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Benedictine Sisters of FL

Holy Name Monastery
Founded 1889

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Him

Whoever receives you, receives me

July 3, 2023 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

This gospel reminds us that Jesus’ message is not about a way of life founded only on love and mercy.   Ours is a way of life that is, above all else, about the person of Jesus. Jesus claims a special place in our lives, more important than our closest family and dearest ones. Being a disciple is not a photo frame around my life.  It takes center stage, directing every moment of our lives.

Jesus assures us that even the smallest gesture of mercy to those in need will not go unnoticed. And the rewards promised by Jesus extend far beyond a donation to Daystar or AIM or a Christmas gift for the elderly – even beyond a hidden act of charity.  Jesus’ kind of mercy is more than civility and good manners.  It is about day-to-day living that echoes respect for all God’s creatures and all creation.  It is gratitude expressed in a smile, an acknowledgment of another’s presence, their service and their gifts.

Henry Nouwen says: “The right question to ask is not: ‘Am I strong enough to be a proclaimer of the gospel?’  The question should be: ‘Am I sufficiently weak enough?  Am I aware enough of my own weaknesses, with my own fragile humanness with its brokenness and rough pieces to identify with others?   Do I accept my condition, or do I try to hide it and end up being hardened, rude and unaccepting of others’ humanness? Do I recognize and accept that we are all on the same journey?’”

What attracts people to our mission is not what we do, as much as why we do it.   Jesus says: “Whoever receives me receives the one who sent me.”   We pray that in our sincerity, our transparency in accomplishing our mission – our ministries – our manner of life  – we can honestly say: They who see me – see Jesus – the One who sends us.

Our storyteller today (Matthew) has Jesus giving his disciples some instructions about how they are to represent him.  He doesn’t baptize them first. He doesn’t have them memorize a creed. He doesn’t give them a vet’s manual so they can identify sheep from goats. He certainly doesn’t ask them about their age, culture, social circles, gender preferences or why he should hire them. He doesn’t even give them the assurance of salvation.  In fact, he tells them it’s not about them at all.  What he represents is even more important than life itself.  He tells them their task is to represent Him and in doing so they represent the ONE who sent Him.

So, that’s IT.  Be hospitable and everything else will follow.  Why did Jesus make hospitality the basis for his ministry?  Perhaps because it is essential to building relationships.  It is the first step to overcoming fear, finding understanding, and giving respect.  Ultimately it is the foundation of bringing about a peaceful world. It is the source of harmony.

Jesus lived to change the world and change it, he did – one person at a time.  To this day Christ lives in, with and through us to change the world one person at a time. Each act of kindness, each word of welcome, each act of hospitality binds us together in love and moves the universe that much closer to peace.  This is not the fragile peace that the world gives; but the peace of God that transcends selfishness, greed, hostility, prejudice, hatred and even war. This is the peace  which can begin with something as simple as a smile, a greeting, an act of hospitality.  If you doubt this, I challenge you to think of a time when you were shown unexpected hospitality that at least improved your day and may even have changed your life.

You see, hospitality is at the heart of our faith.  It starts with a heart open to the influence and working of the Holy Spirit in our lives.  We welcome God’s “interference” (so to say) in our everyday dealings with each other.  We don’t make plans so much as pray to uncover our role in God’s grand plan.  If we miss cues, well, who is going to say our lines?   A Christian, a Benedictine, is simply someone who is hospitable, one who practices “radical hospitality.”  So shall it be among we who promise to “commit ourselves and our resources to respond with the compassion of Christ to the hungers of the people of God.”

~Reflection by Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB

 

 

May you have a happy and safe 4th of July!

 

 

First Reading:  2 Kings 4”8-11, 14-16 a         Second Reading:  Romans 6:3-4, 8-11
Gospel:   Matthew 10:37-42
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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: Christ, God, Him, hospitality, Jesus, Matthew, recieves

Third Sunday of Easter

April 24, 2023 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

To believe or not to believe?  That’s our dilemma.  How much do we believe?  Do we believe without questioning?  Do we believe the good news or the bad?  The choice is ours.   Do we believe only what we ourselves experience?  And what about second-hand stories told by reliable friends? What about stories that begin “someone told me.”?  Do we, as best we can, check the sources?  Can we open our hearts to accept what we cannot see?  Do we trust another’s experience?

This gospel today, and all the stories of the appearances of the resurrected Jesus, show us not only how Jesus convinced his disciples of His resurrection.  This same Jesus prepares us to come together to listen to God’s words.

Consider the story once told by the philosopher Soren Kierkegaard about a circus tent that caught fire. The flames spread to the fields surrounding the circus grounds and began to burn toward the village below. The circus master, convinced that the village would be destroyed and the people killed unless they were warned, asked if there was anyone who could go to the village and warn the people. The clown, dressed in full costume, jumped on a bicycle and sped down the hill to the village below. He shouted as he rode up and down the streets: “Run for your lives! Run for your lives! A fire is coming and the village is going to burn!”   The curious villagers came out of their houses and shops and stood along the sidewalks. They shouted back to the clown, laughing and applauding his performance. The more desperately the clown shouted, the more the villagers cheered. The village burned to the ground and the loss of life was great because no one took the clown seriously. After all, he was just a clown.

When Jesus comes in our door, do we recognize Him? Maybe he’s not dressed as a clown or shouting and waving.   How will we recognize Him?  Have we met Him often enough in our everyday lives that we immediately recognize Him?  Have we met Him in the people with whom we rub shoulders on a daily basis?  Maybe there are times when it is easier to see Jesus in the face of the stranger or the guest than it is to see him in the face of the person across from us at the dinner table or the chapel aisle or walking the hallways.  Jesus says: “Look at my hands, my feet, my face.  See that it is I, your Lord.”  Do we believe?

~Reflection by Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB

 

 

First Reading:  Acts 3:13-15,17-19         Second Reading:  1 John 2:1-5a
Gospel:   Luke 24:35-48
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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: believe, Do we believe, do you believe, Him, Jesus, Third Sunday, third Sunday of Easter

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