COLLECT SERIES
COLLECT
COLLECT SERIES
COLLECT
The
Collect for Third Sunday of Ordinary Time Year C reads as follows:
Almighty
ever-living God,
direct
our actions according to your good pleasure,
that
in the name of your beloved Son we may abound in good works.
Through
our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who
lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
God,
for ever and ever.
REFLECTION QUESTIONS
1. What are the actions I need
to take today/this week to direct my actions according to His Good pleasure?
2. Why should our good works
be done in the name of Jesus?
3. What actions in my life
either intermittently or ongoing are not according to God’s good pleasure? What will I do to address this issue this
coming week?
4. What are good works? Why not examine the corporal and spiritual
works of mercy that the church provides us as a guide. https://cgcatholic.org.au/catholic-voice/blog/the-spiritual-and-corporal-works-of-mercy/
5.. What are my spiritual goals for 2022- for this month,
this week, today?
GOSPEL REFLECTION
Luke’s
Gospel has 3 features for us to keep in mind throughout the year:
1. It
is an orderly account- chronological from the infancy narratives to the death
and resurrection of Christ.
2. It
is geographical account- moving from the countryside and finishing in Jerusalem
with the death and resurrection of Christ.
3. It
is a theological account: By this I mean that Luke is at pains to explain to us
throughout his gospel account that Jesus was not only the promise but the
fulfillment of the promise. Today’s
gospel account where Jesus is reading from the prophet of Isaiah exemplifies
this as Jesus after He rolls up the scroll says’ This text is being fulfilled
even as you listen’.
We may wish to ask ourselves how this text is being fulfilled as we listen today’.
The
Lord sent me to bring good news to the poor: Who are the poor in my life that I
can bring good news to this coming week? What is the good news I need to hear
to nourish the poor in me?
To
proclaim liberty to captives: Who are
the captives in my life that I have in my influence to provide liberty? Freeing someone who is sad by a smile or a
comforting word or helping parishioners, family members, work colleagues,
neighbours. For example, my neighbour
has had her daughter stay with her. The
daughter has now gone home and my neighbour is very tired. My way of giving her some liberty from this
tiredness and her heaviness is to provide a few meals for her. It is tricky because I don’t want this to be
a burden for her thinking she has to reciprocate. There are so many ways we can
proclaim liberty to captives with the people we meet, know, who cross our path.
What will you do this week?
To the
blind new sight: Donations either regularly or a one off payment to
organisations which deal with the blind would be one way to give blind new
sight.
I had
major problems with my eyes a couple years ago so I have come to appreciate the
value of my eyesight even more. I guess
up to then I took my eyes for granted.
Thanking God for our senses and acknowledging how much we appreciate
these senses is in itself new sight, especially if you were like me and took
them for granted and failed miserably to thank God for them.
We may
also wish to ask God for new sight in the areas in our lives where we are
spiritually blind or emotionally blind. We need to be honest and ask God to
show us our blind spots and help us to overcome them with His guidance and
love. What areas of blindness will I ask God to assist me this coming week?
To set
the downtrodden free: Looking up a Thesaurus for the word downtrodden came up
with the following options: oppressed, Subjugated, persecuted, subdued,
repressed, tyrannized, ground down, crushed, enslaved, burdened, weighed down.,
exploited, disadvantaged, underprivileged, victimized, bullied, browbeaten,
under the heel, powerless, helpless, prostrate, abused, misused, maltreated.
Who
are the people in my life that I meet, know or may not know personally but can
help through an appropriate organisation this coming week to help to set the
downtrodden free. It is worth
considering how you might help children to do this as well. Is a child being bullied in the classroom?
How important is it to try to be friends with a child who does not make friends
easily? How can my children show good
example and in their own way put this gospel ideal into practice. We as adults need to help them think about it
and maybe give them suggestions and help them to come up with their own ways to
put this ideal into practice.
No comments:
Post a Comment