Readings: http://www.usccb.org/bible/readings/080220.cfm
Jesus
Blessed, Broke and Gave food to those who were gathered. He Blessed and gave Thanks! He Broke, reminding us that all we have is a gift from God.
He Gave, by Sharing!
The Eucharist
is simple yet profound; simple yet sacramental; simple yet mysterious; simple
yet cosmic, it is a gift that is beyond us, while being readily available to us.
In
“Come Be My Life: The Private Writings of the ‘Saint of Calcutta’”- We read,
“… one of the great
challenges of the darkness was this absence of a vivid sense of God’s presence
in prayer; it was something she [Mother Teresa] still longed for.” [p.270] Throughout the ongoing COVID 19
Pandemic many people have experienced the “absence of God’s presence” in prayer
and in life.
Today’s
Scripture readings provide an antidote to the darkness and despair of our COIVD
19 world. Isaiah invites us to “…come to the water …. Come to me [God] heedfully, listen, that you may have
life.” Fr.
John Foley’s beautiful hymn “Come to the Water” is based on today’s reading
from Isaiah. “Come, without
paying and without cost drink wine and milk."
In our ever increasingly secularized culture, there is a danger that living our faith will become only private, “The church must advocate too for a public conscience, not just for the private conscience.” [Ron Rolheiser, St. Louis University Sunday Website, 8/02/2020]
In our ever increasingly secularized culture, there is a danger that living our faith will become only private, “The church must advocate too for a public conscience, not just for the private conscience.” [Ron Rolheiser, St. Louis University Sunday Website, 8/02/2020]
St.
Paul reminds us that nothing can “separate
us from the love of God”, God loves us forever! The Gospel Verse
teaches us, “One does not live on bread alone, but on every Word that
comes forth from the mouth of God.” God’s Word is our life blood, we should read it, study it
and live it.
In Matthew’s account Jesus is deeply saddened by the death of John the Baptist and He seeks quiet time to mourn, so He withdraws to a deserted place. But the crowds hungry for spiritual nourishment follow Him. When Jesus gets off the boat He sees “… the vast crowd [and] His heart was moved by pity for them.”
In Matthew’s account Jesus is deeply saddened by the death of John the Baptist and He seeks quiet time to mourn, so He withdraws to a deserted place. But the crowds hungry for spiritual nourishment follow Him. When Jesus gets off the boat He sees “… the vast crowd [and] His heart was moved by pity for them.”
At the
beginning of Mass, Msgr. Sacks prayed, “Draw near to your servants, O Lord, and answer their prayers with
unceasing kindness.” In Jesus - Truth confronts sinfulness, In Jesus - Justice forgives sins, and In Jesus - Mercy transforms
sinners into saints. The
vast crowd in today’s Gospel represents us - seeking spiritual nourishment. Jesus feeds
us in unimaginable abundance, so we can live His Gospel and become saints,
whether we are black, white, brown, straight, gay, young or old.
Meghan Murphy-Gill
writes, “The job of the baker is to make bread taste great by extracting as
much flavor as possible from its ingredients. It’s done in a simple, ancient
process — Fermentation …. Fermentation
literally transforms the ingredients from one thing into another…. The yeast literally dies to give life to the
bread, which is then consumed and gives life to us …. The very baking of bread
mirrors the mystery of Christ as the compassion of God made human for us
….”
[Connections, August 2020, “Take this bread” by Meghan Murphy-Gill]
[Connections, August 2020, “Take this bread” by Meghan Murphy-Gill]
Christ
offers us the fullness of life in God in the Eucharist, the preeminent gift He
gives us. St. Teresa of Calcutta
accepted her darkness, [her dark night of the soul], as a gift from God, a gift
hard to live. Our COVID Darkness can be
a time of spiritual renewal for us, if we say yes to God, yes to God’s answer
to our prayers, especially God’s answer to our Coronavirus prayers.
We need
to TRUST that God will guide us through this pandemic in the Lord’s time and in
the Lord’s way. The Lord calls us to
strive to be saints, people who do the ordinary things of in life for love of
God.
For a
few minutes, in silence, think about the ordinary things you do and whether you
do them for in your love of God.
May God Be
Praised!
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