29th Week, Tuesday, Oct 19
Romans 5:12, 15, 17-21 / Luke 12:35-38
Paul talks about sin; Through one man sin entered the world.
The great American storyteller John Steinbeck wrote in his novel East of Eden: “Two stories have haunted us and followed us from the beginning ... the story of original sin and the story of Cain and Abel. And I don't understand them at all, but I feel them in myself.” Each of us carries in our mind and our body the result of Adam's sin. We feel in ourselves a pull toward evil. This should not discourage us. For even though the pull is strong, we know that God's grace is stronger. And even when we sin, we shouldn't become discouraged, because God's mercy is always waiting with outstretched arms to receive us back.
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How courageously do we resist temptation? "Sin is not
hurtful because it is forbidden, but it is forbidden because it is hurtful.”
Benjamin Franklin, Poor Richard
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We are one in our weaknesses, one also in God’s love and in
the salvation he offers us in Christ in the solidarity of grace. Sinners and
saints at the same time, the enemy in us and paradise within us, we long to be
saved by Christ now, to transcend our doubts, our different forms of
selfishness, our sufferings, our divisions within ourselves and our separations
from one another. Yet it is in this kind of life, within this torn human
destiny, that Christ will save us, if with him we accept his life and grace.
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In the gospel Jesus exhorts his disciples to vigilance. They are like servants who should always be ready for the master’s call.
‘Stay awake’ seems to be a favourite theme in Jesus’
parables. Also, ‘be alert’, ‘be on your guard’, ‘be watchful’, are some
expressions used in the Gospels, urging one to be ready at all times, because
no one knows “the day or the hour” of the Master’s arrival. One must stay awake
in “the evening, at midnight, at cock’s crow, or at dawn.” Being awake is not
just being open-eyed, but having an open and alert mind. Those who are ready
will enjoy the ‘wedding banquet’ (Mt. 25:10) served by the Master himself (Lk.
12:37). Be on your guard if you want to receive the heavenly reward!
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If we have a good boss, a boss who takes care of us, sees to our well-being and our welfare, who is fair but firm, corrects us gently and helps us go learn and grow, then indeed we should be happy and thankful. Not only would we be happy and thankful, we would also want to do our best in our work. That is a way of showing our gratitude to a good boss.
In the gospel, Jesus talks about the attitude of servants
who were waiting for their master's return from a wedding feast. They would be
dressed for actions, with their lamps lit, and ready to open the door as soon
as the master comes and knocks. The servants would have this attitude if they
know that they have a good master, and hence they would be willing to stay
awake and keep waiting, no matter how late into the night. And the master
indeed is a good master, a master who would put on an apron, sit them down at
table and wait on them.
We may find it astonishing for a master to do this. But we
may recall that at the Last Supper, Jesus got up from table, wrapped a towel
round His waist, took a basin of water and washed His disciples' feet. And when
we think further about it, Jesus also willingly took up the cross and offered
His life to cancel out our sins and to save us. Jesus is our Master and our
Saviour. Let us realise how good He is to us. Let us be thankful and show our
gratitude by serving Him with all our strength, with all our mind and with all
our heart.
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Prayer
Lord our God, we experience every day that we are a melting
pot, at times a boiling pot, of courage and cowardice, of questions,
hesitations, vulnerability, of selfishness and generosity, of sin and grace. God,
grant that we may accept our solidarity in sin, to share the better our
solidarity in the salvation, which comes to us through your Son, Jesus Christ,
our Lord. Amen