the journey  


::Sources::

Today's Scripture Text
Lives of the Saints

Please visit The Journey
[this weblog's sponsor]

All But Dissertation
Amy Welborn
Curt Jester, The
The Blog from the Core
A Catholic Blog for Lovers
A Catholic Point of View
The Christian Conscience
Consecrated Life: Sister Dianne
Crossroads Initiative: Catholic Study
Dappled Things
De Virtutibus
Disputations
Domestic Excellence
Flos Carmeli
From the Anchor Hold
Goodform
Grain of Wheat
. . .ibidem
Just Your Average Catholic Guy
Life Matters!
Monk's Progress
My Daily Crumbs
The New Pope Blog
Oblique House
PCP - Out-of-Print Catholic Books
St. Blog's Parish
[a list of Catholic blogs]
Summa Minutiae
Tenebrae
Veritas
Video meliora, proboque . . .


Contact / Help / Info:



::Past::

Earliest Blog Archives from
August 2002 to August 2003

The Daily Meditations
are available free
by email subscription:
Name:
Email Address:
Age:
Country:





Come Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of the faithful!
This page is powered by Blogger.
   20040804
Wednesday.blog

The Catholic Calendar for Wednesday, August 4, 2004
Wednesday of the Eighteenth Week in Ordinary Time

Saint John Vianney, priest

Scripture from Wednesday’s Liturgy of the Word:
Jeremiah 31:1-7
Jeremiah 31:10-13
Matthew 15:21-28

A reflection on today’s Sacred Scripture:

“Woman you have great faith! Your wish will come to pass.”
(Mt.15:28)

Today’s first reading shows that God’s faithfulness to His people never wavers. He had allowed them to be scattered in exile because of their lack of faithfulness; but at the proper time He brought them back to their own country to replant their land and enjoy God’s fruits. He had chosen them for a specific purpose and concentrated all His attention to their fulfilling it, making His truth and His love known to the world.

The Gospel then should not surprise us. Christ made the Jews His first consideration and so hesitated to expand His ministry beyond them to the Canaanite woman who asked Him to heal her child. He was sent specifically to gather together the lost sheep of Israel and bring them to a clearer understanding of what God required of them whom He had chosen to make Him, the one true God, known to the world.

What finally moved Christ to heal the foreigner’s child was what He saw into this woman’s heart. She didn’t look upon Jesus as a person who performed magic worked by pagan gods; instead she saw the God of Israel at work in Christ and put her faith in Him. Her persistence, her firm belief and her humble and sincere response to Jesus won her heart’s desire.

O God, our Father,
You have blessed us with Christ in numerous ways,
but most deeply touching
is Your compassion toward all who suffer.
May we too express this to others.
Amen

- Marie Bocko,
OCDS
(mlbocko at borg dot com)








Comments: Post a Comment