January 21, 2012
Memorial of Saint Agnes, virgin and martyr
Father Walter Schu, LC
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Mark 3:20-21
Jesus came with his disciples
into the house. Again the crowd gathered, making it impossible
for them even to eat. When his relatives heard of
this they set out to seize him, for they said,
“He is out of his mind.”
Introductory Prayer: Another
week has passed in your company, in your service. What
a joy, what an honor, what a glory to be
the subject of a king like you! Lord, I know
that you make all things new and that through this
moment of prayer you can give me new vision of
faith to see you more clearly.
Petition: Lord, help
me to strive to be a source of happiness for
others.
1. Home life for Jesus Christ. We know
that Jesus made his home in Capernaum. (“And leaving Nazareth
he went and dwelt in Capernaum” Mt. 4:13.) Today’s short
Gospel passage indicates that Our Lord did not find rest
at home. From all over, the great crowds to whom
he has been preaching have followed him to his doorstep.
When we return home from a hard day’s work, we
likely seek a well-deserved rest, but perhaps a spouse and
children wait for us there. They need to be shown
our love, which involves our time, service, compassion, and support.
Members of our extended family, neighbors, friends and people in
need also look to us for help and kindness. Those
we love and those in need ought to pull us
outside of ourselves, so that like Christ, we reach out
and lovingly serve them throughout the entire day. When I
come home, do I strive to be a source of
happiness and support for the members of my family, or
does my self-centeredness close me off to the needs of
the others?
2. A Man for Others. “Jesus was
a man for others. Such a crowd gathered around Jesus
and his disciples that they had no time even to
eat. Nothing mattered more to Jesus than feeding the souls
of his neighbor with the nourishment of his love and
his truth, so much so that he neglected to feed
himself. This self-sacrificing attitude permeated every moment of his earthly
existence, culminating in the complete oblation of his life on
the cross at Calvary” (John Bartunek, LC, The Better Part,
p. 375). To what extent is my desire to serve
those around me, even to the point of sacrifice, the
thermometer of my love for them? Have I ever been
accused by anyone of “madness” because of my dedication to
others?
3. Out of His Mind? Some of Jesus’
relatives, whose outlook was all too human, believed that Christ’s
commitment to others was excessive. “The only explanation, they thought,
was that he was out of his mind. On reading
these words of the Gospel, we cannot help being moved,
realizing what Jesus did for love of us: people even
thought him mad. Many saints, following Christ’s example, have been
taken for madmen — but they were mad with love,
mad with love for Jesus Christ” (The Navarre Bible: St.
Mark, p. 87). Do I long to love Christ in
my heart and in my life, even to the point
of madness? Is my one great ideal in life to
be a saint — not for my own sake, but
in order to be able to transmit Christ’s love to
those around me, to help bring about his Kingdom in
souls?
Conversation with Christ: Thank you, Lord, for the
gift of faith. It is a gift more precious than
life itself. Help me to see others with the eyes
of faith, to pour myself out in loving and serving
them, just like you did. Help me to love you
with madness as I serve each of my brothers and
sisters.
Resolution: At the end of the day, I
will pay special attention to fulfilling the needs and desires
of my family members.