Posts Tagged ‘Deuteronomy’

Fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Friday, January 27th, 2012

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Readings: Deuteronomy 18:15-20 1      Corinthians 7:32-35       Mark 1:21-28

A number of years ago I was walking through the campus at Harvard on my way to my car. The senior graduation was in progress on the lawn. The guest speaker was Alexander Solzhenitsyn. I caught bits and pieces of his address as I was walking. One statement he made was that “America had lost its courage.” A few weeks later I read the mixed reactions to his speech. Many people found them hard to accept; they took the position that since Solzhenitsyn was not native to America, he could not really know or understand the American version of democracy, and so what he said was not really applicable or true. The reaction of these people, then, was simply to dismiss what Solzhenitsyn was saying to them. Certainly they may have found his message threatening to them; they were perhaps frightened that if what he was saying was true, then their whole way of life and their values were in danger. Since this would be quite painful to accept they simply dismissed it by denying the authority of Solzhenitsyn to speak about those things.

The other reaction was quite different. These people seemed to understand what Solzhenitsyn was saying even though what he was saying was also quite difficult and threatening to them. Still they heard it in a different way. They were even grateful that at least someone came along who had the courage to say what, they felt, needed to be said and should have been said a long time ago. This latter group saw him as one speaking out of his own painful experience, and, therefore, “with great authority.”

Whether we agree with what the Russian author said or not, it illustrates the point of the Gospel of this Sunday’s Liturgy. Whenever someone speaks with new ideas or a new way of seeing things that is contrary to our way of seeing them, or that challenges our value system, it is natural to react to them with a certain degree of hostility. We often demand proof of them and wonder by what right they say these things.

This is the situation that we see in the Gospel. Christ has been invited, as was the custom, to teach in the synagogue. And, as we read in the Gospel, he spoke to them in a manner that was different from the one they were accustomed to hearing. He spoke “with authority,” that is to say, as one who knew what he was talking about. As proof of this, he then performed the miracle of exorcising the man of the unclean spirit. This direct proof of his authority was even more of a challenge to many of the religious leaders of his time, and it provoked in them an even greater resistance. They did not recognize Jesus as the Messiah, and the fact that he might possibly be the Messiah was upsetting and disturbing to them. It was a challenge to their value and even to their temporal position as leaders of the people.

It is normal for us, when we’ve heard someone present to us a new way of looking at things, to find it rather disturbing. We are then forced to re-evaluate our past way of doing things and consider the possibility of adopting new values. Because this can be disturbing, we first tend to block out or deny what the speaker is saying. Still we must try to understand him, as in fact, a great number of people did in the reading today.

They were open to Christ’s teaching and to the miracle that he worked; they recognized his authority. In this way their reaction was quite different from the people who were in the position of power as their religious leaders. They accepted his teaching and made it known throughout the whole countryside; “at once his fame spread everywhere throughout the surrounding region of Galilee.”

Their reaction might teach us also to listen to what others say to us, particularly those who speak from experience, even though we may not always like or even ultimately agree with what they say. We can never be in a position of possessing the whole truth. And each person can teach us something, if only we are open enough to try to understand them.

What efforts are you making to refine your skills of listening to patients, residents and fellow workers?

Rev. Joseph Manship
Pastoral Care

 

Feast of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Deuteronomy 8:2-3, 14-16        1Cor. 10:16-17         John 6:51-58

This feast is a celebration of God’s love for us in that God not only cares for us but actually nourishes us with food for body and soul.  The Old Testament reading reminds us of the manna God provided for the people in the desert when they had nothing to eat. Like a mother and like a father God provides food for his children, all the while guiding them on the journey of life.

In the second reading we are reminded of Jesus giving us his body and blood as food and drink the night before he gave his life for our salvation. He also gave us the example of service and love by washing his disciples’ feet, the work of a servant. To both of these he said:  “Do this in memory of me.”

In the Gospel reading, Jesus proclaims that he is the Bread of Life and that whoever eats this bread will live forever.  What a thought and what a promise! He promises closeness, life and intimacy with God the Father and with Jesus himself. It is a promise and an assurance of food for the soul, of nourishment on the journey of life here on earth that will lead to everlasting life.

It’s hard to believe that many of us pass this up every week.  We are invited every Sunday to worship: to be nourished by the Word of God and by the Body and Blood of Jesus.  We do all sorts of things all week to support our families, to nourish our bodies and to stay healthy.  Yet when the weekend comes, many ignore the invitation to come together in a prayerful community to worship and to be nourished spiritually.  People have all kinds of excuses: time, boredom, sports, apathy, laziness, negative attitudes toward the church, etc.

When I did parish ministry in Skowhegan years ago, I used to encourage families to come and worship on the weekend in gratitude, if for no other reason, for all the blessings of the week. God provides us with shelter, food, a job and so much more.  How can we not give one hour to hear the Word, to find strength in a prayerful community and to receive the Body and Blood of Jesus as food for the journey? The word Eucharist means thanksgiving… Do we not recognize God’s gifts to us every day?  Do we not recognize God’s desire to feed us, his children?

In the Catholic tradition there are some people who have a great devotion to Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament.  It is a good thing for they spend time in quiet prayer connecting to God.  The primary purpose of having the Blessed Sacrament in our churches, however, is to bring this Bread of Life to the sick and the dying. We do that almost daily, bringing the Body of Christ to our sick and elderly here at the hospital and at d’Youville Pavilion. I thank all those Eucharistic Ministers who assist us in that service. 

My hope is that all of us will revisit our need to be grateful and to be nourished by the Body and Blood of Christ.  May that lead us back to our worshiping communities, no matter which denomination or which church we call our own.

Sr. Suzanne Beaudoin, SSCh
Director of Pastoral Care