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Matthew 10:7-15
Jesus sent out the Twelve with the following instructions,
“As you go, make this proclamation: ´The kingdom of heaven
is at hand.´ Cure the sick, raise the dead,
cleanse lepers, drive out demons. Without cost you have
received; without cost you are to give. Do not take
gold or silver or copper for your belts; no
sack for the journey, or a second tunic, or sandals,
or walking stick. The laborer deserves his keep. Whatever
town or village you enter, look for a worthy
person in it, and stay there until you leave. As
you enter a house, wish it peace. If the
house is worthy, let your peace come upon it;
if not, let your peace return to you. Whoever will
not receive you or listen to your words --
go outside that house or town and shake the dust
from your feet. Amen, I say to you, it
will be more tolerable for the land of Sodom
and Gomorrah on the Day of Judgment than for that
town.”
Introductory Prayer: Lord, in your presence I break
away from the spiritual laziness and indifference that deprives me
of the fruit of this prayer which I need
so much. I know my poverty, and you are immensely
rich in all that I need. I am so
slow to give, whereas you are prompt and total
in your gifts to me. I offer you this unruly
heart of mine to do all that you wish
of me today.
Petition: Lord, please grant me
the grace to be a better apostle today than
I was yesterday.
1. Go Out: The command is “Go.” The
Kingdom cannot be spread while sitting in an easy
chair. We cannot wait for the world that needs
Christ to come to our door. Letting opportunities where we
can serve pass by, hoping someone else will take
the initiative, is simply a “no” to Christ’s command.
“Go” means sensitizing our heart and eyes to those who
are hungry for Christ, seeing in the faces of
our family members and co-workers a hunger for his
power and grace. In this culture that is sick and
waning, “go” means reaching out to those who need
to know Christ, so that his Kingdom will expand.
We cannot take the easy route of preaching to the
choir; we must reach out to those professions and
fields of study that have lost all sense of the
dignity of the human person – especially medicine, law,
politics and education. This is what the King is
asking. What is the response which I am giving to
my King?
2. “Nobody Gives What He Doesn’t Possess”: Christ’s command
is to give from what we have received. If every
day we make ourselves more aware of the gifts
we have been given through Christ’s power, we will be
better at giving Christ to others. As apostles, we
go not with our own power; rather, we carry
Christ’s power to heal, save and conquer evil. It is
he who drives the mission, who makes the apostles
a team. How often do I calculate what I
can contribute to the mission based only on the strength
of my human qualities? How often do I give
only from what is just me, rather than from the
graces I have received from the Holy Spirit? Moreover,
do I measure my effectiveness solely from an individual
perspective, rather than from that of the whole body
of the Church, in which other apostles are locked arm-in-arm
with me for the cause of Christ? God’s saving
power is found where obedience and unity are, not
where only natural talents, gifts and abilities are at play.
3. Failures and Disappointments: Christ affirms that when we reach
an impasse in our lives, this is, in and
of itself, no sign of the lack of the
authenticity of our mission. Its results are tied to the
free-will choices of others, as well as to a
plan where apparent barrenness is part of God’s economy
of salvation. A period of few fruits in the mission
can be a period of consolidation of our commitment
to follow him in season and out of season. Take
this time to repel all discouragement and doubt and
to prove how authentic our “yes” is. A pure
“yes” will seek God’s will and the mission at hand
simply because he wants it, not for any easy
or short-term results.
Conversation with Christ: Jesus, I
wish to ignite my own zeal for your Kingdom from
the furnace of divine love which burns in your
heart. I offer you the promise of a soldier
in combat: to be courageous, honorable, persevering, and worthy of
the name I bear – “Apostle of the Kingdom
of Christ.” I work aware of the fact that
I have only one life to live on this earth.
Not one minute must be wasted in comfort-seeking and
selfishness. My heart is ready for the mission, Lord;
please sustain it today with the strength of your own.
Resolution: Today I will review
my daily and weekly time commitments before Christ, and I
will ensure that I am using my time as
fruitfully as I can to expand his Kingdom in the
world.