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Showing posts from February, 2023

Walking with Jesus: First Sunday of Lent

For Sunday, Feb. 26, 2023 Genesis 2:7-9, 3:1-7; Romans 5:12-19; Matthew 4:1-11 Our readings today take us back to where our relationship with God began: in the Garden of Eden. It was beautiful and wonderful to behold. We see the wonders of the world God created. All creation spoke of God’s love and total commitment to create beauty encompassing the vast halo of the Milky Way and beyond. Nothing is in need of repair … everything God touches is total beauty and complete in itself. The bottom line is that humans came and tried to remake, reconstitute and even redo God’s creation to satisfy their own desires, wishes and selfish ambitions. This was not man’s mission to do: Jesus was sent to restore what was lost through the pride of our ancestors. God gave the breath of life to humans; He is the source of all life. Thinking they knew better, Adam and Eve were tempted to turn away from God’s plan … the age-old temptation to do what I want to do because I want to do it … for me! This has been

Walking with Jesus: Seventh Sunday in Ordinary Time

For Sunday, Feb. 19, 2023 Leviticus 19:1-2, 17-18; 1 Corinthians 3:16-23; Matthew 5:38-48 We look back at the Garden of Eden and ask: What is the SIN associated with Adam and Eve? Moses started off his Primeval History with the first story of Creation. God created the heavens and the earth, and continued with “making it beautiful to behold.”   God examined His creation and “saw how good it was. Then God said: ‘Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. ... God created man in His image; in the divine image He created him; male and female He created them.” [Genesis 1:26, 27] “And God looked at everything He had made, and He found it very good. Evening came, and morning followed — the sixth day.” God continued creating, instructing man: “You are free to eat from any of the trees of the garden except the tree of knowledge of good and bad. From that tree you shall not eat; the moment you eat from it you are surely doomed to die.” [Genesis 1:16] Then God created woman, a companion

Walking with Jesus: Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time

For Sunday, Feb.12, 2023 Sirach 15:15-20, 1 Corinthians 2:6-10, Matthew 5:17-37 Today's readings ask me to focus on myself and my relationships with others, beginning with those who had “charge of me” and were “forming” me as I grew up. I was asked, “Please do this job ... finish this chore … take this and do that.” In reflecting, did I tend to look at the “job,” conclude “that’s good enough,” and then rush off to resume whatever I had been doing, which was much more fun? For the most part this was a learning experience that helped me recognize parental rules and those in authority while expanding my living to be obedient, and redirecting my living for  myself to helping and caring for others. This is a good way of reflecting upon how we are encouraged to dig a little deeper by moving from what is “good enough” to the higher, more thoughtful, more mature commitment of realizing that we live in relationship with others. Has my approach been respectful toward all? Or have I cont

Walking with Jesus: Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time

For Sunday, February 5, 2023 Isaiah 58:7-10, 1 Corinthians 1:2-5, Matthew 5:13-16 Am I a happy person? Am I an angry person? Am I a caring person? Am I an indifferent person? Am I a joyful person? Am I an insulting person? Am I a person who is halfway between these “opposites” just listed? Am I concerned that I have much work to do to make myself the person I have been created to be, or am I satisfied with myself — having fallen into the rut that “it's just the way that I am ... there’s no need for me to change?” In the second year of his pontificate, Pope Francis gathered the Roman Curia on Dec. 22, 2014, for an “expected Christmas gathering.” Having begun his pontificate on March 13, 2013, this was his second Christmas as leader of the Catholic Church. The Curia comprises the administrative institution and the central body through which the affairs of the Church are conducted. This certainly is a group of very qualified and talented people, many of whom have spent their lives i