February 13, 2012
Monday of the
Sixth Week in Ordinary Time
Listen to
the podcast version here.
Mark 8:11-13
The Pharisees came and began to argue with him, asking
him for a sign from heaven, to test him. And
he sighed deeply in his spirit and said, "Why does
this generation ask for a sign? Truly I tell you,
no sign will be given to this generation." And he
left them, and getting into the boat again, he went
across to the other side.
Introductory Prayer: Lord,
I can be so cold to your salvific presence as
I hurry about living the moment and becoming so sufficient
unto myself. There is little wonder that I find it
hard to bring myself to prayer—to use faith to know
you, divine love to live in you, and theological hope
to trust in you. I approach you now, wanting only
to be a more faithful disciple of your Kingdom.
Petition: Lord, grant a faith that will console your
heart.
1. Sending Christ away: G.
K. Chesterton once asserted, “The Christian ideal has not been
tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult and
left untried.” Jesus truly loves us and would never refuse
a humble soul the true goods he needs for fulfillment
and salvation. If our wants, like those of the Pharisees,
end up leaving God silent and our spiritual life cold,
it may be a call for us to purify our
hearts of the remaining dregs of our self-centeredness. We should
carefully avoid the attitudes and words that repel Christ. Christ
will not let himself be loved for who he is
not, and he will not indulge the desires we have
for who we are not. We can want our happiness
to be many things, but Christ wants us to accept
that his will is the heart of our fulfillment.
2. Prayer Is My Daily Breath of
Air for the Soul: Jesus converses with our
souls in a language that flows from supernatural attitudes of
faith, hope and love. He will remain silent, however, if
we drag him down to the small, narrow framework of
our reason and calculations—wanting to “figure it out for ourselves”
before we will act. Jesus does not want to be
Superman, who comes into our lives only when things are
really bad and all is lost. Rather, Christ intervenes because
he wants a life of communion and grace day after
day, sharing his life with each and every soul. He
wants our living in fidelity and childlike trust to be
like breathing the air.
3. The
Signs That Bring Christ to Us: Christ did
give us sure signs of his daily presence in our
lives. The first is the sign of the cross. Only
faith will unlock its mystery and bring us to the
encounter between our sin and God’s mercy. Sin is at
the heart of the worst that can go wrong with
our life; the sign of the Crucified One is its
cure. Faith will permit us, as it did the good
thief, to see Christ’s love at the center of the
universe and the world being drawn towards it as if
into a vortex. Another sign he left us is the
Eucharist. It is the most powerful sign because it contains
the author of the sign himself. Christ humbles himself to
stay with us at all costs. Under the appearance of
bread and wine, he reveals what he wants to be
for our souls; Under the veil of the sacrament, we
learn to encounter Christ personally as pure love. “On the
night he was betrayed he showed the depth of his
love…” Let these signs be the “love language” by which
we talk to Christ in the way he wants to
be known, loved and adored.
Conversation
with Christ: Christ, let my prideful demands melt away before
a mature encounter with your divine love. Keep my immaturity
from impeding the expansion of your Kingdom; rather, let me
humbly accept my need to change the way I relate
to your true plan for my life.
Resolution: I will spend some time today acknowledging and
thanking Jesus for the signs he has given me to
know, love and serve him better in my life.