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WSC Reflection for September 29, 2013

26th Sunday in Ordinary Time (Cycle C, Year I)

Community Word:  True disciples bear the nature and character of Jesus.

Theme:  We bear the nature and character of Jesus when we share our blessings with the  poor.

Promise: “Blessed is he who keeps faith forever, secures justice for the oppressed, gives food to the hungry.
The Lord sets captives free.”  (Ps 146:7)

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Reflection:
The readings this Sunday focus on the virtue of generosity, the underlying message being that, just as our Triune God has and will always be generous to us, generosity should be part of our normal disposition as Christians! As the Psalmist declares in our promise this week, – “Blessed is he who keeps faith forever, secures justice for the oppressed, gives food to the hungry.”

In the 1st reading, Amos describes the nature and character of a wantonly over-indulgent, self-centered rich, wallowing in all the excesses wealth can buy, living in wild abandon, luxury and revelry, unmindful of the sufferings of poverty around him.  In contrast, Timothy is exhorted in the 2nd Reading to live an exemplary life as a leader in community through the exercise of the gifts of the Holy Spirit:  “But you, man of God, flee from all this, and pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, endurance and gentleness”, (1 Tim. 6:11).

Paul’s exhortation extends beyond Timothy, to all of us in this generation, that we may not get waylaid by the attractions of the world and lose our goal of attaining the eternal life promised us by Jesus himself when our time on earth comes to an end.

In the Gospel, the mindless, self-indulgent life of a rich man “dressed in purple and fine linen,” who lived in luxury every day is juxtaposed against the life of the beggar Lazarus, who “longed to eat of the scraps that fell from the rich man’s table.”  The rich man was totally absorbed in his comforts and luxury, he could not spare a thought – let alone reach out in love – to the starving beggar at his gate.  He was so immersed in his own luxurious, narrow world; he was blind to the plight and numbed to the pain and suffering of the man at his doorstep.  When both men died, the rich man went to the place of torment, while Lazarus was carried by angels to Abraham’s side.

When we live our life ‘in the spirit’, we receive the power to be generous in thought, word and deed.  For a life lived ‘in the spirit’ is a life of active faith in God, whether we are rich or poor, because generosity is a response to God’s commandment of love.  And no one is so poor, he has nothing to give, or so rich, he cannot receive.  It is all a matter of honoring God in our lives, the Author, Creator, and Source of all that we are and all things we call our own.  God should be at the center of everything we do.  Therefore, excessive attachments should serve as a warning to us about where our souls might be headed.  This is not to say we are not to enjoy God’s blessings here on earth, but mindless overindulgence and indifference to the needs of the poor are what will condemn us, like the rich man in the gospel.

As Christians, we are to be sensitive to the needs of our brothers, fix our eyes on the Giver and not the gift, and strive to be like Christ, our loving, compassionate, generous and merciful God.

Prayer:
Father God, You who are so generous in love and compassion, I come before You today with a repentant heart for the times I failed to see and respond to the needs of others, especially the poor; for the times when I allowed myself to be so absorbed in the pleasures of this material world, or so focused on my own needs, that I failed to share, or deliberately withheld the resources you have given me, whether material or spiritual, from those who needed my help; and for the times I failed to honor you and respond to your call to love by making time to minister the lonely and broken hearted.  I acknowledge my shortcomings, Lord, and I ask that You grant me the grace to become more generous with my time, talent and treasures, in response to Your commandment of love.  This I pray in Jesus’ name. Amen.

Reflection Questions:
1. What is my most treasured possession?
2. What is in my nature that hinders me from loving like Christ?
3. Share any struggles in the area of generosity and compassion.

This Week’s Daily Mass Reading Guide:
September 29, 2013 (Sun) Am 6:1,4-7/ Ps 146:7-10/ 1Tm 6:11-16/ Lk 16:19-31
September 30, 2013 (Mon) Zec 8:1-8/ Ps 102:16-21,29,22,23/ Lk 9:46-50
October 1, 2013 (Tues)      Zec 8:20-23/Ps 87:1,3,4,5,6,7/ Lk 9:51-56
October 2, 2013 (Wed)      Ex 23:20-23/Ps 91:1-6,10,11/ Mt 18:1-5,10
October 3, 2013 (Thur)      Neh 8:1-6,7-12/Ps 19:8-11/lk 10:1-12
October 4, 2013 (Fri)          Bar 1:15-22/Ps 79: 1-5,8,9/ Lk 10:13-16
October 5, 2013 (Sat)        Bar 4:5-12,27-29/Ps 69:33-37/Lk 10:17-24

“Ignorance of the Bible is ignorance of Christ.  Read your Bible daily!”

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