Sunday, March 17, 2024

Fifth Sunday of Lent

March is the month dedicated to Saint Joseph

Readings for the Rule of Saint Benedict for the Week: Ch 38 The Reader for the Week - Ch 43 Tardiness at the Work of God or at Table

A clean heart create for me, O God.

SAINT JOSEPH, MINISTER OF SALVATION,
SAINT JOSEPH, TERROR OF DEMONS,
MARY, MIRROR OF JUSTICE,
SAINT MICHAEL THE ARCHANGEL,
PRAY FOR US.

He was heard because of His reverence. Son though He was, He learned obedience from what He suffered; and when He was made perfect, He became the source of eternal life for all who obey Him.
(Hebrews 5:8-9)

Welcome to the Fifth Sunday of Lent, and in other years, the commemoration of Saint Patrick, Apostle of Ireland. Remember that on Saint Patrick's Day, everyone is Irish. So why not join my very Irish Great Aunt Mary of happy memory and send out this old Irish blessing, or perhaps it's an old Irish curse. 😉 Aunt Mary had it typewritten on a bit of paper and placed with a magnet on the front of her refrigerator. 

May those who love us, love us.
And those who don't love us, 
may God turn their hearts.
And if He doesn't turn their hearts, 
may He turn their ankles,
so we'll know them by their limping.

As we absorb the words from the Letter to the Hebrews above, how about we make this week one of obedience to God's will. Our Lord tells us quite plainly in today's Gospel that whoever serves Him must follow Him; where He is so will His servant be (John 12:26). We are here to love and serve the Lord and obey Him by carrying our crosses, the big ones, and the little ones of tiny pinpricks that rub us the wrong way, upset our nicely organized apple carts, and shake us up a bit. In a beautiful letter received the other day, a young wife and mother related what a spiritual director told her once, before even dating her now husband: "Marriage is choosing to love your spouse every day. Every single day you have to wake up and choose to love him." It is like that for all the faithful. Every day. Every day we wake up and choose to love God and our neighbor, our husband or wife, our children, our co-workers, our teenage neighbor next door, the old man in the pew behind us at Mass, the sister or brother sitting next to us at a meal, and so on. Or not. We choose to follow the Lord, or not. The choice is ours. We will encounter much joy in the daily, and much suffering too. The Lord certainly did. No matter. He kept going; He was made perfect. Thankfully, the Father honors whoever serves His Son, Jesus Christ. We reach out to the Lord who is with us, without fail. 

Our voices for the week continue with a prayer that might be used as a morning offering, especially this week. 

Jesus, you know that we love you and that we wish to imitate your virtues. Today, grant us the virtue of obedience, that we might submit our judgment and our will to God's. Grant us that forgetfulness of self that will separate us from ourselves and which will unite us more to you forever. O Holy Virgin, obtain for me the grace of never wasting the least opportunity to obey, because this is the indisputable road to holiness, to maintain interior peace, to please Jesus, and to attain heaven.
Amen.
(Blessed Concepcion Cabrera de Armida, 1862-1937, wife, mother, and widow, the first Mexican laywoman to be beatified, see Magnificat, Meditation of the Day, March 15, 2024)

The first step of humility is unhesitating obedience, 
which comes naturally to those who cherish Christ above all else.
(Rule of Saint Benedict, 5:1)

Bow down in suffering, love your enemies, avoid your friends, be patient in the midst of adversities. That is my cry now. Give me your help generously now, so that God may make my grief and my suffering bearable, so that I may wrest my way to the very pinnacle of God's will: Not as I will, but as you will ...
(Servant of God Joseph Mueller, 1894-1944)

I was like a stone lying in the deep mire;
and He that is mighty came, 
and His mercy lifted me up,
and verily raised me aloft and placed me on top of the wall.
(Saint Patrick, 5th century)

It is always tempting to take credit for the gifts of grace and to lay blame elsewhere for our faults. If we do not claim responsibility for the choices that are truly ours, neither can we ask for or accept forgiveness. Too heavy for us, our offenses-too heavy not to allow the Lord to wipe them away.
(Magnificat, Prayer for the Morning, Introduction to Psalm 65, March 9, 2024)

United in faith and prayer, we keep going.

I trust in your faithfulness.
Grant my heart joy in your help,
That I may sing of the Lord,
"How good our God has been to me!"
(Psalm 13:6)

SAINT PATRICK, APOSTLE OF IRELAND,
SAINT BRIGID OF KILDARE,
SAINT GERTRUDE OF NIVELLES,
SERVANT OF GOD CHIARA LUBICH,
SAINT CYRIL OF JERUSALEM,
SAINT EDWARD THE MARTYR,
BLESSED FRANCIS PALAU Y OUER,
SAINT HERBERT,
SAINT CUTHBERT,
SAINT BENEDICT,
SAINT DEOGRATIUS,
SAINT NICHOLAS OWEN,
SAINT LEA,
SAINT TURIBIUS OF MONGROVEJO,
PRAY FOR US.

Today's photo: Peach tree blossom; glorify the Lord with me. A willing spirit sustain in me. Thank you, dear Beth.

© Gertrude Feick 2024

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