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ATTENTION ON THE COVENANT OF LOVE

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MONDAY OF HOLY WEEK     Isa 42:1-7; Ps 27:1-3,13-14; Jn 12:1-11 The Covenant for the People We have begun the Holy Week with the celebration of Passion Sunday. Within the week, Saint John will gradually lead us through the drama of the last days of the Son of Man in Jerusalem, culminating in his crucifixion on the day before the Sabbath, that is, on Good Friday. The prophecy of Isaiah the prophet supplies the scriptural background to the drama and story of the Messiah. As we noted previously, what we heard on Passion Sunday is detailed and drawn out for us throughout the week, so that we may deeply appreciate God's plan of our salvation and its exact execution. The psalmist offers us the mindset of the Son of Man as he approaches the time of his glorification in the completion of his total sacrifice of self to God. “The Lord is my light and my help; whom shall I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my life; before whom shall I shrink?” This confession of total confid...

WHAT HIS PASSION TEACHES US

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PALM SUNDAY    Mt 21:1-11; Isa 50: 4-7; Ps 22:8-9,17-20,23-24; Phil 2:6-11; Mt 26:14-27:66 The Lesson of Our Teacher and Master Today is Palm or Passion Sunday. The celebration ushers us into Holy Week for the celebration of the Paschal mysteries of our Lord. The readings prepare our minds with a summary of the events of the coming days. The naming of the Sunday is from the major event of the day, which is the triumphant entry of Jesus Christ into Jerusalem. The first part of the celebration depicts this. The blessing of the palms at a suitable place outside the church and subsequent procession into the church are to recall these events from the Gospels. The major lesson from this initial celebration is the emphasis placed on the Lordship of the Son of Man. What we see clearly through the Gospel reading proclaimed outside the church in preparation for the procession is Jesus’ foreknowledge of all things and his command or control of every event. He knew the hour had...

THE GATHERING OF THE CHILDREN OF GOD

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SATURDAY, FIFTH WEEK OF LENT    Ezek 37:21-28; Jer 31:10-13; Jn 11:45-56 Gathered Together by The Son of Man God called Abraham and promised him many blessings if he would obey and follow God. As we noted previously, the physical blessings of descendants, nations, and the land of Canaan were sacramental signs of the spiritual blessings God prepared for Abraham and his spiritual descendants. When God fulfilled the promised physical blessings, he made use of these blessings to direct our attention to the real spiritual blessings that would be realised last. By the scattering of the children of Israel among the nations of the world, God achieved two things: First, he showed the children of Abraham by physical descent that they were mistaken in putting too much emphasis on the physical in place of the spiritual. Second, he sent them to their rightful places among the unbelievers, in preparation for the gathering of the spiritual children or descendants of Abraham from a...

BEARING OUR TRIALS WITH FAITH

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FRIDAY, FIFTH WEEK OF LENT    Jer 20:10-13; Ps 18:2-7; Jn 10:31-42 The Son of Man Eluded Their Grasp The omnipotence of God is such that he is always near to us and carries us, supporting us with his powerful providence. Sometimes the real presence of God is difficult to grasp, perceive, or comprehend. He seems so removed from our troubles and anxieties that we feel like giving up in our faith. None is a total foreigner to these moments of radical isolation from others and from God, our source of existence and being. In such moments when we search for meaning in life, we must hang on with faith in God, bearing in mind that God’s presence and love will be renewed at dawn. By dawn, we mean whenever God chooses to bring back his light to our darkness and re-establish his communion with us. The psalmist describes his own dark moment in the psalm. “The waves of death rose about me; the torrents of destruction assailed me; the snare of the grave entangled me; the traps of deat...

OUR PERPETUAL COVENANT WITH GOD

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THURSDAY, FIFTH WEEK OF LENT    Gen 17:3-9; Ps 105:4-9; Jn 8:51-59 The Covenant in Perpetuity Following the readings the Church gives us to reflect on, we consider God's faithfulness to his word again. As we have come to understand, we can say without doubt that God keeps his covenant ever in mind; for through his word and dealings with men, we come to know the meaning of covenant. God lives by himself and does not need anyone or anything for support. Rather, He is the support of all that exists and will come to exist. God is life and truth, and his word is life and truth. Our Lord taught us this when he informed the Jews that the Father gives life and has also given the Son the same power to give life to whomever he wills. He created man and woman to be with him and enjoy the communion of his goodness. The initiation of the communion as desired and designed by God is revealed in the Son of Man. By the perfection of the planned communion, the Son of Man gives life to who...

THE SACRIFICE OF OUR NATURE

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THE ANNUNCIATION OF THE LORD     Isa 7:10-14,8:10; Ps 40:7-11; Heb 10:4-10; Lk 1:26-38 The Reward of The Sacrifice of The Lamb We have reflected on the sacrifice that our human nature was created to be to God. For a sacrifice to be truly worth the name, it must be a voluntary offering and never forced in any way. Any form of coercion removes the beauty and worth of the sacrifice. Therefore, after God’s creation of man and woman in His image, he let them exercise their free will as a path leading to making them in the likeness of God. The path outlined by their free will, if illuminated by the word of God, leads to divine likeness. Thus, the true path of our free will is a path of sacrifice of ourselves to God. It is indeed so, because God, who leads us in the path, is the meaning of sacrifice. God is holy unto Himself; He is consecrated to Himself as He cannot be any other, in any respect. So, listening and doing the word of God makes us a sacrifice to God. Sin...

THE SYMBOL OF OUR SACRIFICE

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TUESDAY, FIFTH WEEK OF LENT    Numb 21:4-9; Ps 102:2-3,16-21; Jn 8:21-30 The Lifting of the Son of Man We can understand the revelation of man as the temple of God in a slightly different way, which enriches our appreciation of our vocation to God. The fact that God created us for himself, to be his dwelling place, implies that our nature is supposed to be a sacrifice to God. Since human nature is ours, the sacrifice ought to be made by man, and not by God or any angel. However, the fact that corruption lies at the root of our nature makes this sacrifice impossible. By their original disobedience, our first parents admitted the seed of corruption into our common nature. Because of this corruption at our origin, God promised a new beginning for the human person when He promised to create enmity between the serpent and the woman, between the seed of the serpent and the seed of the woman. The new beginning of human nature was necessary for its sacrifice to God, as divi...