22nd Sunday in Ordinary Time (Cycle B, Year II)
Community Word: Obeying God’s word purifies us, giving honor to Him
Theme: We obey God’s word when we keep ourselves unstained by the world.
Promise: ” … hear the statutes and decrees I am teaching you to observe that your may live.” (Dt 4:1)
Reflection:
God’s will is above human traditions and precepts, and his law takes precedence over our traditional practices and norms. The latter are not substitutes for following the ways of God and for obeying what God wants from us.
God cannot be reduced to mere performance of rituals, or observance of rules and regulations. God is honored by living His commandments. He is praised by our good works, and glorified by doing what He desires of us.
What matters is the condition of the heart. Jesus puts greater emphasis on sincere care and concern, not on mere obedience of rules and regulations. We please God more by being genuinely compassionate and concerned, able to understand and uplift the intolerable conditions of our underprivileged brothers and sisters. We can only be close to God by loving Him in His people. And love should be the motivating factor of all our words and actions. Traditions should lead us to love, rather than to finding excuses and justifications for feeling superior to others. God will surely measure us on the basis of how much we love, and the quality of our service.
Worthiness lies in a transformed life. To be a true and faithful disciple of Christ is to have a contrite heart and to live an honest and holy life. Jesus, in today’s gospel, demands purity of heart. If our hearts are pure, then we can speak and share true and inspiring words with others. If our hearts are clean, then can love, forgive, and be forgiven. For where there is purity of heart, there will be love and faithfulness.
Jesus does not criticize traditions as such, because He himself kept many of them. What the Lord objects to are traditions that are cut off from the faith that gives them life. Traditions do not automatically make a person holy. Holiness and sin are within the heart and soul of a person. They are ways of sustaining our commitment to Christ and our Catholic identity. Traditions should express, renew and deepen, but not replace faith. Following the Lord is not easy in today’s world, but the Church, the liturgy, the music, the teachings, the prayers… these should enable us to express and maintain our commitment to Christ. Through them, as St. Paul says in today’s second reading, we can welcome the Word, Jesus Christ, in our homes and into our lives.
Let us remember that actions or ‘doing’ is more effective than promises; cooperation and collaboration are greater incentives to service than criticism.
Reflection Questions:
1. What is the true condition of my heart in reference to the poor, the weak, the least and the last?
2. What are the intentions behind everything I do, everything I say?
Next Week’s Daily Mass Reading Guide:
September 2, 2012 (Sun) Det 4:1,2,6-8/ Ps 15:2-5/ Jas 1:17,18,21,22,27/ Mk 7:1-8,14,15,21,23
September 3, 2012 (Mon) 1Cor 2:1-5/Ps 119:97-102/ Lk 4:16-30
September 4, 2012 (Tue) 1Cor 2:10-16/ Ps 145:8-14/ Lk 4:31-37
September 5, 2012 (Wed) 1Cor 3:1-9/ Ps 33:12-15,20,21/ Lk 4:38-44
September 6, 2012 (Thu) 1Cor 3:18-23/Ps 24:1-6/ Lk 5:1-11
September 7, 2012 (Fri) 1Cor 4:1-5/Ps 37:3-6,27,28,39,40/ Lk 5:33-39
September 8, 2012 (Sat) Mi 5:1-4 or Rom 28-30/ Ps 13:6,6/ Mt 1:1-16,18-23 or Mt 1:18-23
“Ignorance of the Bible is ignorance of Christ. Read your Bible daily!”