We should all strive to have the faith of Job especially in
times of trials and difficulties. As the old saying goes, "When the tough
gets going, the going gets tough!" It is only during these tough times
that we can practice strength and endurance in our faith. This is all because
we believe that we have a mighty vindicator in God our Savior. Amen.
Hallelujah!
Job 19:21-27
...But as for me, I know that my Vindicator lives, ...
We always have hope in the Lord who knows what's best for
each one of us. All we have to do is call on the Lord, trust that He hears the
sound of our call and wait for Him with courage. When we get carried away by
all the commotion there is a tendency that we neglect the essential and most
central issue which is to always believe that we shall see the good things of
the Lord in the land of the living. Amen. Hallelujah!
Psalm 27:7-8a, 8b-9abc, 13-14
R: I believe that I shall see the good things of the Lord in
the land of the living.
7 Hear, O LORD, the sound of my call; have pity on me, and
answer me. 8 Of you my heart speaks; you my glance seeks. (R) Your presence, O
LORD, I seek. 9 Hide not your face from me; do not in anger repel your servant.
You are my helper: cast me not off. (R) 13 I believe that I shall see the
bounty of the LORD in the land of the living. 14 Wait for the LORD with
courage; be stout-hearted, and wait for the LORD.
We are blessed to have a line up of brilliant and anointed
preachers who share their knowledge and zeal for the word of God in EWTN
(Eternal Word Television Network). But there are only a few people who take on
this mission of spreading the word of God because we don't fully realize this
as baptized Christians, we are all sent by Christ on this mission. We should
accept God's invitation and receive the word of God by living its message. We
have a great responsibility in our hands and should respond to His Word for
indeed the harvest is abundant but the laborers are few. The time is now to
become part of this great harvest. Jesus knows exactly the kind of life we are
headed to if we heed His call. What He expects from us is courage to go on and
He will do the rest. Let us trust that God is truly the Good Shepherd who never
abandons nor forsakes the lambs in the midst of the wolves. Today also we celebrate the feast of St. Francis who was known to have tamed a wolf. He was able to do it with prayer and contemplation. He made the sign of the cross and called the wolf to meet him in peace under the grace of the Lord. We, Catholics
believe that God gave human beings reason although it sometimes gets darkened
by sin but still human reason can figure out some things. One of the things
that human beings figure out without God having to reveal it, is that human
beings need to meet 4 qualities to be deemed a human being. The philosopher,
before even Plato, Aristotle and Socrates, had this figured out. We find it
mentioned in Wisdom 8:7, the 4 virtues or qualities are also called the hinge
virtues because it is where all the other virtues or qualities of good people
would hinge. The word cardinal means hinge. The Cardinals who surround the Pope
are the doorway to the Pope. They are also the ones whom he rely the most for
advice. Everything else depends on the cardinal virtues. (Prudence or wisdom,
justice, temperance and courage or fortitude) Prudence is the ability to make
right decisions in complex situations. They are decisions that lead to the best
and right thing. Without this we can be in big trouble. We’ve got to be able to
decide in a situation that we’re in what the right thing to do which is the
best thing to do. How do we get something done? There are some folks who
probably just can’t figure out what to do. There are other folks who look at
the problem and they can figure out a solution. It’s a core and they execute
that core. It’s practical wisdom. We’ll find in the Book of Proverbs a lot of
things about wisdom even in Sirach, Ecclesiastes and all the wisdom literature
in scriptures. We can also find all the other 3 cardinal virtues, like justice
which means giving each person his or her due. We all know even as kids
instinctively how important justice is. The first thing that a kid cries out as
soon as he learns how to talk if he has brothers and sisters is “Not fair, he
got more than I did” or “You ask me to do more than what that person is doing.”
This is because we have instinctively or natively offensive justice. Each
person has rights and ought to get their due. There’s also another part of
justice that we forget, that is, we have obligations and duties to everyone. A
person who is unjust is not a good person. To be just, we need to control our
passions. Temperance is a virtue that balances and controls our passions. It is
like controlling our desire for that last piece of cake if we know that it
belongs to our sister. In order to be just, we’ve got to control our appetites.
Make our appetites come into line with justice, truth and goodness. We’ve got
to have that balance in our life in order to be a good and effective person.
Temperance makes this happen. We also have to be courageous. If we are not
courageous then every time a difficulty arises we’re going to shrink back. If
there’s any danger involved in doing the right, just and wise thing then we’re
just going to crack out and find an excuse because we’re afraid. Courage or
fortitude helps us to master fear and not let fear keep us from doing what’s
right. We’ve got have all these things but here’s the problem. When Adam &
Eve decided to sin they let loose a weakness into our race and nature that
impacts all of us. We call it original sin. Sin is not so original, we just
copy what other people have done. There’s nothing creative about sin. Adam
& Eve’s sin was the only original sin. What they did has an impact on us.
By weakening their own nature, sin weakened man’s nature. They passed on to us
a weakened nature. They separated themselves and the whole human race from
friendship with God and were born into that. There’s a tendency in our nature
to go on a downward drift, a drift off course and a tendency to a great degree is
dealt with through grace. How do we get grace? Through the death and
resurrection of Jesus, God has made possible for us, healing of our humanity.
He gives us other gifts, faith, hope and charity that make it possible for us
to really have wisdom, justice, temperance and courage. Without faith, hope and
charity in this life, no one can really become truly wise. All throughout human
history we see people who exercise these gifts. They may not be Christians,
deeply spiritual people, or in a state of grace and can exercise some of these
potentials here and there. But ultimately original sin means we are going to
sin seriously and mess up. We need God’s grace for those 4 great virtues to be
perfected. Faith, hope and charity are supernatural. These are things that
human beings would never know that they need or could have without God giving
them supernaturally that’s why they are called the theological virtues. We only
know about them through divine revelation and we couldn’t know about them by
reason. We can only have them through God’s grace. The theological virtues,
faith, hope and charity are the crown of the first 4 cardinal virtues that
transform and make them possible. God doesn’t want us just to be whole human
beings and restore us to what Adam & Eve were when they blew it in the
Garden. God wants us to be more than that. He wants to elevate our human nature
and divinize it. He wants us to share in His own Divine nature. Charity is all
about loving with God’s love. Loving as the 3 persons of the Holy Trinity love
each other and sharing in that goes way beyond human nature. This is an
incredible thing and call. It was only possible because God became man and we
can share in his virtue. This is what the real Catholic life is all about. It’s
not just about making it or going to heaven by the skin of your teeth after
struggling. It’s about growing in holiness and becoming like Jesus all
throughout our life, a champion not without struggles. As a matter of fact
without the struggles we can never become a champion. It is possible with
victory and excellence not with hopelessness, despair and frustration. This is
God’s desire for us which is a fantastic calling. The power to do this is given
to us. Amen. Hallelujah!
Luke 10:1-12
Jesus appointed seventy-two others whom he sent ahead of him
in pairs to every town and place he intended to visit. 2 He said to them, “The
harvest is abundant but the laborers are few; so ask the master of the harvest
to send out laborers for his harvest. Go on your way; behold, I am sending you
like lambs among wolves...
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