AD SENSE

31st Sunday B: Liturgical Prayers

 Greetings (see Second Reading)

Jesus here among us offered himself for us. He is living forever to intercede for all of us who come to him. May his grace and peace be always with you. R/ And also with you.  

Introduction by the Celebrant Love:

Summit and Summary of all Commandments.

There is no greater love than that which disposes someone to give up one’s life for others. Jesus, the person who tells us this, proved by his own life and death that he meant what he said. He insists that love of God and love of people are one and inseparable. It is perhaps easy to love an unseen God but it is often very difficult for us to love people whose weakness we see, people who are cranky and rough and unreliable. But if we cannot love these people, we really do not love God. Jesus, who is God’s love alive, can give us his own endless, reliable love.  

Share God’s Love People who love one another deeply are disposed to sacrifice themselves for one another. Yet, what counts more than the sacrifice itself, is their mutual love; that is the root. Love is so great because, more than anything else, it is a gift from God who loved us first. If we become fully aware of this it will be easy to love people and to be at peace and in love with ourselves, for God loves us in all our frailty and fickleness and he keeps accepting us. Why, then, should we not accept also those around us? We ask the Lord in this Eucharist to let us feel his love and to enable us share it.  

Penitential Act Whose love has not failed at times? Let us ask the Lord and those we have hurt to forgive us in the generosity of their heart. (pause)  

Lord Jesus, let us share in your love that was attentive to all people and cured their ills: Lord, have mercy. R/ Lord, have mercy.  

Jesus Christ, let us share in your love that embraced even sinners and outcasts: Christ, have mercy. R/ Christ, have mercy.  

Lord Jesus, let us share in your love that went all the way, even accepting death to save the unjust, the ungrateful, the hard-hearted: Lord, have mercy. R/ Lord, have mercy.  

Have mercy on us, Lord, and forgive us all our sins. Make us capable of a love that excludes no one and lead us to everlasting life. R/ Amen.  

Opening Prayer Let us pray to God, the source of all love to refresh our love (pause)  

Lord our God, loving Father, all true love comes from you and leads to you. You have committed yourself to us in a covenant of lasting love in the person of Jesus Christ. Help us to respond to your love with the whole of our being and to live your commandments not as laws forced on us from outside but as opportunities to love you for yourself and in people, our brothers and sisters. We ask this through Christ our Lord. R/ Amen.  

First Reading: Love the Lord with All Your Heart God said as early as in the Old Testament: Listen, people of the covenant: The one Lord God loves you. Love God with all your heart.  

Second Reading: Christ, the Definitive High Priest Christ is the definitive mediator and high priest, for he is the eternal Son of God, and he has sacrificed himself totally for us. He alone can bring real communion with God.  

Gospel: No Greater Than These Two Listen, people of the new covenant: Love the Lord God with all that is in you; remember that love includes everyone.  

Intercessions Love can hardly be commanded, yet it ought to be the heart of all we do. Let us pray to the Father of all love for the capacity to love him and our neighbor far and near. Let us say: R/ Lord, make us instruments of your love.

–   That the Church for which Christ died may grow into a universal community of love which makes God’s unconditional love visible to all people, let us pray: R/ Lord, make us instruments of your love.

–   That Christians everywhere may not be people of legalisms and outward observances but people with a heart, who do what they have to do and more because they are God’s children; let us pray: R/ Lord, make us instruments of your love.

–   That the nations of the world may learn to respect and help one another and to build peace and progress not at the expense of one another but based on justice and equitable sharing; let us pray: R/ Lord, make us instruments of your love.

–   That we may be reliable friends to those suffering in any form; that we may lighten their burdens and help them to keep trusting in God and people, let us pray: R/ Lord, make us instruments of your love.

–   That our anemic and dried-up love may become rich and spontaneous, like a fresh breath of life and joy brightening the lives of those around us and a wordless song of praise to God, let us pray: R/ Lord, make us instruments of your love.  

Loving God, we claim to belong to you and to your Son. Help us through your Spirit of love to give to your love a human shape, that we may make people happy and be your happy people in Christ Jesus our Lord. R/ Amen.  

Prayer over the Gifts God our Father, in these offerings of bread and wine allow us to join your Son Jesus in his perfect sacrifice of love. Accept our heart, our life, our thoughts and words and Intercessions, our burdens and our joys as a grateful way to respond to your love and to bring life to our brothers and sisters. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.  

Introduction to the Eucharistic Prayer One of heart and voice, let us thank God for the love shown in Christ, which makes us capable of love. Jesus’ obedience too has made us capable of giving to God a response of love.  

Invitation to the Lord’s Prayer By the power of the Holy Spirit who dwells in our hearts, we pray to our Father in heaven: R/ Our Father…  

Deliver Us Deliver us, Lord, from every evil of selfishness and calculation and open us to your love. Keep us free from the fear of committing ourselves in love to anyone who needs us, and let our love for those around us be the test of the quality of our love for you. Help us to be one in heart and soul and to be a community of service, as we wait in joyful hope for the coming of our Savior Jesus Christ. R/ For the kingdom…  

Invitation to Communion This is the Lamb of God who gave up his life for us and who said: Everyone will know that you are my disciples if you love one another as I have loved you. Happy are we to be invited to share Jesus’ meal of love. R/ Lord, I am not worthy…  

Prayer after Communion Our God and Father, we have learned from your Son not merely to love others as we love ourselves but if necessary more than ourselves. By the strength of this Eucharist, dispose us to rejoice with the happy and to mourn with the sad, to cultivate the best in ourselves and to offer it to others as a free gift. Help us never to take Christ without people, never people without Christ, who is our Lord for ever. R/ Amen.  

Blessing Did we really need the reminder that love is the heart of our faith, as it is the heart of all human life? Yes, if we are aware that often, we forget that love. Perhaps the love of God is easier to keep in a way, because God often seems far away. But our neighbor is there, with all his irritating blemishes and habits. Let us not forget that he or she is Christ meeting us on the road of life. May God fill us with his love and bless us: The Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. R/ Amen.  

Let us go with one another the way of love of the Lord. R/ Thanks be to God.  

Commentary Listen to him! Today's text presents Jesus in the temple, where a scribe asked him the theological question: "What is the most important commandment?" The scribes had discovered 613 commandments of the Law and the question was: Of these 613, which one is the most important? Many teachers maintained that the most important of the commandments was the observance of the Sabbath because God himself observed this, as he rested on the seventh day after six days of creation. But Jesus had disagreements on that. The gospel readings of last week were all about Jesus’ confrontation with the Pharisees regarding the Law of the Sabbath. Others believed that “not to have other gods than the only God of Israel” was the most important. Contrary to what the scribe expected, Jesus cites the creed of Israel which is given in the Book of Deuteronomy, Chapter 6: “Hear, O Israel!” Jesus gives a new way of understanding our relationship with God, where the first command of the Lord is “Hear, O Israel” – ie., “Listen O chosen people of God”. We are the chosen people of God, and we must listen to the Word of God and allow it to transform us. Hear O Israel, Adonai is our one God ... if you listen to him, you will keep his word.” “Love God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your life, with all your strength and with all your mind.” Our entire life project has no other objective than to fulfil the mission entrusted to us on the earth – to do the projects of God. We do not do this because of any compulsion but rather out of love of God, who has designed our life. The Pharisees had asked for the most important commandment, but Jesus gives us two commandments: “To Listen” and “to love”. Then he teaches us that the love of God is not possible without the love of our neighbour. According to Luke’s version of this passage, there is only one commandment: 'Love God and love your neighbour as yourself'. In the Gospel of John, in chapter 15, Jesus says: "This is my only commandment: “love one another." In the letter to the Romans, Paul says: 'All the commandments ... do not commit adultery, do not kill, do not steal, they are summarized in these words: you will love your neighbour as yourself.' How are we to live by this commandment of Jesus? First, Listen to him! To listen to the voice of the Lord, we must resolve to travel with him on the road from Galilee to Jerusalem. Reading Mark's Gospel is equivalent to making this journey. It may be that having reached the last page, one does not yet dare to offer one's life with Jesus. There is no need to be discouraged because of this; one must resume the journey with him, starting again from Galilee.  

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3 November 2024 Mark 12:28b-34 Making the Word become flesh in our lives In today’s Gospel, a scribe asks Jesus which commandment is the most important. Jesus answers by citing the “Shema” from Deuteronomy 6, to "Love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength," and adds, "Love your neighbour as yourself." Pope Francis reflects on this dialogue, particularly noting how the scribe repeated Jesus’ words. Pope Francis suggests this repetition teaches us something vital: the Word of God is not just information to be heard but a message to be repeated, internalised, and lived. The pope uses a powerful analogy, explaining that the Word of God must be “ruminated”—chewed over and over until it becomes part of us. This is not merely about understanding the words but allowing them to transform our hearts. Jesus invites us to engage with God’s Word so deeply that it begins to echo within us, shaping our actions, thoughts, and relationships. In one of his homilies, the pope said, “The Lord is not so much looking for skilled Scripture commentators. Instead, he is looking for docile hearts which, welcoming his Word, allow themselves to be changed inside. This is why it is so important to be familiar with the Gospel, to always have it at hand – even a pocket-size Gospel in our pockets, in our purses to read and reread, to be passionate about it. When we do this, Jesus, the Word of the Father, enters into our hearts, he becomes intimate with us and we bear fruit in Him,” says the pope. This requires us to constantly engage with the Gospel, reading and rereading it so that it resonates in our conscience and directs our daily actions. The command to love God and neighbour must be more than theoretical; it needs to orient our entire lives. Are we loving God with all we are? Are we doing good for our neighbours? We need to become living translations of God’s love, making His Word flesh in our actions, just as Mary did.