Childrens Liturgy of The Word

The Season of Lent

Today's Readings

Blog_Archive

2015 Nov  9374  7
2015 Oct  4063  4
2015 Sep  1529  2
2015 Jun  706  1
2015 May  1416  2
2015 Apr  3399  4
2015 Mar  2534  3
2015 Feb  2872  4
2015 Jan  1984  3
2014 Dec  2195  3
2014 Nov  2431  3
2014 Oct  2286  3
2014 Sep  2362  3
2014 Jun  2577  3
2014 Apr  1905  2
2014 Mar  4210  4
2014 Feb  4498  5
2014 Jan  3289  4
2013 Dec  2412  3
2013 Nov  3699  5
2013 Oct  2507  4
2013 Sep  1879  3
2013 Jun  3325  4
2013 May  2837  3
2013 Apr  1582  2
2013 Feb  3745  4
2013 Jan  3615  4
2012 Dec  3984  4
2012 Nov  3115  4
2012 Oct  2329  4
2012 Sep  2614  4
2012 Jun  1014  2
2012 May  873  2
2012 Apr  2674  3
2012 Mar  2878  4
2012 Feb  2645  4
2012 Jan  1969  3
2011 Dec  1983  3
2011 Nov  2446  3
2011 Oct  2585  4
2011 Sep  2820  4
2011 Aug  1913  3
2011 Jul  2028  3
2011 Jun  3220  4
2011 Apr  1420  2
2011 Mar  11541  4
2011 Feb  3297  4
2011 Jan  3645  4
2010 Dec  2242  3
2010 Nov  3346  4
2010 Oct  3770  4
2010 Sep  2579  4
2010 Aug  3332  4
2010 Jul  2892  4
2010 Jun  4222  4
2010 May  3040  3
2010 Apr  1553  2
2010 Mar  2362  3
2010 Feb  2565  4
2010 Jan  1506  3
2009 Oct  462  1

Reflections on the weekly readings

Sunday, September 15th, 2013 - 24th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Our readings this week focus on the mercy of God.  IN the first reading God is angry at the Israelites for making for themselves an idol, a golden calf, and worshipping it and saying, “This is your God, O Israel, who brought you out of the land of Egypt!”  God says to Moses, “Let me alone, then, that my wrath may blaze up against them to consume them.  Then I will make of you a great nation.”  In an interesting twist of roles it is Moses who implores the Lord to have mercy on His people.  Moses reminds God of His servants Abraham, Isaac and Israel and how God swore to them to make their descendants as numerous as the stars in the sky.  The Lord relented in the punishment.

In the Gospel Jesus is in the company of tax collectors and sinners (I think these are interchangeable descriptions!) and the Pharisees and scribes complained, saying “This man welcomes sinners and eats with them!”  Jesus did not rebuff the accusation, he was eating with sinners, this is true, but he did tell a parable to the Pharisees and scribes.  “What man among you having a hundred sheep and losing one of them would not leave the ninety-nine in the desert and go after the lost one until he finds it?  And when he does find it rejoices and when he arrives home invites his neighbors to rejoice with him for he found the ONE sheep that was lost!  Or what woman having ten coins and losing one would not light a lamp and sweep the house, searching carefully until she finds it?  And when she finds it invites her neighbors to rejoice with her for she found the coin that she lost!!”

This is the infinite love and mercy of God, our God who wants to forgive us, to save us and not lose us.  In the parables God is the man and the woman who have lost the sheep and the coin.  It is God who rejoices and invites all the heavens to rejoice with Him when ONE of His lost sheep is found and brought home!!

Luke didn’t elaborate much on the surroundings in his recollection of this event, but what little he related is incredibly weighty.  The Pharisees are deeply disturbed that Jesus, proclaiming himself a holy man, is actually keeping company with sinners.  How many times did Jesus say to us, in one way or another, and this is yet one more way, that he did NOT come to minister to the well but to the sick?  Jesus did not come to save those who do not need saving, he came for sinners.  He came to find the lost sheep, the lost gold coin, and bring it back home!  Both male and female images are used in the parables which can represent a mother/father kind of love and caring that would instigate the need to find that lost little one!  Our heavenly Father is both father and mother to us in His love and caring and nurturing and teaching.  To God each one of us is extremely important and He loves each one of us completely.  What parent, having lost their child at the mall, would say, “Oh well…we have three more.  Let’s go home without him?”  While that is an extremely silly scenario, I believe it makes my point!  :)

The Psalm this week is Psalm 51: I Will Rise and Go to My Father.

Ponder in your hearts the Fatherly love that God has for you, and how He desires your presence in His, and how each one of us who turns toward God is graced with God turning toward us in absolute love and welcome, like the father who ran out and embraced his prodigal son who returned to him!

And have a most blessed week!


Copyright © 2012. All Rights Reserved.