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Daily Prayer

June 14th, 2010

"If anyone forces you to go one mile, go with him 2 miles"
Matt. 5 : 41

The message in today’s Gospel is about kingdom love. “Turn the other cheek.” This saying of Jesus sums up what it means to be a Christian. It calls us to act for the good of the person who injured us, and to take a positive step towards healing. We should not allow our rivers of love to become poisoned by the evil attitude of others. The problem with revenge is that it hurts us more than it hurts those who have wounded us. As the peace activist Martin Luther King said : “The old law about “an eye for an eye” leaves everybody blind.” The way of Jesus is the way to freedom: if we strive to live by His way and not our own way, we will find it. Kingdom love is very demanding, so we pray : Our Father in heaven may your Kingdom come within our hearts and may our love be perfect as your love is perfect.

Prayer


Lord, you are the cornerstone upon which I build my life. Heal me of my lack of love and help me to experience your healing and forgiveness in my relationships with others.

Just a Thought

How the Holy Family prayer: A Reflection by Pope Benedict XVI

“I would like to invite you to reflect on the place of prayer in the life of the Holy Family of Nazareth. The home of Nazareth, in fact, is a school of prayer where we learn to listen, to ponder and to penetrate the profound meaning of the manifestation of the Son of God, drawing our example from Mary, Joseph and Jesus.

Pope Paul VI during his visit to Nazareth said “we come to understand the need for a spiritual discipline, if we wish to follow the teaching of the Gospel and become disciples of Christ.” And he added: “First, it teaches us silence. Oh! That there would be reborn in us the esteem for silence, that wonderful and indispensable atmosphere of the spirit: while we are deafened by so many noises, sounds and clamorous voices in the frantic and tumultuous times of modern life. Oh! Silence of Nazareth, teach us to be resolute in good thoughts, intent upon the interior life, ready to listen well to the secret inspirations of God and the exhortations of the true masters.”

We can glean several insights on the Holy Family’s prayer and relationship with God from the Gospel accounts of Jesus’ childhood. We may begin with the Presentation of Jesus in the temple. St. Luke tells us that Mary and Joseph, “when the time came for their purification according to the Law of Moses, brought the child up to Jerusalem to present him to the Lord”(2:22). Like every observant Jewish family, Jesus’ parents go up to the temple to consecrate the firstborn son to God and to offer sacrifice. Moved by fidelity to the law’s prescriptions, they set off from Bethlehem and go up to Jerusalem with Jesus, who is now forty days old. Instead of a one-year-old lamb, they present the offering of simple families; that is two young pigeons. The Holy Family’s pilgrimage is one of faith, of the offering of gifts, a symbol of prayer, and of encounter with the Lord, whom Mary and Joseph already see in the son Jesus.”

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