AD SENSE

32nd Week, Thursday, Nov 14

 Philemon 7-20 / Luke 17:20-25 

The Coming of the Kingdom of God 

I read this story about a little girl who was standing with her grandfather by an old-fashioned open well. They had just lowered a bucket and had drawn some water to drink. She asked her grandfather: “Lolo, where does God live?” the old man picked up the little girl and held her over the open well. “Look down the water,” he said, “and tell me what you see.” ‘I see myself,” said the little girl. ‘That’s where God lives,” said the old man, “He lives in you.” 

In today’s gospel, the Pharisees asked Jesus about, when the Kingdom of God would come. Jesus surprised them with the answer that the Kingdom of God cannot be observed. It’s not “here” or “there,” but ‘the Kingdom of God is among you,’ that is, within our hearts. God’s kingdom has already appeared in the person of Jesus Christ, the Son of God and Savior of the world. He speaks also of the coming of God’s kingdom as both a present event and an event which would be manifested at the end of time or is already here but not because its completion will happen at the end time.

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We often look to the extraordinary for reassurance that God is in our present situation. In other words, we wish that God would work a miracle to resolve a troubled and desperate situation. And when we are in distress, whether in illness or in danger, our instinct will be to look here or look there for an immediate solution. The Pharisees asked when the kingdom of God was to come. Their idea of the kingdom of God is not that different from our idea of a God of quick solutions.

We want God to show His power and might, to bring about retribution to the evil people, and protect us from harm and danger. After all if God is king, then He should be doing all this to show what His kingdom is about. Yet God is more often found in the quiet: in quiet endurance, quiet joy, quiet kindness and goodness. The kingdom of God is present when there is forgiveness and reconciliation and acceptance, like how St. Paul urged Philemon to forgive and accept Onesimus, his former slave, to be his brother.

Yes, the kingdom of God is found in the ordinary and quiet, humble acts of love. May we have quiet and love-filled hearts to see it.

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At the end in addition to the above truth, the article, Experiencing God, says something about what God does to us. It says that:

  1. God is always at work around us.
  2. God pursues a continuing love relationship with us, that is, real and personal.
  3. God invites us to become involved with Him in His work.
  4. God speaks by the Holy Spirit through the Bible, prayer, circumstances and the church to reveal Himself, His purposes and His ways.
  5. God’s invitation for us to work with Him always leads us to a crisis of belief that requires faith and action.
  6. We must make major adjustments in our life to join God in what He is doing.
  7. We come to know God by experience as we obey Him and as He accomplishes His work through us. 

Let us Pray:
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.

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