Daily Meditation - Thursday 14th. February 2008 - PERSPECTIVE AND PRIORITIES

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DAILY MASS READINGS
usccb.org/nab/021408.shtml

An insight into the Reading for today
Scroll down to “Reflection”
ocarm.org/lectio/annoA_eng/064eng.htm

Meditation
wau.org/meditations/meditations.asp?month=02&day=14&year=2008&x=12&y=4

“Ask and it will be given to you;
seek and you will find;
knock and the door will be opened to you.” (Matthew 7:7)
In our sometimes cynical minds this can sound like an advertisement for some new product that will never live up to its hype.

Isn’t it funny how our thinking can get skewed to the point where we believe that God is just as unreliable as the “next great thing” to come on the market?
The truth is, God loves us so much that he wants to give us every good and perfect gift. After all, he gave us the gift of his Son—and even that wasn’t enough. Now that Jesus has redeemed us,*** God wants to keep giving us gifts. He wants to lavish us with his wisdom, his council, his strength, his joy, and most importantly, his love. ***He’s longing to open the door—if only we will knock!
Don’t worry about getting everything in perfect order before you
ask, seek, and knock. God knows we have doubts and fears. He knows your sins and weaknesses—better, even, than you do. But none of that has changed his desire to bless you. He has known you before time began, and even then he decided to shower you with the choicest of gifts.

Of course, some will wonder why God didn’t give them a million dollars, or why he didn’t take vengeance upon an enemy. The answer is that, because he knows us better than we know ourselves, he also knows exactly what we need. He sees the inner needs in our hearts, and he knows that meeting these needs is what will make us the most happy and fulfilled. He wants nothing more than to see all of us filled to overflowing with his love and his power.
We will never know the full extent of God’s plan for us, but we can trust that his plans are full of goodness, love, and peace. So what are you waiting for? Go ahead and knock!

“Jesus, today I will knock and ask you to open the door.

Fill me with your love and freedom.
I want to choose you over the worries and concerns of this world. You are my Savior,
and I love you with all of my heart.”
 
An insight into the Reading for today from OP

ocarm.org/lectio/annoA_eng/064eng.htm
During the time of Jesus there were several movements which, like Jesus, sought a new way of living. For example, John the Baptist, the Pharisees and others. Many of them formed a community and had disciples. (Jn 1, 35; Lk 11, 1; Acts 19, 3) and they had their own missionaries (Mt 23, 25). But there was a great difference! The Pharisees, for example, when they went on mission, they went already prepared. They thought that they could not eat what the people would offer them, because the food was not always ritually “pure”. For this reason, they took with them purses and money in order to be able to take care of their own food. Thus, instead of working toward overcoming the divisions, this observances of the Law of purity weakened even more the living out of community values.
• The proposal of Jesus is different. He tries to rescue the community values which had been suffocated, and tries to renew and to reorganize the communities in such a way that they could, once again, be an expression of the Covenant, a sign of the Kingdom of God.
And this is what is said to us in today’s Gospel which describes the sending out of the 72 disciples:
• Luke 10, 1: The Mission. Jesus sends the disciples to places where he himself has to go. The disciple is the spokesperson of Jesus. He is not the owner of the Good News. Jesus sends the disciples in pairs, two by two. That is useful for mutual help, because the mission is not individual, but rather communitarian. Two persons represent the community better than only one.
• Luke 10, 2-3: ***Co-responsibility. ***
The first task is that of praying so that God may send workers. Every disciple - ,man and woman – has to feel responsible for the mission. And thus has to pray to the Father to send workers to continue the mission. Jesus *sends his disciples as sheep among wolves. *The mission is a difficult and dangerous task. Because the system in which they lived was and continues to be contrary to the reorganization of the people in a community of life. The *Mission *to which Jesus sends the 72 disciples tries to recover four community values:
  • Luke 10, 4-6: *
Hospitality
*. Contrary to the other missionaries, the disciples of Jesus – men and women – cannot take anything with them, neither purse, nor sandals. They can and should only *take peace. *That means that they have to trust in the hospitality of the people. Because the disciple who goes without anything, taking only peace, shows that he/she trusts the people. The disciple thinks that he/she will be received, and the people feel respected and confirmed. Through this practice the disciple criticizes the laws of exclusion and recovers the ancient value of hospitality. Greet no one on the road, probably means, that no time should be lost in things which do not belong to the mission.
  • Luke 10, 7: *Sharing. *
The disciples should not go from house to house, but should remain in the same house. That is, they should live together with the people in a stable way, participate in their life and in the work of the people of the place and live from what they receive in exchange, *because the labourer deserves his wages. *This means that they have to trust in sharing. Thus, through this new practice, they recover an ancient tradition of the people, they criticize the culture of accumulation which distinguished the politics of the Roman Empire and announced a new model of living together.
  • Luke 10, 8: Communion around the same table.
The disciples should *eat what the people offer them. *They cannot live separated, eating their own food. That means that they should accept the communion and cannot be separated, eating their own food. This means that they have to accept to sit around the table with the others. In this contact with the others, they should not fear to loose the legal purity. Acting in this way, they criticize the laws of purity which were in force and they announce a new access to purity, to the intimacy with God…
  • Luke 10, 9a: *The Acceptance of the excluded. *
The disciples should *cure those who are sick, cure the lepers and cast out the devils *(Mt 10, 8). This means that in the community they should accept those who are excluded. This practice of solidarity criticizes society which excludes and indicates concrete solutions.
• Luke 10, 9b: *The coming of the Kingdom. *If all these requirements are respected, the disciples can and should cry out in the four directions: *
*The Kingdom is here! *
*Because the Kingdom is a new way of living and of living together with others, according to the Good News which Jesus has come to reveal to us: God is Father and because of this we are all brothers and sisters. In the first place, to educate for the Kingdom is to teach a new way of living and of living together with others, **a new way of acting and of thinking. **
4) Personal questions
• Why are all these different attitudes recommended by Jesus signs of the coming of the Kingdom of God?

• How can we practice today what Jesus asks: “do not take with you any purse”, do not move from house to house”, “do not greet anyone on the road”, announce the Kingdom?
 
You will notice that the Gospel used for the Meditation and that used for “Insight into Reading” (Lectio Divina) are different Gospels.
I presumed (and never a good move!!!) that the Gospels used were always the same. I’ll watch this in future:o

Blessings - Barb
 
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