13th Week, Monday, June 27
Amos 2:6-11, 13-16 / Matthew 8:18-22
Amos prophesies in Israel: “You trample on the poor!”
At the time Amos preached, Israel was enjoying a period of
prosperity. But the wealth benefited only a few who ignored the poverty of the
masses.
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What is our attitude toward the masses of poor? “Your extra
bread belongs to the hungry; your extra coat belongs to the naked, and your
extra gold belongs to the poor.” St. Basil
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It is almost everyone's desire to have a comfortable life. So besides having enough to eat and a cozy place to stay in, we would also wish for financial security and also luxuries like a nice big car and maybe even servants to do our work for us. Yet, these desires only exist in dreams and seldom in reality. Even if these desires are achievable, they are like a bottomless pit and we can never be satisfied and contented.
There is something that Jesus said in the gospel that needs to be reflected upon and thought about. When He said that He has nowhere to lay His head, Jesus is almost like saying that He has no place in this world and that nothing belongs to Him. If Jesus can say that, then what about us? And if we want to be His disciples, are we also prepared to live like Him and have nowhere to lay our head?
We must remember that we live in a passing world and we are only stewards of what we have. Nothing really belongs to us forever, and we also cannot bring anything from here to the hereafter.
If we have nowhere to lay our heads on earth, then the other aspect is that there must be somewhere we can have hope in where our hearts will be at rest and find contentment.
May our hope be in our faith in God who will grant us peace
and protect us from anxiety so that our lives will be lived in joyful hope.
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Introduction
Amos scolds the people of God that they have not answered
God’s covenant of love. Not only should they have responded to God but also
show it to their neighbor.
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“Leave the dead to bury their dead.” Though implying total renunciation in the style of the Jewish rabbis, Jesus stresses more about making a new beginning, getting uprooted from the past and breaking with it, so as not even to stay at home until one’s father dies, and accepting the insecurity of following Jesus and living the faith consistently and earnestly. Are we consistent? Are we radicals in the sense demanded by Jesus?
Burning Bridges Behind
To leave the dead to bury the dead might look too cruel a demand; but when it comes to following the Lord, it only signifies an immediate and absolute commitment. That’s how the first disciples followed him too: “immediately”; “leaving the boat and their father behind” (cf. Mt. 4:22). One must burn the bridges to the past, be it good or bad; Christ becomes the one and only focus thereafter. Jesus has further made it clear when he said, “No one who puts a hand to the plough and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God” (Lk 9:62). As David Lloyd George remarked, “Don't be afraid to take a big step if one is indicated. You can't cross a chasm in two small jumps.” Following Christ is one full, long, hard leap – a leap of faith across the chasm of life. We must jump with all our heart, with all our soul, with all our strength, and all our mind (cf. Lk 10:27) to land in his bosom where we can lay our head.
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Opening Prayer
Lord, our God, we share in the sins of the world, in its
injustices and lack of love, by our silence and our cowardice. Make us aware
that you also call us to lift up this world above itself by proclaiming to it
the Good News of your Son, Jesus Christ. And to make this message of hope
believable, help us to live it consistently, so that people may see that you are
our God of justice, love, and peace, now and forever. Amen