Today I
am going to share with you some thoughts in area that I am an expert – SIN. It will not be an exhaustive analysis,
because that would take several days
In the
area of SIN, we each have expertise. That
expertise is not something we should be proud of, rather we should be honest
enough with ourselves to admit it.
In our
1st Reading from Deuteronomy – Moses teaches the Israelites and us
to observe the statutes & decrees and to observe them carefully.
Our 2nd Reading is from the Letter
of James offers us the building block for our worldview – “All good giving and every perfect gift is from
above ….” FROM
GOD.
James reminds us to HEAR God’s Word and to
LIVE God’s Word. He urges us to allow
God’s WORD to guide our actions, our life.
And, in
today’s Gospel Jesus confronts hypocrisy; He challenges the Pharisees and the
scribes about being hearers of God’s WORD but not doers of God’s WORD. Jesus points out to them that they “cling” to
human tradition and “disregard” God’s commandment.
When we
sit down to dinner how many times do, we or did we ask our children, “Did you
wash your hands with soap and water? Fortunately,
when my children were growing up, they were unaware of this Gospel passage or
they would have said, the Apostles didn’t wash their hands, why do we? We know that is not what Jesus is saying, He
is saying what makes us unclean is not the dirt on our hands, but the dirt in
our hearts.
Pope
Francis recently reminded us not to be hypocrites, not to fear the truth, not
to pretend. “Who we are,
what we do, the kind of persons we are begin within the heart – the place where
God dwells ….” [Connections,
8/29/2021]
God’s
dwelling place in our lives increases or decreases by our actions, how we live
our lives. "An old Cherokee once told his
grandson about a fight that was going on inside of him. He
said it was between two wolves. One was evil: Anger, envy, greed, arrogance,
self-pity, gossip, resentment, and false pride.
The other was good:
Joy, peace, love, hope, serenity, humility, kindness, generosity, truth,
compassion and faith. The grandson
thought about it for a moment & then asked his grandfather, 'Which wolf do
you think will win?' The old Cherokee replied, 'The one I feed.'" [Sermons.com, Philip W. McLarty, - The Parable of the Wheat
and the Tares]
The
Catechism teaches us that “Sin is ‘a word,
an act, or a desire contrary to eternal Law’ … an offense against God in disobedience to his love.”[Compendium of the Catechism of the Catholic
Church, #392, p.114]
God
transforms the world one person at a time, and He wants us to start now. The
Kingdom of God belongs to the childlike, the people who put God first in their
life, who allow God’s Will to become their wills. Maybe
this true story can help us, “A boy’s letter to Jesus ….” It is dated December 17, 1939 (southern France)
Little
Pierre wrote: “Dear little Jesus, to prepare me for my first communion,
I ask you not to bring me toys this year; I want to make this sacrifice to
thank you and ask you to take care of Daddy, and to end the war soon so that he
will no longer be forced to go far away where fighting is going on.” [Aleteia, 8/11/2021]
As we
wash our hands with soap and water may it remind us that we need to confess our
sins so we can have the soap and water of God’s Grace and Mercy clean our souls
and help us do God’s Will more faithfully.
For a
few minutes, in silence, reflect on where God is in your life: At the
center?
Somewhere
else?
St. Joseph, pray for us.
St. Andre Bessette, intercede for us.
St. Francis de Sales, pray for us.
“Tune my spirit to the
music of heaven.” [St. Brendan the Navigator]
May God Be Praised.
Join me
and pray, God, our refuge and hope, we turn to You during this COVID 19
Pandemic and plead for Your help. In
Your mercy and compassion, You carry the dead home and give us grace to comfort
each other.
As the
Pandemic persists, in its Delta variant form and we try to return to “normal”
life, may that “normal” be filled with prayer and thanksgiving for You and for
the many blessings You give us. May we
follow Your Light as we continue our earthly journey and prepare for the gift
of eternal life. Amen. [Dcn. George Kelly]