
Luke 5:12-16
Introductory Prayer:
Lord, I approach you today with a heart as humble as
this leper's, who can claim no beauty apart from what you can give him. My willful defects have
disfigured your plan for me, and I seek from you today the power to make all my works and words
clean. I hope in you and trust in your infinite mercy.
Petition:
Lord,
grant me an unshakeable confidence in your infinite mercy.
1. "Lord, If You Wish, You
Can Make Me Clean":
If God so wills... This marks a disposition of soul that says the leper
wants God more than he wants his cure. By demonstrating patience and acceptance, he shows he is
ready to live his cross according to God's plan for him. Being self-absorbed and not accepting
problems and defects is, in itself, an obstacle to being cured of them. Some lose patience in the
fight because they want the cure more than they want the one who cures. Such cures may heal the
body, but leave the soul diseased and unattractive to God. Openness to God's time, detachment from
an easy life, and total abandonment into Our Lord hands permits illness to cure the soul long before
it is freed from the body. How beautiful the soul of this humble leper was in Christ's eyes! May I
let this prayer today open my heart to accept all trials of the moment with humility and love for
the God who guides me.
2. "I Do Will It. Be Made Clean":
The disfigurement of
leprosy becomes a symbol for the soul of a sinner in need of redemption. Suffering the miserable and
disfiguring effects of sin provokes man to begin the path to conversion and change. There is
something of disbelief in a new life for those who still feel the sting of a grievous sin of their
past. They work to draw close to God, but find it hard to believe he would ever want to be close to
them. The intervention of God definitive, eternal, absolute moves Christ's hand, which reaches out
to touch the leper saying, "I do will it!" From his flesh to his soul God's will to forgive and heal
surpasses our human comprehension! When we stop measuring our failures from wounded self-love and
accept with living faith the decisive will of the redemptive God, we will find ourselves fully
immersed in the life of the new man in Christ, dead to sin and dead to the world.
3. Then
He Ordered Him Not to Tell Anyone:
Our Lord imposes silence. Not all that is known needs to
be said, and prudence is demanded from a disciple of Christ. How often do we slow down God's work
by speaking too much, manifesting too much of our knowledge for vanity sake? Christ is secure
in himself because he lives his mission face-to-face with his Father, and the time and place of his
formal manifestation to the Jews will come at his bidding. Discretion, as a virtue, is a self-giving
work, not in the least self-serving. We speak so as to maximize the good we wish to do for others.
Our Lord's discretion proves such a posture. When will his identity be formerly declared? "When I am raised up, then I will draw all men to myself" (John 12:32). Only in his passion,
from Palm Sunday to Easter Sunday, will he fully show his hand. May I communicate my experience of
Christ, my knowledge of him, with the humility, charity and restraint that prudence imposes, so that
I may maximize the effect of Christ's truth in the world.
Conversation with Christ:
Lord, I see your hand moving from the leper to my soul,
showing its power to transform.
No sin should ever break
my fighting spirit; no longtime defect should ever weaken
my hope
in victory. Your hand but moves and all is cured,
forgiven, and redeemed. Today I anchor my
program of
holiness with confidence in your grace and unconditional
love.
Resolution:
I will entrust someone I know to be living a bad life to
the power of Our Lord's mercy.
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