I will seek to recognize God’s presence in my day by patiently welcoming the suffering and trials he permits, so he can bring about a greater good
Matthew 17:9a, 10-13
Introductory Prayer: Lord, your
disciples sincerely tried to comprehend your identity and believe in you. I come before you today
with my doubts and problems, hoping to find in this prayer an answer to my deepest aspirations. I
want to believe with unwavering faith, and I want to love you with a devout heart. I offer you this
time of prayer as my token of gratitude for all I have received from you.
Petition:
Mary, help me to embraceobey God’s will in my life, just as Christ embracedobeyed the
Father’s plan for our salvation.
1. John the Baptist as Elijah: Once again the Gospel
refers to John the Baptist as the one , is referenced in the Gospel for hiswhose role is toin
prepareing us for the One who is to come. Through the prophet Malachi, the Jews have grown in their
expectation of the return of Elijah, who will prepare the way for the promised Messiah, has grown.
But they have come to view him as a figure of great power, as someone who will sweep men away. So
they fail to recognize Elijah’s presence in the person of John the Baptist, whose only power is that
of the Spirit of God, calling all people to conversion of heart in order to receive the Christ. How
many times in my life do I fail to recognize the presence of Christ in my life because I’m seeking
something other than what Christ’s promises to his followers? Christ doesn’t offer an easy path of
comfort and consolations.
2. Bethlehem and the Cross: Why did Christ become a helpless baby at
Bethlehem? Why did he take on a fragile human body? Precisely so he could suffer for us in order to
redeem us. What does that mean for our lives as Christians? It means nothing less than the fact that
suffering is a gift from God. It is the Father’s gentle caress, molding us into the image of his
Son. The cross is the source of our fruitfulness, not only in our personal spiritual growth, but
also in the mission to win graces for others, for all of the souls God has mysteriously entrusted to
our care.
3. Obedience unto Death:
Christ’s desire to embrace suffering arose from his loving obedience to his Father’s plan,
without condition or limit. This loving obedience is what gives suffering its redemptive value. From
the moment of his birth at Bethlehem, Christ shows us what it means to obey with love. Bethlehem is
a school of obedience. In Bethlehem, Christ teaches us that only a loving obedience frees, only
loving obedience redeems and sanctifies, only loving obedience enriches. Loving obedience alone
saves, loving obedience alone frees us from sin and loving obedience alone pleases God. Let us
embrace the cross of obedience in the challenging circumstances of our daily lives, in the trials
brought by the passing of years, in the sorrow that afflicts us when God calls our loved ones back
to him. Loving obedience is the path to holiness, the way to the Father’s house.
Conversation with
Christ: Thank you, Lord, for giving us a school of loving obedience at Bethlehem, throughout
your life and in your death on the cross. Help me to embrace suffering like you did and to be
confident in its power to make me holy and win graces for souls.
Resolution: I will seek to
recognize God’s presence in my day by patiently welcoming the suffering and trials he permits, so he
can bring about a greater good. will live this day united to Mary, obeying God’s will in whatever
ways he manifests it to me.
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