Heaven Holds the KeyToday, I will strive to edify others though my words
by Father Barry O’Toole, LC | Source: Catholic.net
Luke 1:
67-79
Introductory Prayer: I believe
in your loving presence with me, Lord, and I tremble as I consider the immense love you have for me.
I do not deserve your grace, and yet I cannot live without it. You have called me to rise above my
sin and misery and to live in your love as one of your children. I truly want to show you my
love.
Petition:
Lord, help me to seek you and find you through silence.
1. Silence for Reflection: Zechariah had been in silence (a silence imposed by God)
for over nine months. Perhaps at the beginning, he had felt frustrated at not being able to
communicate normally with others. As time goes on, that frustration turns into resignation and
reluctant acceptance. Through perseverance and prayer, suddenly he begins to love the trial God had
imposed on him, embracing it wholeheartedly and willingly. When we see someone who is suffering, be
it in a hospital, a nursing home or even on the street or at work, we need to bring them this
message of hope. Suffering has a meaning, a redemptive value, if we unite our sufferings to those of
Christ.
2. Silence for Union with Our Lord: We see
that Zechariah’s 9-month “retreat” has provided him the opportunity for a closer contact with God.
Through prayer he has been brought to a deeper and experiential knowledge of God, which has
converted him into an apostle in his desire to share this experience with others. As his wife’s
period of waiting results in her giving birth to a prophet, so Zechariah’s “incubation” period also
turns him into a prophet: He foretells that salvation for his people is near at hand. We will have
words of wisdom and encouragement for others when we have discovered how to be alone with God in the
secret depths of our hearts. Silence is a vehicle for achieving this intimacy.
3. Silence for Praise: At some moment during his tribulation,
Zechariah would recall the angel’s words, “you will be speechless and unable to talk until the day
these things take place” (Luke 1:20). Hope would invade his heart. The day is coming when he would
be able to speak again! He has nine months to prepare his speech. The first words he utters as his
tongue is loosened are not a curse against God for having made him suffer, but a hymn of praise for
his mercy on a sinful humanity. He has experienced this mercy in his own flesh. We are meant to
communicate truth through speech, and the greatest truth is what God has done for each of us and
wishes to do for every single person. When our speech is a result of what we have first meditated on
profoundly, our words will bear fruit. Does my speech normally edify others? Do my words ordinarily
come from the good I have experienced in God’s company? Am I aware of how much we can build up
others through good conversations?
Conversation with
Christ: Lord, your birth comes tonight. I want to have a proper place prepared for you.
Please help me to make it warm and comfortable for you. Make up for what is lacking in my poor
efforts to please you. O King of Glory, may my every thought, word and deed of this day be a fitting
homage for your coming.
Resolution: Today, I will
strive to edify others though my words.
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