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Sunday, June 23, 2024

12th Sunday of the Year (B)

(Edited) Reflections for the 12th Sunday of the Year, Year B

"Why are you lacking in faith?"

In this Sunday's gospel, Jesus displayed His divine power over the storm, and commented on the lack of faith expressed by his apostles. His followers, as the gospel described, were quite alarmed and thought that all of them will drown due to the strong storm. This story of Jesus stilling the storm in the gospel of Mark is before that point in the gospel when the identity of Jesus was known through the confession of Peter ["You are the Christ"], which is in Chapter 8. So in the experience of the storm, the apostles only had a vague knowledge of who Jesus is. This vague knowledge was expressed in the comment: "Who can this be that the wind and the sea obey him?" Since they do not as yet know who Jesus was, they had no faith in Him in that storm incident.

Each one is journeying together with the Church further on into a deeper and greater knowledge of who Christ is. Most often, the "storms" experienced in life come when one does not yet have a deeper personal knowledge of Christ, or when one has forgotten Christ in his way of life and work. "Storms" come and arrive. They are part of the seasons of life in the world: economic storms, wars, stormy relationships, great losses in life [a loved one, a job, a relationship, divorce, bankruptcy in business], illness, etc. It often comes not only to test our faith in Jesus, but to deepen our knowledge and rootedness in His will. The best response to "storms" is to be proactive - spiritually. We are called always to be vigilant, to watch and pray, so that we do not get mired in fears, worries and anxieties. Anxieties can blind us like the apostles, who only then saw and realized that Jesus was with them, and when awakened, surprisingly stilled the storm.

In all the storms of life, there is a call to be "proactive" spiritually. To discipline ourselves spiritually and avoid that blindness that makes us forget that the Lord is with us. He is always present. Much of our time are often delegated to matters which does not integrate our life in the Spirit, or which distracts us to that interior life cultivated often in times of retreats and recollections. We are then called to live a more balanced life, spiritually and temporally, so that when stormy circumstances arrive, we act in faith and not paralyzed by fear. We are called to always water that mustard seed of faith in our soul, that it may grow to a great tree of faith, rooted deeply in Christ, His Word and Sacrament. And He is always there in every Blessed Sacrament of any parish. He is also within us in our baptismal consecration. Jesus is present to us through the members of the family, and through friends and loved ones. He can even be present through mere acquaintances, who, being moved by the Spirit at unexpected times, are there to be "God-is-with-us" for us.

And so at this time of our history, when we are faced with difficulties in the global scene, storms will be daily fare. St. John Paul II has a message that will get us through: "Be not afraid". His intercession will help humanity see that Christ is One who has power even over a "global storm" that may be impending: one that could disrupt even the peace of our world. Each one's respective Christian task is simple. Keep faith in Jesus. We take responsibility for nurturing our faith in Him. We make it strong by cultivating a personal relationship with Him that is rooted in strongly bonded relationships with family and with the institutions of our society, particularly, our parish, with our religious communities, and our local government, and the country's relationship with the rest of the world. The task and discipline is simple: humbly practice a "proactive" way of life, prayer, and work with Jesus and with others.

Saturday, June 22, 2024

Memorial of Saints (June 22)

Paulinus of Nola: (died 431 A.D.); husband and father who gave his possessions to the poor; a dedicated bishop, especially during the Visigoth invations.

He used the ground floor of his house as a guest house for pilgrims, debtors, and others who were down on their luck. On the upper floor, he and his wife and a few friends began a semimonastic way of life. They all prayed the Divine Office together on a daily basis. He also had a special devotion to the Saints, writing poems and letters to some of the most important Christians of the day: Ambrose of Milan, Jerome, Augustine of Hippo, and Martin of Tours. (June 22)

John Fisher: (beheaded 22 June 1535 A.D.); chancellor of Cambridge University; bishop of Rochester; dedicated pastor of souls; renowned for his preaching and educational reforms; defender of Church tradition against Luther, and of the Roman primacy against Henry VIII. (June 22)

Thomas More: (beheaded 6 July 1535 A.D.); humanist and chancellor of England; close friend of Erasmus; wrote “Utopia”; refused to support Henry VIII’s divorce of Queen Catherine and his Act of Supremacy; patron of lawyers, statesmen and politicians. (June 22)

also on June 22: Alban, martyr; Nicetas of Remesiana, bishop; Eberhard, bishop

To follow the other Saints whose feasts and memorials occur in the month of June, visit this link

Friday, June 21, 2024

St. Aloysius Gonzaga, Jesuit Scholastic (June 21)

Aloysius Gonzaga: (died 1591 A.D.); Jesuit scholastic, died at age 23 caring for the sick; from the princely family of Castiglione; a page at the court of Medicis and of Philip II of Spain; renounced inheritance to enter Jesuits; Robert Bellarmine was his spiritual director; strongly devoted to the Eucharist, interior prayer, and charitable service; patron of youth and of students in Jesuit colleges and universities.

His prayer is featured in the book, "Hearts on Fire": Praying with Jesuits", edited by Michael Harter, SJ. It is a prayer addressed to the Blessed Virgin Mary.

Holy Mary, my Queen, I recommend myself to your blessed protection and special keeping, and to the bosom of your mercy, today and every day and at the hour of my death. My soul and my body I recommend to you. I entrust to you my hope and consolation, my distress and my misery, my life and its termination. Through your most holy intercession and through your merits may all my actions be directed according to your will and that of your Son. Amen.

The prayer of St. Aloysius of Gonzaga is joined by many other prayers in the book "Hearts on Fire". That book is a good meditative guide for praying in the spirit of the Ignatian Spiritual Exercises. The presentation of the prayers and other prose is a contemporary translation of the method into popular literary forms: the actual prayers and prose written by Jesuits - both "classic", like St. Aloysius of Gonzaga and Gerard Manley Hopkins, SJ, and contemporary, like Anthony de Mello, SJ.

Learn more

To follow the other Saints whose feasts and memorials occur in the month of June, visit this link