist says— that Jesus proposes the parables we read today.
If we feel spiritually sick, Jesus will tend to us and will be happy that we have gone to him. But if, on the contrary, we would think, as those proud Pharisees did, that we need not to plead forgiveness, the divine Doctor will not heal us. Each time we recite the Lord's Prayer, we must feel like sinners, as we say «and forgive us our wrongs...». And we sure must be grateful to him for doing it! As grateful we must also be, for having placed, so mercifully, at our disposal, the Sacrament of Reconciliation. Let us hope our haughtiness will not make us to look down on it. St. Augustine tells us that Jesus Christ, God and Man, gives us an example of humbleness by removing the “tumor” of our arrogance, «for, though great is the misery of a haughty man, greater is still the mercy of the humble God».
Let us further add that the lesson Jesus gives to the Pharisees is also an example for all of us; we cannot throw sinners away from us. The lord wants us to love them as He has loved us (cf. Jn 13:34) and we must rejoice to bring back home the lost sheep or to recover the lost coin.
WAU -Meditation: Luke 14:25-33 - 31st Week in Ordinary Time
Great
crowds were traveling with Jesus, and he turned and addressed them… (Luke
14:25)
Try to imagine yourself among the people following along behind Jesus. Questions are swirling around you; some are laughing, and some are crying, as the crunch of feet on the ground grows. Suddenly Jesus stops, turns around, and looks right at you. Did I do something? Jesus begins to speak, and it is as if everyone else disappears. Luke’s little detail about Jesus stopping, turning, and speaking seems deliberate. He wanted to emphasize Jesus’ desire to get the people’s full attention as he spoke words crucial to their faith. This was not a time for idle chatter or casual conversation. It was a time to let every word soak in. And for those who did pay close attention, the words changed their lives.
Every day, Jesus, the Son of the living God, wants to speak to you! He wants to take your face in his hands and say, “Look at me. Listen closely. This is important. I want you to receive it.” He asks you to set aside your own thoughts, ideas, and plans, and try your best to imagine looking into his eyes. This is a holy moment, when he can move your heart and form your mind. It’s a sacred time, when he can give you the grace you need to love him and follow him. It’s a golden opportunity for him to chip away at the hard outer layer of your heart so that he can find new ways to teach you and love you. Day in and day out, we are surrounded by distractions—both interior and exterior. There is so much “chatter” trying to pull us away from Jesus and from one another. How encouraging, then, to know that we have a Redeemer who will never stop trying to get our attention! Day after day, he wants to turn to us, look us in the eye, and tell us about his love, his will, and his salvation. So don’t let the chatter drown him out!
“Jesus, thank you for calling my name and speaking to my heart. Open my ears to hear you above all the noise in my day.”
Trong bài Tin Mừng hôm nay, Thánh Luca mô tả Thiên Chúa không phải là người ưa thích báo thù hay muốn trừng phạt con người, nhưng là một Thiên Chúa đầu yêu thương, Ngài hằng mong tìm kiếm những con người tội lỗi để đem họ về trong ơn cứu rỗi. Thiên Chúa đang tìm kiếm chúng ta, những con người tội lỗi, và yếu kém đức tin! Trong bài dụ ngôn hôm nay, Chúa Giêsu đuợc mô tả như một người mục tử nhân từ đang tìm kiếm con chiên đi lạc trong sa mạc. Và khi tìm thấy được nó, anh ta không tức giận, la mắng hay trừng phạt nó vì cái tội đi lang thang để bị lạc bày, nhưng anh ta đã đặt nó trên vai và mang nó về nhà với niềm vui hớn hở. Tương tự như vậy, Thánh Luca tiếp tục miêu tả Thiên Chúa như người phụ nữ tìm đồng tiền bị mất của mình. Cô quét nhà, thắp đèn cho sáng, cô đã bỏ ra hằng giờ và cố công để tìm cho ra đồng bạc bị mất của mình. Mặc dù đồng bạc ấy có giá trị không bằng cái công đã bỏ ra đi tìm, và có thể cô còn tốn tiền nhiều hơn cái giá trị của đồng tiền trong việc ăn mừng với bạn bè làng xóm sau khi cô đã tìm thấy được đồng bạc ấy.
The gospel today portrays God, not as vengeful and punishing, but as a God who searches for sinners so he can save them. God is searching for us! In the first parable Jesus describes a shepherd searching for a lost sheep in the desert. When he finds it, he does not scold or punish it for wandering off and becoming lost, but puts it on his shoulders and brings it home with great joy.
Likewise, Luke portrays God as a woman searching for her lost coin. She sweeps the house, lights a lamp. She spends more time and energy searching for her coin than it is probably worth and probably spends more than its value in celebrating its finding with her friends.
Christianity is more about God seeking us than it is about us seeking God: about God forgiving, welcoming, and inviting us to the Eucharist, sinners though we all are. The scriptures invite us to reflect upon what we may have unknowingly lost. What is missing? Perhaps something we dropped or have misplaced or accidentally left behind or maybe just gradually fell away unnoticed. Perhaps something was taken from us. What have we lost? What’s missing? God is looking for us, waiting to welcome us home. My soul is waiting for the Lord, I count on his word.
“What man among you having a hundred sheep and losing one of them would not leave the ninety-nine in the desert and go after the lost one until he finds it? And when he does find it, he sets it on his shoulders with great joy and, upon his arrival home, he calls together his friends and neighbors and says to them, ‘Rejoice with me because I have found my lost sheep.’” Luke 15:4–6
Some of the great saints point out that the number one hundred represents perfection. One hundred refers to the perfection of the Kingdom of God, which represents not only all of the saints in Heaven but also the angels. The one lost sheep represents all of humanity as we make our way through this life. Jesus, of course, is the Shepherd Whose attention turns to fallen humanity on a diligent search for us so as to carry us home.
First, notice that the Shepherd does not search for the one stray sheep out of anger but out of concern and love. Understanding this is essential if we are to have a correct understanding of how our Lord sees us when we stray. We must see His deep concern, His diligence in searching, and His unwavering commitment to find us in our straying condition. This is not a God Who sits back in judgment and anger but a God Who came to us, took on our fallen human nature, and endured all suffering so as to find us and bring us home.
Notice also that in this parable, the Shepherd places the lost sheep on His shoulders and carries the sheep home. Oftentimes we can fall into the trap of thinking that we must make our way back to God by our own effort. But the truth is that God is always there, waiting to pick us up and carry us home. Our duty is to surrender to His merciful hands and to stop running. This is done by turning to Him and allowing Him to come to us and minister to us. The primary effort is on the part of our Lord once we surrender ourselves into His gentle Hands.
Finally, notice that the rejoicing mentioned in this parable is on the part of the Shepherd. Of course we also will rejoice at being picked up and carried home to the perfection of God’s Kingdom, but our rejoicing is done in response to the joy of our Lord. It is His joy we are invited to share in. It is His heart that is filled with gratitude as we allow Him to tenderly carry us home. “Rejoice with me because I have found my lost sheep,” He says.
Reflect, today, upon this holy image of the Good Shepherd. As you ponder this parable and imagery, be attentive to the various thoughts, memories, emotions and fears that are evoked within you. Each one of us is different, and our Lord deeply desires to come to each one of us right where we are, in the midst of our sins. Pondering the compassion of this Good Shepherd will open the door for our Lord to speak to you and to invite you personally to come to Him, turning away from the ways that you personally have strayed. Do not run away. Remain in confidence as He comes to you. Listen to His voice and say “Yes” to Him as He lifts you up to carry you home.
My gentle Jesus, You are the Good Shepherd. You love me and search for me with diligence and fidelity. May I trust You enough to stop running from You and hiding from Your gentle voice. Please come to me, pick me up, place me on Your shoulders and carry me home. Jesus, I trust in You.
Opening Prayer: Lord God, I pray that you may find me when I am lost. For my part, I will seek you in all good things. I am thankful for the gift of your grace that empowers me to do good works.
1. The Parable of the Lost Sheep: In the Gospel of Luke, Jesus prepares for the Parable of the Prodigal Son and his Older Brother (Luke 15:11-32) by telling two parables. The Parable of the Lost Sheep (Luke 15:3-7) focuses on God’s concern for sinners who are like the younger, prodigal son. The twist in the parable is that the shepherd leaves the ninety-nine. Any sensible shepherd would just cut their losses. They still have 99 sheep, losing one is no big deal. God, however, is not a sensible shepherd. He is madly in love with each one of us. He knows each one of us by name. We are each precious to God, and he will do whatever it takes to bring us back into the flock of his sheep.
Opening Prayer: Lord God, I love you very much. I want to spend this time with you, to hear what you have to tell me. I need your Gospel, and I need your message of mercy. Grant me your grace and hear my prayer.
"Lord Jesus, let your light dispel the darkness that what is lost may be found and restored. Let your light shine through me that others may see your truth and love and find hope and peace in you. May I never doubt your love nor take for granted the mercy you have shown to me. Fill me with your transforming love that I may be merciful as you are merciful."
Opening Prayer: Dear Lord, I thank you for the grace to be able to spend time with you. Strengthen my faith and inflame my love. Help me to listen attentively to your word, and to be open in both mind and heart. May I continue to seek you out more each day, and may I allow myself to be found by you, the Good Shepherd.
1. Lost Sheep: It is easy to imagine a single sheep becoming distracted, disoriented, and lost. Once separated from the flock, it is in danger of not finding its way back, or worse, being attacked by wolves. While such a situation is troublesome, a shepherd really couldn’t be angry at an irrational animal for its actions. However, when man strays from God, he does so by his own free choice. He is responsible; he does not accidentally stray from God due to innocent ignorance. That makes the patience of Christ all the greater than that of a shepherd; he is not pursuing an ignorant animal, but rather a willful and errant soul. That is why St. Paul marveled, “God proves his love for us in that while we were still sinners Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8). Francis Thompson’s “Hound of Heaven” expresses the errant soul’s perspective well: "I fled Him, down the nights and down the days; I fled Him, down the arches of the years; I fled Him, down the labyrinthine ways… But with unhurrying chase, And unperturbed pace… They beat-and a Voice beat… “All things betray thee, who betrayest Me.’’
There will be more rejoicing in heaven over one repentant sinner
Today, the evangelist of God's mercy imparts two parables of Jesus that lighten up his divine behavior towards those sinners returning to the right path. With the human image of joy, he reveals God's goodness finding pleasure in the homecoming of those who moved away from sin. It is like coming back to the Father's home (as more distinctly will say at Lk 15:11-32). «For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved» (Jn 3:17), and He did it while welcoming those that, full of confidence, «were seeking the company of Jesus (...), to hear what He had to say» (Lk 15:1), as He healed their soul as the doctor heals the body of the ailing (cf. Mt 9:12). While the Pharisees believed they were so righteous and felt they needed no doctor, it is actually for them —the evangelist says— that Jesus proposes the parables we read today.
If we feel spiritually sick, Jesus will tend to us and will be happy that we have gone to him. But if, on the contrary, we would think, as those proud Pharisees did, that we need not to plead forgiveness, the divine Doctor will not heal us. Each time we recite the Lord's Prayer, we must feel like sinners, as we say «and forgive us our wrongs...». And we sure must be grateful to him for doing it! As grateful we must also be, for having placed, so mercifully, at our disposal, the Sacrament of Reconciliation. Let us hope our haughtiness will not make us to look down on it. St. Augustine tells us that Jesus Christ, God and Man, gives us an example of humbleness by removing the “tumor” of our arrogance, «for, though great is the misery of a haughty man, greater is still the mercy of the humble God».
Let us further add that the lesson Jesus gives to the Pharisees is also an example for all of us; we cannot throw sinners away from us. The lord wants us to love them as He has loved us (cf. Jn 13:34) and we must rejoice to bring back home the lost sheep or to recover the lost coin.
Try to imagine yourself among the people following along behind Jesus. Questions are swirling around you; some are laughing, and some are crying, as the crunch of feet on the ground grows. Suddenly Jesus stops, turns around, and looks right at you. Did I do something? Jesus begins to speak, and it is as if everyone else disappears. Luke’s little detail about Jesus stopping, turning, and speaking seems deliberate. He wanted to emphasize Jesus’ desire to get the people’s full attention as he spoke words crucial to their faith. This was not a time for idle chatter or casual conversation. It was a time to let every word soak in. And for those who did pay close attention, the words changed their lives.
Every day, Jesus, the Son of the living God, wants to speak to you! He wants to take your face in his hands and say, “Look at me. Listen closely. This is important. I want you to receive it.” He asks you to set aside your own thoughts, ideas, and plans, and try your best to imagine looking into his eyes. This is a holy moment, when he can move your heart and form your mind. It’s a sacred time, when he can give you the grace you need to love him and follow him. It’s a golden opportunity for him to chip away at the hard outer layer of your heart so that he can find new ways to teach you and love you. Day in and day out, we are surrounded by distractions—both interior and exterior. There is so much “chatter” trying to pull us away from Jesus and from one another. How encouraging, then, to know that we have a Redeemer who will never stop trying to get our attention! Day after day, he wants to turn to us, look us in the eye, and tell us about his love, his will, and his salvation. So don’t let the chatter drown him out!
“Jesus, thank you for calling my name and speaking to my heart. Open my ears to hear you above all the noise in my day.”
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