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Archive for July, 2022

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As I begin drafting this week, it’s Thursday, July 28, and thanks to some opportunities I’ve seized outside of this blog, I’m out of time to put together the type of post I have before. Right now, God seems to be using life to teach me not to cling too tightly to my plans.

Now I’m far from opposed to making plans. I want to encourage everyone to make them. Outcomes aside, the planning process itself is a great teacher, not just about what we’re planning, but about ourselves. So even when plans don’t work out the way we hoped, they aren’t wasted. Sometimes, they do work out the way we hope they will, but the path we take to get to the intended destination isn’t the one we thought we’d follow. Along these lines, I’m not going to skip posting this week, but I am going to try out yet another new approach in what I post. I don’t think this will be the usual approach from here on out, but it may be an option I consider from time to time.

My new approach is to share the reflections that others publish on the readings from the previous weekend. First, I want to start with Dr. Susan McGurgan’s reflection about the gospel reading that inspired my post last week. The passage was Lk 10:38-42. Dr. McGurgan’s bio under Preacher includes a wealth of credentials. You can watch a video of her preaching on this passage as well as read the text of her reflection by following this link.

Second, I want to share with you a reflection from Boston College School Associate Professor of Old Testament Jamie L Waters. Here, she reflects on the Old Testament reading from July 24, Gn. 18: 20-32. I hope you can access this reflection. As a digital subscriber, I’m not limited in the number of times I’m able to follow the link. It’s my recollection that America Media allows a certain number of free views before it asks readers to sign up for a digital subscription. However, if any of you lets me know you can’t access this article, I won’t link to this source again.

Third, I want to share with you again the prayer I wrote for my June 2 post. I’m linking to it here because this past week’s gospel reading, Lk. 11:1-13, included the Lord’s Prayer. I thought about just copying and pasting the prayer here, but then I thought referring you to the original context for it would be helpful.

And finally, I’d like to share with you Brenna Davis’s reflection on the Lord’s Prayer because who needs just my take on it — especially for the second time around? Not me. I wanted to hear someone else’s perspective. As with Dr. McGurgan’s reflection, you can watch a video of Ms. Davis presenting hers under the Video link, and you can read the text of it under the Text link. Her bio is under the Preacher link on the same page as her text and video.

Works cited

Davis, Brenna. “July 24, 2022: Seventeenth Sunday in Ordinary Time,” Catholic Women Preach, FutureChurch, https://www.catholicwomenpreach.org/preaching/07242022, 24 July 2022, Accessed 28 July 2022.

McGurgan, Dr. Susan Fleming. “July 17, 2022: Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time,” Catholic Women Preach, FutureChurch, https://www.catholicwomenpreach.org/preaching/07172022, 17 July 2022, Accessed 28 July 2022.

Rutledge Lisa, “Our Ascension,” Sitting with the Sacred, Oleander Isle Editing & Publishing, https://sittingwiththesacred.com/2022/06/02/our-ascension/ 2 June 2022, Accessed 28 July 2022.

Waters, Dr. Jamie L. “God, Our Father, Calls For Justice and Hospitality,” America: The Jesuit Review, America Media, https://www.americamagazine.org/faith/2022/07/20/justice-hospitality-god-father-243388?utm_source=piano&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=22942&pnespid=pLtrES0WN7EY3fDMu27sCpOT4A6nVYYtfPizzeZ4thJmHv4SYX4HgDlY5gP0d4E4o34lMxHT, 20 July 2022, Accessed 28 July 2022.

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For this week’s post, I’ve been sitting with Luke Chapter 10:38-42. In this passage, Martha “welcomes” Jesus into the home she shares with her brother and sister, Lazarus and Mary (Luke 10:38). When I imagine the scene, Mary invites in right behind Jesus the apostles, along with the women who have been “provid[ing] for [the men] out of their resources” (Luke 8:3). Joanna, Susanna, Mary from Magdala, and others join Martha in making what she had planned for the evening meal go further. Then they set about helping her bring all that food to the table. As they do so, Martha tells her guests she wishes she had richer fare and more of it, especially as she sees the most prominent villagers standing at her threshold in the wake of the initial visitors. The visiting women don’t respond with any reassuring words. Still, she doesn’t take the hint. She wonders out loud whom she should seat where. Finally, one of the women shushes poor, hospitable Martha. “We listen to the teacher while we do the chores,” she whispers, patting Martha on the arm. “We’ll have time to catch up when we recline to eat.”

Martha’s gaze finds the teacher’s in the opposite corner of the large room. Then it finds her sister sitting at his feet, like a guest, while the visiting women help with the serving. Her hands clench around a bowl as she makes eye contact with the teacher again.

At first, he looks as if he’s spotting her again after losing her in a crowd. But where one moment she reads joy, she soon finds pity. He doesn’t look down, even though he seems to continue speaking to her sister.

“Tell her to help me,” Martha interrupts the teacher. “Don’t the Scriptures teach us that we should welcome guests?”

“They do, but they also teach us to love the Lord ‘with all our hearts, with all our souls, with all our minds, and with all our strength (Mark 12:30). Your sister is doing that, and you could be doing so just as well while you prepare a meal for us. Mary ‘has chosen the better part’ but not because of her posture or because of what she’s not doing (Luke 10:42). If she sat here and were worried about the things you are, she wouldn’t be choosing any differently than you.” Concern yourself with what concerns the Father. Do your best, and then trust Him to provide as you as you strive to serve as He does.”

Author’s note: With my physical limitations, I can’t do much to help with chores, so I often find the passage from Luke Chapter 10 reassuring. To be honest, I’ve used the passage to pat myself on the back in the past. However, when I imagined the scene as I drafted this post, I gained a different perspective.

The Bible. The New American Bible Revised Edition, Kindle edition, Fairbrother, 2011.

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I’ve often read and heard that Jesus’ parables include twists, that an element of surprise is often included, and this element increases the impact of the story all the more. The parable of The Good Samaritan (Luke 10: 25-37) is no exception to this observation. If we were hearing the story in Jesus’s’ time on earth, we might have been surprised that the Samaritan is the one who stops to help the victim. It’s my understanding that Samaritans and Jews were far from close allies around the 1st century A.D.

I wonder how Jewish hearers of this story would have felt about the fact that the priest and the Levite don’t seem to notice the man lying bloody by the side of the road. Angry at the priest and the Levite? Angry at Jesus for presenting these two characters in that way. Cynically unsurprised as in “That’s just like a priest to act that way”? Or would they be unsurprised in another way because they had heard Jesus before and were used to the ways he turned their expectations upside down? As with any story, how an audience member responds to it depends not only on the culture from which he or she comes or the status he or she has in that culture, but in the unique combination of experiences that an individual brings to the hearing.

I listened to this parable on an app that invited me to put myself into the story. Before I did that, I saw a reflection on the parable whose title asked me whether I was a victim or perpetrator in the story. I was a little surprised that when I closed my eyes and played the events in my mind, I was neither one.

I was a beggar lying on the opposite side of the road from where the victim would fall. I saw myself in this position because I can’t walk or stand. My arms don’t allow for much extension or have much strength either. If I had lived in the first century and had miraculously survived to be born and then survived to my current thirty-eight years, I’d probably stay home and be cared for by my extended family, so long as I had living relatives, as I do now. But if I were the only one of my people left, I wouldn’t have much choice but to have someone place me by the side of the road to beg for food and coins, so that’s the position I felt prompted to imagine myself in as I prayed with this parable. The position allowed me to witness the scene.

I witnessed the man being beaten and then robbed, but I didn’t make a sound because I didn’t want the perpetrators to attack me. Then, as they hurried away, and the victim and I lay turned away from each other, I thought to myself, “God’s law requires that I help this man, but he can probably still move more than I can. So what can I do?”

Beg passersby to help the injured man. That’s all. To imagine myself doing it, I’ll have to imagine I’m braver, more hopeful, and more altruistic than I am. Because if the priest and the Levite ignored the injured man, why would they give any indication they heard me calling? Perhaps because I’m persistently making noise, while the injured man isn’t. Perhaps because they’ve seen me there before, and giving me a few coins time would make them feel good without costing as much as helping the injured man would. Maybe they would answer me but would say they could do nothing because they had somewhere to be and they were already late. Besides, they didn’t have any more money on them. Maybe next they would command me to hush, and I’d clutch at their robes until they shook me off until I lost my grip. I would be silent then until they were out and of earshot.

I would feel that all was lost. What was the point in nagging people? It wouldn’t change anyone’s mind or help the injured man, and it would make things worse for me.

But so what if it gave me new rips in my scraps of clothing and some new scrapes and bruises? A man’s life was at stake, and more of that life pulsed out of him with every second that went by.

But so what if it gave me new rips in my scraps of clothing and some new scrapes and bruises? A man’s life was at stake, and more of that life pulsed out of him with every second that went by. Maybe the events of this day were one of the reasons I was here. Maybe my persistence would do some good, even if it wasn’t for me or the man, and and even if I didn’t see it.

So when I saw another man approaching at a distance, I spoke for the victim again, first in a whisper and then in a shout as the stranger passed me.

He didn’t acknowledge me but stopped to wash the other man’s wounds, lifting the victim onto his own stooped shoulders and making his way back to his horse to drape the man over the animal.

Only then, caked in dust, flushed and sweating out of every pore did he trudge over to me and hold out a coin.

“No, save it for him.” I nodded toward the man lying across the horse.

He dropped the coin into the dirt and strode toward his animal.

As he rode out of sight, that was the last I saw of either man.

Would the helper have done what he did without my pleas?

Probably.

But the price of silence had been too high to find out.

What might have been didn’t matter. What mattered was the good that had been and would continue to be.

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“Carry no money bag, no sack, no sandals; and greet no one along the way ” (Luke 10: 4). With these words, Jesus gives seventy-two disciples counterintuitive instructions for how to prepare for their mission to help spread the Gospel. After all, we normally want to prepare for a trip by packing anything we’ll need, especially if we’re getting ready for a trip important enough to be called a mission. So what was the thinking behind Jesus’s words? I won’t pretend to know for sure, but I have no doubt that following the instructions would be very helpful to the disciples’ mission in at least these ways:

  • The disciples would be reminded or would learn for the first time about the experiences of people who are totally dependent on others for their survival. Hopefully, such an experience would make any of us want to do more to help the less fortunate in the future.
  • The dependency and simplicity with which the disciples presented themselves would convey humility. This presentation might also contrast with the grandeur with which many leaders of the day may have presented themselves. This contrast may have encountered may have aided the disciples’ trustworthiness and relatability in the eyes of some of those they wanted to reach.
  • The dependency of the disciples would present an opportunity to the people whose houses they entered, the opportunity to be the means of God’s providence. It would open the disciples to trusting God, thanks to the kindness of their fellow human beings. I’d say God’s will is to work through us is to provide for each other because, as I’ve written before, God’s very nature is relationship.
  • The disciples would receive opportunities to practice brushing off rejection, not letting it distract or dishearten them. Instead of letting rejection “cling” to them, they were to practice continuing with forward progress toward building new relationships (Luke 10: 10-11). This take on Luke 10:10-11, verses that follow the ones I began with, is not original to me. Among other places, I’ve encountered this perspective in a series of reflections I subscribe to. Writing for America Media, Sarah Vincent shared a similar perspective. perspective

Into whatever house you enter, first say, “Peace to this household.” If a peaceful person lives there, your peace will rest on him; but if not, it will return to you.

Luke 10: 5-6

Many of us aren’t called to “Carry no money bag, no sack, no sandals, and greet no one along the way” (Luke 10:4-5). In fact, especially in the literal sense, many of us may be called to the opposite: to raise money or to support financially those who depend on us, to pack an extra pair shoes, and to give a stranger a simple kindness such as a smile, a “Hello” or a “How are you?” (And actually want to know the answer, whether it’s what we want to hear or not.)

Nonetheless, it’s worth considering what we can do and whatever work we’re called to to make ourselves more open to the gifts others have to offer. It’s worth considering what we can do to demonstrate trustworthiness and humility. I wrote about these considerations in How to Share the Good News: Open a Two-Way Street. It’s also worth considering the ways we’ve been dependent since before we were born and since we were small. It’s worth considering how each of us still needs each other and God whether or not we realize our need for relationship. It’s worth considering how our needs can change due to age, an accident, an illness or another life-changing event. Nothing is guaranteed but Divine Love. Jesus’ instructions to the seventy-two disciples remind us of that.

Works cited

The Bible. The New American Bible Revised Edition, Kindle edition, Fairbrother, 2011.

Vincent Sarah. “The Disciples Show Us How to Take a Leap of Faith.” America: The Jesuit Review, their July 2022, https://www.americamagazine.org/faith/2022/07/03/disciples-scripture-reflection-faith-243293/. Accessed their July 2022.

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