Faithful
Friends:
I
don’t often borrow a reflection, but this one struck me as particularly
challenging. The gospel is Jn 2:13-25.
Borrowed with permission from
Mike Day, President NACFLM (National Association of Catholic Family Ministers)
“I’ve
often quipped that there’s two Lents: there’s the Lent we choose and the Lent
God gives us. There have been many years I’ve charged into the season with
grand ideas for penances only to find the most difficult were the sufferings I
did not anticipate life throwing my way.
“For the 3rd Sunday in Lent, the Gospel tells of Christ purging the
temple of moneychangers. By pointing out that He did so with a whip made of
cords clarifies that this was not some reactionary moment of human weakness. He
had time to discern and spent that time in preparation for a response. Christ
was consumed by a “zeal for his house” and the sign given for doing this was
the temple of His own body which would be destroyed but raised again.
“Through
reception of the Eucharist, the “house” in which Christ resides is our very
selves. St. Paul reminds us in 1 Corinthians that we are a temple of the Holy
Spirit and, like the literal temple, Christ is consumed by zeal for us. For
however well-intentioned and insightful our Lenten penances may be, God knows
us more intimately than we know ourselves and He desires to drive out from us
all that diminishes our worth, dignity and beauty. It is not always a peaceful
process and can, like this moment with the moneychangers, be unsettling, tense,
and frustrating.
“This is not only true within ourselves but relationships as well. Whether with
our spouse, children, extended families or even co-workers, there may be
conflicts that threaten to drive us apart. But the virtue of patience can
afford us the space and time needed to see the work of purification Christ is
doing within us.
“As we cross the halfway point of our Lenten journey, with all the blessings
and challenges that have come our way, let us take heart and behold, for Christ
makes all things new."
Sincerely Yours in
Christ,
Mike Day, President NACFLM"
Blessings on your Lenten Journey, Charlotte
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