It seems that life is filled with moments of accomplishment and and equal number of new beginnings. Here is the text of the reflection I offered to the people who gathered to pray earlier today. It's based on the scripture texts proper for the thirteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time.
Set your face
Set your face
There’s great excitement in
the air. Children have just completed
their academic year, and are beginning their summer holidays; graduates from
Kindergarten to Grade 12 have closed the book on one chapter of their lives, and
are eagerly ready now to turn the page and begin the next exciting
adventure. There’s great excitement in
the air because there are new beginnings beckoning.
As these new horizons dawn,
the scripture passages provided for today’s encounter provide us with two words
of advice: make up your mind, and
then once that decision is made, keep
focused.
At pivotal moments in life,
there are decisions to be made. It’s
wise to consider all the options before you make up your mind, but it’s often
necessary to weed out some of the choices, and even then, we have to choose one
option. Saint Luke tells us that when
Jesus knew that his time was running out, he set his face to go to Jerusalem.
Not all the decisions we have to make are easy ones; in fact, some of
them are very difficult because the choice to follow one path means that we
must close the door to other possibilities, and sometimes the alternatives are
just as enticing, but if the goal is worth the effort, no amount of effort is
too much. Jesus knew that he had to go
to Jerusalem, and he knew that in Jerusalem, he would be put to the test, but
he also knew that this was what he had to do.
He had done his homework, he had asked the questions, he had pondered
the alternatives, he had prayed about it.
This was the task to which he was being called, so he made up his mind,
and turned the page.
When we have difficult
decisions to make, do we do our homework?
Do we consider all the options?
Do we kneel in prayer and ask for guidance? Do we wait for God to answer? God doesn’t always answer the way we would
like him to, but God always answers in the way that is best for us. At times, the answer challenges us, and
challenges can be scary, but God only gives us challenges that will help us to
grow, so it’s important that once we’ve made up our minds, we need to keep
focused.
The disciples who accompanied
Jesus as he made his way to Jerusalem were also students; they were being
trained in the art of discernment. Jesus
sent them as messengers ahead of him
on the way. Their task was to prepare
the way. The task of the disciple is
always to prepare the way for the coming of Jesus, but blazing a trail is often
the most challenging of tasks. Some of
the terrain is fertile and relatively easy, but sometimes there are more
difficult landscapes, more demanding challenges, and the disciple can easily be
discouraged, but even when the messengers are not well received, we must
remember that God is the one who has called us and who guides us: our efforts
must always be focused on him; we must never forget to kneel in prayer in order
to discern the choices we must make.
Distractions come in many
shapes and sizes. Sometimes, we truly do
want to follow, but we need to first consider all the options because every
choice comes with certain facets that we can see, and others that we can’t, and
once the choice is made, we cannot turn back.
Can we choose to follow in the footsteps of a man who openly tells us
that the life to which he invites us will not always be easy? Foxes
have holes, and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to
lay his head.
There will always be a part of
the human heart that might wonder: if I had chosen another path, would things
have been easier, would I have had more privileges, would I have been
happier? There are always other options:
let me first say farewell to those at my
home, but once we have set our faces toward Jerusalem, we must remain
focused on following Jesus because only he can adequately answer the needs of
the human heart, all other temptations will eventually prove to be inadequate,
so set your focus on Jesus. Leave the
dead to bury the dead, and be courageous in telling others the good news of
Christ’s gospel.
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