"Then to what shall I compare the people of this
generation? What are they like? They are like children who sit in the
marketplace and call to one another, ´We played the flute for you, but you did
not dance. We sang a dirge, but you did not weep.´ For John the Baptist came
neither eating food nor drinking wine, and you said, ´He is possessed by a
demon.´ The Son of Man came eating and drinking and you said, ´Look, he is a
glutton and a drunkard, a friend of tax collectors and sinners.´ But wisdom is
vindicated by all her children." (Luke 7:31-35)
Introductory Prayer:
Eternal God, prayer is your gift to me. I believe that you give me complete and
unlimited access to your power and mercy. I want to value this gift of prayer
above all things. As I begin this meditation, I renew my faith, my hope and my
love for you.
Petition: Lord, give me
discernment and constancy in my efforts to follow you.
1. Endless Excuses:
Some very good and religious people in Jesus’ day complained about John the
Baptist, precursor of the Messiah, because of his austere lifestyle. “He must
be crazy,” they said. They also complained about Jesus’ apparently excessive
liberality with sinners and nonbelievers. The habit of constantly sifting
reality through our own preconceptions can lead us to reject the things of God.
This is the opposite of faith. It is even the opposite of the healthy exercise
of reason and has become a limiting rationalism. Rather than seeking to place
God neatly in our own self-created and prearranged world, we need to let
ourselves be shaped by God’s criteria.
2. Fickleness:
Spiritual fickleness inevitable leads us to reject God. The inability to follow
through on a particular spiritual path necessarily leaves us midcourse, far
from the goal. It does not matter whether we follow the austerity of the
disciple John or the apparently liberality of the disciples of Jesus. What
matters is that we follow through to completion whatever particular path God
has given us. As long as we move, God can guide our steps. If we don’t move,
there is nothing to guide. Waiting around for some mythical “perfect
conditions” is in reality capriciousness and unwillingness to commit.
3. Wisdom: Wisdom is a
gift of the Holy Spirit by which we are able to see and comprehend the divine
and human realities from God’s perspective. Wisdom leads to equilibrium and
balance in our judgments and assessments. We prepare for this gift by our
effort to make good decisions and live by them. The supernatural gifts build
upon the human virtues.
Conversation with Christ:
Lord Jesus, I am indebted to you for your teaching and for your example. Help
me to learn from your life and your example, and keep me from ever dismissing
them as irrelevant. Help me to be constant in my resolutions so that I will
continue to grow closer to you and serve you better.
Resolution: I will avoid making excuses today
No comments:
Post a Comment