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+ 4th Week in Ordinary Time
Everyone needs a bit of ‘pocket time’
Readings: 1 Kings 3:4-13 Psalm 119:9-14 Mark 6:30-34
The apostles rejoined Jesus and told him all they had done and taught. Then he said to them, “You must come away to some lonely place all by ourselves and rest for a while.” [Mark 6:30]
The notion of Sabbath rest is rooted in the third of the Ten Commandments, “Keep holy the Lord’s day.” For Christians, Sunday is our Sabbath because it was the day on which the Lord rose from the dead. Holiness is the state of being whole, i.e., fully integrated, mind, soul and body. It is the acknowledgment of God as the ground of our being.
In truth, God doesn’t need the Sabbath; we do!
However, I am of the mind that we need to build into our daily routine, a mini-Sabbath or two. I call it ‘pocket time’ or time out from the pressure of our daily schedule. Some folks call it down time.
Of course, there are different strokes for different folks. A good power walk also can be a great opportunity for conversation with God. It’s an easy script. God talks and I listen.
All of us, married or single and whatever our call and career need pocket time every day and in that way we learn to live in the present moment. As my cousin frequently reminds me, “Yesterday is a cancelled check; tomorrow may never come; the present is a gift.” How true. I’m still a neophyte.
Daily Scripture Archive»It’s not about biology but about the technology of love.
And the angel said to her, ‘The Holy Spirit will come upon you and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. [Luke 1:35]
But the grace of God overshadowed Mary long before the announcement of the Angel Gabriel.
Every so often a new phrase will show up in public discourse and in ordinary conversation. “Over time” is one; another is “at the end of the day.” Short phrases are short cuts to meaning. I’ve used them frequently in these brief reflections and meditations.
Several years ago, “Be open!” was making the rounds. It was a plea for greater openness to new ideas, many of them fruits of the enlightenment. For some it was an invitation. For others it was a rebuke. But when it comes to being open to God’s Word and God’s Spirit, the phrase takes on new meaning.
In her latest book, Open the Door—A Journey to the True Self, Joyce Rupp [Sorin Books, Notre Dame Indiana, 2008] invites the reader to reflect on the many doors in our lives, doors to the deepest self, the true self where God lives. “When I open the door of my heart to God, I do more than simply extend a smile of recognition or a nod of welcome. I open myself to grow and change in ways I may never dream likely. I risk being spiritually transformed into a person whose life continually manifests goodness. The pattern of this transformational process parallels the physical movement of going through a doorway. First I approach the door in order to move beyond where I am not. If the door is closed when I get to it, I open it. Sometimes the door is locked and a key is needed to allow access to the space that lies beyond. As I open the door and prepare to step forward, I move across the threshold, the middle of the doorway. I make a decision about the direction I want to go, either forward or backward across the threshold. With either direction I eventually close the door behind me and move on.” [Ibid. Introduction, p. 7]
Mary was so totally open to God’s word that she opened the door of her heart—wide open—and became pregnant with the living Word of God in Christ.
The feast is not about the conception of Christ but abut Mary’s return to ‘Original Blessing’ at her own conception. It’s a feast that is not found in the Bible. In fact, biblical scholars accept the fact that the infancy narrative, including the description of the Annunciation is ‘midrash’ i.e., Luke’s meditation on the mystery of the incarnation rather than an historical account.
This is a feast rooted in the conviction of the faithful ‘over time’ that Mary was totally prepared by God for her disposition to be totally open one day to her divine call to be the mother of Jesus.
However, this feast is not about the technology of Mary’s conception as much as the belief of Mary’s favor (living in grace). The feast reminds us of how dependent God is on our collaboration in bringing Good News to the world.
At Baptism we were all returned to “Original Blessing” and thereby empowered to say ‘yes’ to our ‘partnership’ with God in the continuing work of creation.
The seed of God’s word is sown in the heart of believers to empower us to goodness and Godness. We are called to be conduits of God’s grace.
As in this feast, the Church is still catching up to the faith and devotion of the faithful in the pew. Mary’s favor surely hints at other ‘favors’ bestowed on women by God but still not foully recognized by ‘men’ of the Church.
In anticipation of the Feast of the Nativity, I offer this simple reflection / meditation on Mary’s role:
Healing Love
Woman wrapped in silence
resting in the cold night
waiting for the sun to rise
and a new day to bring new life.
Woman unknown,
under stars light years away__
under the star destined to shine over all the ages.
Waiting woman wrapped in mystery
carrying within her womb the child God,
child unwanted__
by earthly gods
of gilt and gold
of power and prestige
of weapons and war
Woman wrapped in wisdom, sophia,
transparent soul filled with grace,
waiting in the darkness of night
to bring forth ‘Sophia’ Son of light
in whom there is no darkness__
no east or west,
incarnate—neither male nor female—the Christ
the same yesterday, today and forever.
Courageous woman called blessed
from generation to generation.
Gentle woman in whom no sin is found
woman priest of God brings forth the lamb of God
who takes away the sins of the world—enduring love,
healing love.
Venite adoremus!
Fr. Lasch
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