AD SENSE

20th Week, Wednesday, August 21; Saint Pius X

20th Week, Wednesday, August 21; Saint Pius X

Ezekiel 34:1-11 / Matthew 20:1-16

You shepherds are doomed: "You take care of yourselves, not your sheep!" 

Fr. Horace McKenna of Washington, D.C., spent much of his life helping the city's poor. Just before he died, he said: "When God lets me into heaven, I think I'll ask to go off in a corner somewhere, sit down, and cry—because the strain is off. 

I won't have to worry any longer about who's at the door, whose breadbox is empty, whose baby is sick, and whose children can't read." Unlike the shepherds that Ezekiel talks about in today's reading, Fr. McKenna devoted every waking moment to the flock God had entrusted to his care. He was, indeed, a good shepherd. 

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Ezekiel delivers a stinging rebuke to the shepherds of Judah. The political leaders who had been divinely commissioned to lead the people into a deeper knowledge of the God of Sinai and Abraham had used their position to line their own pockets. Because their lives were poured into self-service rather than true service, they fall under Ezekiel's most terrible condemnation. The Lord announces through him that they will be removed. Now God will shepherd His people. 

(The phrase is reminiscent of the New Testament theme of the Good Shepherd. Significantly, it is a rejection of the king as the one through whom God's blessing would flow to the people. Ezekiel looks to a time when intermediaries will disappear and God will guide each heart and life into a deeper knowledge of Himself. In that new age, priests will be instruments of the Spirit, who will be directly available to all people. A hierarchy will no longer serve as filters through whom God's Spirit passes to others.)

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What kind of a shepherd are we to those God has entrusted to our care? Lord, make shepherds to others in the image and likeness of your Son, Jesus, who was the model for all shepherds. 

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One of our human follies is that we have this tendency to be jealous and to envy others. We get jealous at others for getting a better deal than us, or better treatment than us, or simply just because they are better than us.

We get jealous of others instead of rejoicing with them in their good fortune, and we get envious about almost anything. But if we are able to look at envy and jealousy clearly, then we will also see that we get jealous and envious simply because we are not looking at what we already have. We look at what others have, and we say that it is not fair because they grass is greener, or so we think. That was what happened to the workers who worked a full day in the vineyard.

Instead of rejoicing that the last-minute workers who were hired had something to bring back to their families, they resented that they were paid the same amount as them. Yes, resentment is the product of jealousy and envy. Let us ask the Lord to heal our resentment and jealousy and envy, so that with generous hearts we will rejoice with the Lord for His gifts and blessings to all of us.

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Let us pray: God, you are high above us and get nearer to us than we are to ourselves; you hate evil and yet you give a chance to people who fail; you know us as we are and still you love us. Teach us your surprising ways, that your thoughts may become ours and that we may generously share with those around us all the good gifts and the life you have given us in the generosity of your heart, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. God Bless.

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Saint Pius X

Feast day August 21

“I was born poor, I lived poor, I will die poor.” These words were part of the will that Pope Pius X left at his death on August 20, 1914.

He was born Giuseppe Melchiorre Sarto, the second of 10 children. His father was a poor parish clerk in Riese, Italy, and his mother worked as a seamstress. At 11, Giuseppe was accepted as a student in high school. Every day, he walked five miles to school and back. At 15, he began attending the local seminary. When his father died, Giuseppe wanted to come home and help with the family. His mother, however, would not let him.

In 1858, he was ordained and then worked as a parish priest for 17 years. He believed his call was to encourage those who were poor to lead Christian lives and to help them overcome financial problems. He was, however, named spiritual director of the major seminary and chancellor of the diocese. Later, he became a bishop and then a cardinal.

In 1903, this little-known cardinal was elected to become Pope Pius X. He took as his motto “Restore all things in Christ.” He emphasized the importance of the Eucharist. He directed that children as young as seven should be allowed to receive the Eucharist. He initiated changes in Church music and worship. He began a biblical institute. He gave the first official impetus to the modern liturgical renewal.

Pope Pius X believed that real peace could be achieved only through social justice and charity. He sponsored and sheltered refugees with his own resources. He wrote an encyclical encouraging Latin American bishops to improve the treatment of native people working on plantations. He worked to stop the world from going to war. When Europe entered World War I, Pius was heartbroken and said, “I would gladly give up my life to save my poor children from this ghastly scourge.” Just a few weeks after the war started, Pope Pius X died.