
Luke 13:1-9
Introductory
Prayer:
My Lord and my God! I believe that you came as my Savior. I know you wish to save me
from everlasting harm. Thank you. I place all my trust in you. I love you, Lord, and I offer myself
as an instrument for you to help others to know and love you, too.
Petition:
Teach me,
Lord, to repent, to turn to you and to spread your Good News.
1. Scandalized by Evil:
It can happen that people become scandalized or doubt God because of the evil and suffering they see
in the world around them. Christ shows us that this attitude is mistaken because God says, I swear I
take no pleasure in the death of the wicked man, but rather in the wicked man's conversion, that he
may live. Turn, turn from your evil ways! (Ezekiel 33:11). God does no evil. It is we, his
creatures, who do evil, and God suffers the consequences twice: He suffers when we reject him
through our sins, and he then takes our sins upon himself and suffers on the Cross so that we might
be redeemed. If anyone has a right to complain about the evil in the world, it is God. However, it
is through forgiveness that God shows his power and his love. We should not be scandalized by evil,
but examine our souls and repent of our own sinful deeds.
2. Wrath of God or Wrath of
Man?:
For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him
should not perish but have eternal life (John 3:16). I am that tree which so far has
given little or no fruit. Jesus is the gardener who sticks up for me and pleas to fertilize me
instead of cutting me down. The fertilizer is Christ's Body and Blood, which he sacrificed so that I
might have life to the fullest. He wishes to give me his very self and to fill me with grace and
thus reconstruct my weak, worn heart and person. What does he ask of me? I need to turn to him with
both contrition for my sins and confidence in his healing love. I need to open myself to his saving
grace. Am I fully aware of my need for Christ, and do I turn to him hungrily? If not, why not?
3. Finding Figs:
"Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his
life for his friends" (John 15:13). After three years of public ministry, we see in today's Gospel
that Jesus is ready to put his life on the line for me – but does the Son of Man find any faith or
love in my heart? "God sent the Son into the world, not to condemn the world, but that the world
might be saved through him" (John 3:17). He will soon shed his blood under Pontius Pilate – for my
sins. Will he find my tree barren and grant me this one last year of mercy? Or will he find my tree
blooming with sweet-smelling fruits in good works performed out of love for him? He will hang from a
dead tree on Good Friday, and his corpse, given out of love for me, will become real fruit, real
moisture and fertilizer to my arid soul. Let him make of me a fruitful fig tree, so that others,
too, may come to repentance on my account.
Conversation with Christ:
Teach me,
Lord, to repent, to turn to you, and to spread your
Good News. I believe in your mission of
saving souls, including mine.
I hope in you because of the time of mercy that you grant me.
I want to love by spreading the Good News of your salvation.
Let me be a messenger of your
love.
Resolution:
I will serve others by voicing Christian hope in my
conversations today.
Comments
Post a Comment