Saturday, March 8, 2025

Thoughts on conversion

 

Saturday after Ash Wednesday

Luke 5:27–32

Friends, in today’s Gospel, Jesus tells Matthew, “Follow me.” The call of Jesus addresses the mind, but it is meant to move through the mind into the body, and through the body into the whole of one’s life, into the most practical of moves and decisions. “Follow me” has the sense of “apprentice to me” or “walk as I walk; think as I think; choose as I choose.” Discipleship entails an entire reworking of the self according to the pattern and manner of Jesus. 


Upon hearing the address of the Lord, the tax collector, we are told, “got up and followed him.” The Greek word behind “got up” is anastas, the same word used to describe the resurrection (anastasis) of Jesus from the dead. Following Jesus is indeed a kind of resurrection from the dead, since it involves the transition from a lower form of life to a higher, from a preoccupation with the temporary goods of this world to an immersion in the goodness of God. 


Those who have undergone a profound conversion tend to speak of their former life as a kind of illusion, something not entirely real. Thus Paul can say, “it is no longer I who live, but it is Christ who lives in me”; Thomas Merton can speak of the “false self” that has given way to the authentic self; and, perhaps most movingly, the father of the prodigal son can say, “This brother of yours was dead and has come to life; he was lost and has been found.” 


Bishop Robert Barron



Friday, March 7, 2025

Thoughts on temptation


Jesus Is Tempted



At his baptism Jesus hears his Father's voice, "You are My beloved Son." He is then led by the Spirit into the desert to be tempted by the devil. The temptations begin "If you are the Son of God, ..." They are temptations to his identity, his self-understanding, his mission. They are tempting because they are three different ways to fulfill his mission without his death on the cross. The devil says, Feed the people and they will follow you, cure the sick and the possessed and they will follow you. Jesus refuses to buy their loyalty; he wants them to believe and love him and everyone else. He feeds and cures out of compassion for their hunger and suffering, not as bribery.


   In the Spiritual Exercises Ignatius calls the devil "the father of lies". He always tempts us by his lie that this choice, this decision will make us happy, satisfied, fulfilled, admired, important, etc. We know from experience that it doesn't. Let us ask the grace to recognize and resist the lies and always turn to the Lord for strength in our weakness.


Fr. Ralph Huse, S.J.



Thursday, March 6, 2025

Thoughts on anxiety

 

Not Worrying About the Future
For us the future is often a source of anxiety and fear. We have all kinds of questions: What if my children get sick, I lose my job, my wife or husband leaves me, or a war breaks out? Our fears pull us away from the present and extinguish the Spirit in us.
When we believe that God is with us always through the Spirit, we can let the future emerge out of the present. When we really believe that God is with us and that we are already now breathing his Spirit, we don't have to worry about the future. We don't have to worry about what might happen next. We can start trusting that if we fully live the life in the Spirit, the future will unfold from the present as we travel through life.
 
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“Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”
 
- Philippians 4: 6 - 7


Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Do Something for Lent

 

In the past and perhaps even still now, people will often ask, "What are you giving up for Lent this year?"

Because for years Catholics have been conditioned to give up something for Lent as a means of using that sacrifice as a way to draw yourself closer to God and to Jesus.  For some, it became a change in daily habits for the good.  And there's really nothing wrong with that.  But, then Sunday comes around and you are permitted to let yourself have the thing you gave up for one day. Over time, giving up soda or chocolate, became a bore or a grudge.  It didn't really help you become closer to God, it may have made you feel like it was just something that you were supposed to do during this season of the church, but it didn't make you happy.

Now, and for the past couple of years that I can recall, a new way of thinking has arose during the season of Lent.  Instead of giving up something for God, what if we DO something for God.  Something good, something meaningful?  So we don't have to give up something, except eating fish on Fridays of course, we get to do something meaningful that should point me in the direction of God, or which will help me be a better disciple of Jesus.  So what can we do?  Well, we can pray, we can read the Bible, we can volunteer, we can give alms or give to the poor.  These are all good things that we can do to focus on God, draw us closer to Jesus in a meaningful way, and become a better person all at the same time!  

So if you are still giving up something for Lent, try something new and Do something for Lent!

May God bless you in whatever you do this Lent,

Scott

Thoughts on prayer

 

Ash Wednesday

Matthew 6:1–6, 16–18

Friends, today’s Gospel asks us to do three things: pray, fast, and give alms. Let’s focus today on prayer. Studies show that prayer is a very common, very popular activity. Even those who profess no belief in God pray!


What is prayer, and how should we pray? Prayer is intimate communion and conversation with God. Judging from Jesus’ own life, prayer is something that we ought to do often, especially at key moments of our lives.


Well, how should we pray? What does it look like? You have to pray with faith, and according to Jesus’ model, you have to pray with forgiveness. The efficacy of prayer seems to depend on the reconciliation of differences.


You also have to pray with persistence. One reason that we don’t receive what we want through prayer is that we give up too easily. Augustine said that God sometimes delays in giving us what we want because he wants our hearts to expand.


Finally, we have to pray in Jesus’ name. In doing so, we are relying on his influence with the Father, trusting that the Father will listen to him.


Bishop Robert Barron



Tuesday, March 4, 2025

Thoughts on discipleship

 

Mark 10:28–31

Friends, today’s Gospel exhorts us to see the radicality and rewards of Jesus’ call to discipleship, which cuts through so many of the social conventions of his time and ours. He urges us to see that everyone—rich and poor, men and women, those on the inside and those on the outs—is summoned to discipleship, and that this summons is the most important consideration of all. It is the better part, to use Jesus’ words, the one thing necessary.

St. Augustine was right: “Lord, you have made us for yourself; therefore, our heart is restless until it rests in thee.” We are all wired for God. There is a hunger in us that nothing in this world can possibly satisfy. And that’s why we must determine to follow Jesus, because only he can lead us to the heavenly banquet.


Bishop Robert Barron


Monday, March 3, 2025

Thoughts on eternal life

 

Mark 10:17–27

Friends, in today’s Gospel, a rich young man asks Jesus what he must do to inherit eternal life. There is something absolutely right about the young man, something spiritually alive, and that is his deep desire to share in everlasting life. He knows what he wants, and he knows where to find it.


Jesus responds to his wonderful question by enumerating many of the Commandments. The young man takes this in and replies, “Teacher, all of these I have observed from my youth.” So Jesus looks at him with love and says, “Go, sell what you have, and give to the poor . . . Then come, follow me.”


God is nothing but love, straight through, and therefore the life of friendship with him, in the richest sense, is a life of total love, self-forgetting love. Jesus senses that this young man is ready for the high adventure of the spiritual life: he is asking the right question and he is properly prepared.


But at this point, the young man tragically balks. The spiritual life, at the highest pitch, is about giving your life away, and this is why having many possessions is a problem.


Bishop Robert Barron