COLLECT SERIES.
The Mass: Collect Series Icon.
The Mass: Collect Series Icon. |
COLLECT
The
Collect for the 18TH Sunday of the Year C reads as follows:
Draw
near to Your Servants, O Lord,
and
answer their prayers with unceasing kindness,
that
for those who glory in You as their Creator and guide,
You
may restore what You have created
and
keep safe what You have restored.
Through
our Lord Jesus Christ, Your Son,
Who
lives and reigns with You in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
One
God, for ever and ever.
REFLECTION QUESTIONS.
In
making this prayer tangible for during the week, the following reflection
questions emerged:
1. Why do
I want God to draw near to me? How will I feel?
2. How
does God answer my prayers?
3. What
prayers do I want to be answered with unceasing kindness?
4. What
areas in my life do I need God to restore?
5. What
areas in my life do I want God to keep safe?
GOSPEL
REFLECTION.
The Gospel is from St.
Luke 12:13-21. Jesus was surrounded by a large crowd to whom he was giving his
message of salvation. Some men in the crowd asked him to arbitrate in a family
dispute over property. This Jesus refused to do. This interest in property gave
him the occasion to teach his hearers, and all of us, in a very effective
parable, the relative value of this world's goods.
The lesson of this parable is obvious
to all, and it is perhaps as difficult to put into practice as it is obvious.
To be in this world and not of it, to collect the necessary goods of this world
by honest labor and yet remain detached from them, to possess but not be
possessed by worldly riches, is an ideal to which our weak human nature
responds very reluctantly.
A large percentage of Christians,
however, do respond to the challenge manfully and loyally. They earn and use
the goods of this world, while at the same time they keep God's laws and earn
wealth for heaven. Some renounce even the right, which is theirs, to possess
the necessary things of this world, by taking on themselves the vows of
religion. Thus they set themselves free to devote their whole time and energy
to the service of God and neighbour.
Others, and they are of necessity the
more numerous, have to own the world's goods in order to provide for themselves
and their dependants, but, while so doing, they never let their temporal
possessions come between them and their God. To do this is not easy, but God's
helping grace is always available to the willing heart.
There is still a third group—those who
resemble the foolish man described in the parable. Like him they are so
enmeshed and ensnared in their desire to collect good things for their earthly
life, that they forget that at any moment they may have to leave this earth and
all they possess in it. They may not have large barns or grain-bins bursting at
the seams with the fruits of their fields or their market dealings, but they
have allowed their possessions, large or small, to become the prison-houses of
their hearts and thoughts. In their mad rush for earthly treasure they give
themselves no time to stop and think of the really important thing in life,
namely, that soon they must leave this world and all it holds dear to them. But
it is not the departure from this world that is to be feared. Rather, it is the
arrival at another for which they have made no preparation. That other world of
which they have often heard, but which they shrugged off as something fit for
the weak-minded, will not open before them in all its awe-inspiring immensity.
They will have a momentary glimpse of the eternal beauty and happiness that
they lost for a "mess of pottage," before they enter the unending
valley of sorrow which they elected for themselves when, during their period of
trial, they chose earthly baubles instead of God.
This has been the fate of foolish men
and women in the past. It will, also, be the fate of many more in the future.
It could be my fate, too, unless I remain ever on the alert to keep myself free
from the snare of worldly wealth. I must remember that it is not the quantity
of this world's goods which I possess that will be my undoing, but the quality
of the hold which they have on me. There are and will be millionaires in
heaven, while many in the lower income-brackets will find themselves excluded.
No man will be excluded from heaven
because he lawfully possessed some of this world's wealth. But a man will
exclude himself from eternal happiness if he lets this world's wealth possess
him to the exclusion of God.
The fate of the rich man in the parable
need not, and should not, be mine. I still have time to stop building larger
grain-bins and barns, and to turn my attention instead to collecting some
treasure for heaven.
— Excerpted from The Sunday
Readings Cycle C, Fr. Kevin O' Sullivan, O.F.M.
PERSONAL NOTE
It fills me with great joy to be present at the Ordination and First Mass of a young Dominican this weekend. I went interstate to be present and my heart is joy filled with joy. I can finally call him Father William. He has great potential and I ask you to pray not only for him but for all priests. They need our love and support and prayers.
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