Monday of the Third Week of Lent (March 5, 2018): Expect the unexpected

Chúa Nhật, 04-03-2018 | 16:00:53

Today’s Readings:

2 Kings 5:1-15
Ps 42:2-3; 43:3-4
Luke 4:24-30
www.usccb.org/bible/readings/030518.cfm

USCCB Podcast of the Readings:
ccc.usccb.org/cccradio/NABPodcasts/18_03_05.mp3


A reading from the Holy Gospel according to Luke.

Jesus said to the people in the synagogue at Nazareth:
“Amen, I say to you,
no prophet is accepted in his own native place.
Indeed, I tell you, there were many widows in Israel
in the days of Elijah
when the sky was closed for three and a half years
and a severe famine spread over the entire land.
It was to none of these that Elijah was sent,
but only to a widow in Zarephath in the land of Sidon.
Again, there were many lepers in Israel
during the time of Elisha the prophet;
yet not one of them was cleansed, but only Naaman the Syrian.”
When the people in the synagogue heard this,
they were all filled with fury.
They rose up, drove him out of the town,
and led him to the brow of the hill
on which their town had been built,
to hurl him down headlong.
But he passed through the midst of them and went away.


Good News Reflection: 

Is your soul “athirst” for the living God, like we read in today’s responsorial psalm? Are you tired of waiting to “behold the face of God” (in other words, his friendly support up close and personal)? Are you spiritually or emotionally thirsty because it seems like God doesn’t really care about you or isn’t moving fast enough to resolve hardships?

We get thirsty when we haven’t had enough to drink. In this life on earth, we will never fully quench our thirst for God, because it’s only after death that we come face to face with God, and it’s only after being completely purged of everything that’s not of God that we are able to enter into the fullness of his goodness and love.

However, we can relieve some of our thirst here and now. In fact, we’re probably much more thirsty than we need to be.

An unquenched thirst for God usually manifests itself in loneliness, despair, frustration, self-indulgence — or any other feeling or behavior that’s triggered by lacking what we need. And yet, as Christians who spend time every day with God, we should feel like we have everything we need. Why don’t we?

We get a clue from today’s first reading. Observe the behavior of the leper Naaman. God gave him the healing that he asked for, but at first Naaman didn’t believe it because it was offered in an unexpected way.

Usually, when we think that God has abandoned us, what’s really happened is that he’s not giving us what we want the way we want it!

To see what God is doing and to receive everything that he wants to give us, we have to first get rid of our expectations. When dealing with God, we should expect the unexpected.

The people in the synagogue at Nazareth (in today’s Gospel reading) had been waiting a very long time for the Messiah. They had been praying for his arrival for many generations. But they, too, did not recognize the answer to their prayers because of unmet expectations. The Messiah landed on their doorstep in quite an unexpected way.

How often we get angry, like those people did, because God’s love and his answers to our prayers are not what we want the way we want it.

Like those people, we reject Jesus even while trying to find him. We assume “no, this can’t be right” to what he’s placing in front of us. By turning away and staying focused on whatever we’re expecting, we say “no” to his gifts and blessings.

This is why our souls are parched. We need to spend time this Lent identifying and repenting of all the ways we say “no God, this can’t be right” — whether it’s “no” to a Church teaching because we don’t like it or “no” to a bad situation that doesn’t end no matter how hard we pray.

We find our miracles when we expect the unexpected.

Today’s Prayer:

Heal me, Lord, of the hardness of my heart. Water it with Your love and may it become fertile soil to fully receive and grow in Your word. Amen.

© 2018 by Terry A. Modica

Tags: , , ,

Có thể bạn quan tâm