32nd Week, Thursday, Nov 16
Wisdom 7:22-8:1 / Luke 17:20-25
Wisdom is all-seeing; Wisdom defeats wickedness.
In her book, A Grandma's Letters to God, Ruth Youngdahl Nelson tells this story. On a hill overlooking Weinsberg, Germany, is a huge fortress. One day, in feudal times, the fortress was surrounded by an enemy. The enemy commander agreed to let all women and children leave the fortress. He also agreed to let the women take with them one valuable possession.You can imagine the consternation of the enemy commander
when he saw the women leave the fortress with their husbands on their backs. The
secret to wisdom is love. Love gives us an insight that nothing else does.
***
Have we ever experienced the insight that love alone can
provide? Speaking to the Little Prince about love and life, the Fox says:
"'It is only with the heart that one can see rightly.” Antoine de
Saint-Exupéry
***
The author of the book of Wisdom gives high praise to
wisdom. She is personified, she is like a spirit that moves. She is like the
breath of God that orders all things well.
***
***
Books and movies about prophecies and predicting the future are usually of much interest to people. Maybe because it is our human tendency to want to have a hold on the future in order to have a sense of security. Yet we may get so engrossed about the future that we may lose hold of the present.
We may forget to live in the here and the now. That was what
Jesus meant when he said that the Kingdom of God is among you. In other words,
God's Kingdom is in the present and the now; and God's name is "I
AM". God wants to be present in the now of our lives and it is in the here
and the now that God reveals Himself to us.
***
To the Pharisees and perhaps to the disciples too, anxiously
looking for signs, Jesus says: The kingdom of God is among you, right in your
midst. It is already present in our lives. In other words, be wise and be
committed to the present, to building up God’s kingdom now. Seek eternity and
eternal life in the present, and God’s good day will come in God’s good time.
***
Prayer
Lord our God, your kingdom is not an established order but
something that is alive and always coming. Make us aware that it is to be found
where we let you reign, where we and the kingdom of people give way to your
kingdom, where we let your justice and love and peace take the place of our
fumbling and stumbling. Lord, establish your kingdom among us through Christ
Jesus, our Lord. Amen
***
Saint Margaret of Scotland
Feast day November 16
For Saint Margaret—a wife, a mother, and a queen—giving
money was never enough. She was with those who were poor, making sure they had
food and clothes. Margaret was born about 1045. She was raised in the Hungarian
court, for she was from the line of nobility. When she was 12, she was sent to
the English court of Edward the Confessor and further educated. When the
Normans conquered England, Margaret, her mother, her brother, and her sister
tried to return to Hungary. Their ship was blown off course and landed in
Scotland. They were welcomed by King Malcolm III, who fell in love with the
beautiful and gentle Margaret. They were married in 1070.
Scotland was a rough country, and although Malcolm was a
good man, he was more of a soldier than a scholar or courtly gentleman. But
Margaret helped him become a virtuous, gracious leader. They had eight
children; all of them grew to love those who were poor and to care for them as
their parents had. The youngest, David, was thought of as a saint by the
people.
Margaret was prayerful. She gathered women together to study
the Scriptures and to embroider vestments and altar cloths. She was always
surrounded by beggars, and she gave them money and clothes. She helped ransom
the English who had been captured, and she set up homes and hospitals for those
in need. She and her husband would go to church during Lent and Advent. On the
way home, they would wash the feet of poor people in need and give them money.
At home, Margaret fed nine orphans who were brought to her daily. She brought a
love of the arts and education to the people, and they loved her in return. Her
children are believed to be primarily responsible for two centuries of progress
and peace in Scotland.
Margaret died four days after her husband’s death in 1093. In 1250, she was canonized and later declared patroness of Scotland.