15th Week, Thursday, July 14
Isaiah 26:7-9, 12, 16-19 / Matthew 11:28-30
Isaiah holds out hope: Those sleeping in their graves will wake up.
After the Titanic sank in the North Atlantic, a newspaper carried two pictures side by side. The first picture showed the ship’s side ripped open by the huge iceberg. Under it was printed: “The weakness of man, the supremacy of nature.” The second picture showed a passenger giving his place in a lifeboat to a woman with a child in her arms. Under it was printed: “The weakness of nature, the supremacy of man.” Isaiah sees the southern kingdom in similar terms. By itself, it appears doomed and without hope. With God’s help, however, it can rise from the grave and live again.
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When we fall or lose hope, do we focus on ourselves and on
our own inadequacies? Or do we focus on God and his love and power? “Jesus
said, ‘Young man! Get up. . . .’ The dead man sat up.” Luke 7:14-15
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In the prayers for the deceased, we often hear the phrases
"eternal rest" and "rest in peace".
When understood
literally, it means that the departed have finally come to rest from their
journey in this world, and they are freed from the anxieties and worries of
this life. That is one way of understanding the word "rest".
When Jesus said in
the gospel, "Come to me, all you who labour and are overburdened, and I
will give you rest." we may immediately think of physical rest.
Indeed, the anxieties
and worries of life have taken their toil on us physically and we yearn for a
good night's rest in the comfort of our beds.
But spiritually, we
also yearn for a rest for our hearts more than we yearn for physical rest. Our
hearts need to rest in peace.
And Jesus wants to give us that peace because the meaning of
rest is to go to Jesus and have our hearts re-created into His image and
likeness so that our hearts can be like His.
As the 1st reading
puts it: Lord, you are giving us peace. With peace in our hearts, then we will
understand what the 1st reading means when it says: The path of the upright
man is straight, you smooth the way of the upright. Following the path of your
judgments, we hoped in you, Lord, your name and your memory are all my soul
desires.
So even though our
bodies may be resting, the 1st reading says: At night my soul longs for you and
my spirit in me seeks for you. Yes, our
hearts will not be at rest until they find their rest in the heart of Jesus.
Then like Jesus, we will be humble and gentle of heart. Then we find that the
yoke and the burdens of life will be light.
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I WILL GIVE YOU REST
Introduction Isaiah
voices a prayer of longing for God, and asks for peace, and hopes for a rebirth for
his people. It represents the prayer of the just among his people. Our
selection skips the parts referring to the fate of the unjust.
The weak and the poor
are open to the love of Jesus, for they are aware that they are fragile and
vulnerable. He will give them rest and make them aware that what Jesus asks of
them is a light burden, for it is carried in love. They will find rest in him. Opening Prayer
God with a heart, you have made your love visible in your
Son Jesus, human like us, and through him you have bound yourself to us with a
bond of faithful love. Accept our thanks and help us to reflect a bit of your
own love, that, like you and Jesus, we may not be afraid of showing affection
and concern to people and of rendering them generous service, even when it is
inconvenient to do so. We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Commentary Isaiah recalls vividly that the country’s
pain has ended in joy. But the crushing hand of God’s anger had been felt in
punishment. As pain precedes childbirth only to break forth in joy, such is the
similar lot of God’s people. While final salvation still remains on the
horizon, his glory is already being enkindled. At some point even the dead will
rise. We all suffer pain in one way or another—war, unemployment, illness. But
the Christian life is never overwhelmed. Jesus reminds us today to bring our
sorrows to him. He is not an overbearing dictator but a servant-prince who is
meek and humble of heart. If we stand firm, we will be refreshed. That is the
assurance of today’s Gospel. Some people are forever downcast. A professor I
had years ago never smiled. He carried the weight of the world and his students
got the brunt of it. One student remarked, “Well, he’s strict, but he’s fair.”
Another responded, “I don’t know about his fairness, but I’ve never had any
trouble finding his strictness.” Rejoice in the Lord, for the world is his.
Points to Ponder Christian hope Confiding in the Lord
Jesus, the meek and humble Master
Intercessions
– Lord Jesus, make us aware how brittle and vulnerable we
are, that we may simply ask for your help when we are in distress, we pray:
– Lord Jesus, may those who are tired in life and see no
solution to their problems, turn trustingly to you, we pray:
– Lord Jesus, help us carry the burdens of others, for these
are light as they are our brothers and sisters, we pray:
Prayer over the Gifts God, source of all love, your
Son Jesus gave himself totally for you as he gives himself now to us in this
Eucharistic celebration. May we learn from him to help others carry their
burdens and to bring out the best in them. Make our love as faithful and
generous as his, that he may live among us now and for ever.
Prayer after Communion Lord our God, your love beat
in a human heart when your Son lived among people as one of us. Help us to
become one with him and give us hearts as wide as his. May we prefer, as he
did, those who are loved least and therefore need affection most, that we may
bring them a bit of your warmth and love in them him who is our Lord now and
for ever.
Blessing Let our Christian living be a hymn of
gratitude to God’s initiative of love and to Jesus’ continual care. May the God
of love bless you all, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.