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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»Learning to Swim
With the approach of Lent, a middle-aged gentleman thought it was high time to shed a few pounds and so he decided to go on a diet and do exercise. He even changed his usual driving route on the way to work precisely to avoid passing his favorite bakery. One morning, however, he arrived at the office carrying a large, sugarcoated, calorie-loaded coffee cake.
Roundly chided by his colleagues, he smiled, shrugged his shoulders and said, “What could I do? This is a very special cake. I accidentally drove by the bakery this morning and there in the window were trays full of the most scrumptious goodies.
“I felt it was no accident that I happened to pass by this way, so I prayed, ‘Lord, if you really want me to have one of those delicious coffee cakes, let me find a parking space right in front of the bakery.’ And sure enough, on the fifth time around the block, there it was!”
It’s a cute story but it may be more truth than fiction. As someone remarked to me in a jocular manner, “The quickest way to get rid of temptation is to give into it!”
The discipline of Lent is not as much about passing the local bakery or the butcher as it is about taking a holistic view of our lives as human beings within the context of our Christian heritage and formation. The process begins with a prayerful examination of our life of faith.
Thomas Green in his popular book on spirituality, When the Well Runs Dry offers as a metaphor for faith and prayer the attitude of a person learning to swim.
The secret of swimming lies in being willing to take the risk and do the opposite of what happens by instinct. When we attempt to keep ourselves rigid in the water, ready to save ourselves from the waves breaking around us, we wind up being swamped by the waves. On the other hand, as we relax we are buoyed up by the rolling sea and we escape being swamped. People find it difficult to let go. It is the same with faith. We need to risk swimming in the sea of God’s grace, to be at home in the water with no visible means of support except the constant buoyancy of God’s presence.
In the face of moral choice, rigidity or obsession on one hand or presumption on the other can lead to defeat. Confidence in God and trust in our own formation will lead to a positive outcome.
In today’s complex world, temptation can be very subtle and extend beyond diet to healthy attitudes toward our world politic and habits that impact on our neighbor and the common good. A holistic attitude toward life does not excludes our daily diet of food and exercise, but also includes our reading and entertainment habits and our willingness to love without counting the cost.
Lent is the time for all Christians in the Catholic tradition to encounter the God of love who buoys us up in the face of life’s choices and the struggles that can lead to sin, personal and social.
Jesus walks the journey with us. He is our strength. In him we find the confidence and courage we need to overcome the fear of drowning. He is our hope and salvation.
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