Adhering To Christ
Monday:
Seventeenth Week of the Year: July 25, 2016
Year II: Jeremiah 13:1-11; Responsorial: Deuteronomy 32:18-21; Matthew
13:31-35
The Responsorial
asks us: “Have you forgotten God who gave
you birth?” (Deuteronmy 32:
18-21).
Jeremiah
13: 1-11 tells
us what the essential is for preserving our integrity, goodness, beauty of soul
and usefulness in ministry: it is closeness to God: union of mind and will,
coordination of heart and action with the heart of Jesus.
God had Jeremiah buy a new loincloth and
wear it around his waist for a good long time. Then he told him to bury it in
the ground for several days. When Jeremiah dug it out it was “spoiled, good for
nothing.” Then the Lord said, “Just as a loincloth clings to a man’s waist, so
I had intended the whole house of Judah to cling to me… to be my people, my
glory, my honor and my boast. But they have not listened.”
To be the instruments of Christ in
ministry to one another and to the world, the first requirement is holiness – defined here as closeness:
“union with Jesus Christ,” being united with him in our understanding, desires
and action. This is rooted and obvious in the mystery of grace, the mystery of
our sharing in the divine life of God. We cannot minister as the body of Christ
if we have forgotten God who gave us
birth as his body in Baptism:
I am the vine,
you are the branches. Those who abide in me and I in them bear much fruit,
because apart from me you can do nothing.1
In practical terms, this means our first
preoccupation in becoming or training ministers should be spiritual formation. We are ready to live a “spiritual life” from
the moment we realize that something is
going on between ourselves and God and decide to get involved in it.
Spiritual formation shows us how.
Matthew
13: 31-35
continues to teach that the operative element in ministry is God’s life in us.
A mustard seed is “the smallest of all the seeds.” All it has is life. But,
allowed to develop, that life will make it a tree in which the “birds of the
air come and shelter.” If divine life is growing in us, we will form Christian communities in which all who
seek to live the life of grace will feel at home and find a home of shelter,
nourishment, mutual inspiration and love. (A “community” is a “common unity” of
commitment expressed in ways all
understand).
A Christian community is never
self-enclosed, but like “leaven in the dough” works for changes within society
until the whole world is transformed. Christians who have not forgotten God who gave them birth act as
“leaven” at home, school and work. They minister as Christ himself to everyone
on earth until society is “leavened all through.”
Initiative:
Give God’s life: Be a “priest in the Priest.” Constantly ask Jesus to act with, in and through you.
Footnotes:
1John 15:5.
2See Psalms 84:3; 104:17.
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