Sunday August 21, 2022

daily reflections

Good News Reflections:
Making scripture meaningful to your daily life
by Terry Modica

DISCOVER TODAY: On our own, we cannot love fully, but when we rely on God to give us his love for others, we have perfect love.

Good News Reflection for:

21st Sunday in Ordinary Time
August 21, 2022

Today’s Prayer:

Thank You, Lord, that through Your Holy Spirit I am able to recognize You. Give me the strength I need to carry out the mission that You have entrusted to me. Amen.

SaintsSubscribe to Today’s Saint Quote & Prayer:
gnm.org/SaintQuotes/

Today’s Readings:

Isaiah 66:18-21
Ps 117:1, 2 (with Mark 16:15)
Hebrews 12:5-7, 11-13
Luke 13:22-30
bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/082122.cfm
USCCB Podcast of the Readings:
bible.usccb.org/podcasts/audio/2022-08-21

The sign of heaven

[ Listen to the podcast of this reflection ]

This Sunday’s scripture readings are signposts on the road to the narrow gate at the entrance of heaven. Isaiah says that God knows our works and our thoughts. To help us sanctify our works and purify our thoughts, so that we can see the fullness of the glory of God when we die, he sets a sign among us. It is Jesus. His life — how he lived and how he died — are a sign of how to enter heaven.

He says in the Gospel reading that many will attempt to enter salvation who are not strong enough. Strong enough for what?

Throughout the Gospel, Jesus gives us the answer to that: We must be perfect in love. That does not mean that mistakes and other imperfections will lock us out of heaven. The key that opens the gate to heaven is love, and if we throw love away, we throw that key away.

It’s very unlikely, however, that we will ever completely throw love away, even though we sin. But we are told to be perfect in love. This means loving fully. Always. Unconditionally. Sacrificially. Radically. How can we be radically loving on this 21st Sunday in Ordinary Time?

To be perfect in love, we need to have the Lord’s own love. We need Jesus to dwell in us and reach others through us. On our own, we cannot love fully, but when we rely on God to give us his love for others, we have perfect love.

To rely on God’s love and feel confident in it, we have to get rid of anything that blocks his love: unforgiveness, vengeful attitudes, lingering resentments and cynicism, and the apathetic ignoring of the needs of others.

The reading from Hebrews tells us not to disdain the discipline of the Lord. No matter what causes our hardships and trials or who’s to blame, God uses them to perfect us in love. If we recognize these as opportunities to grow in love — if we seek God in them and let him stretch our ability to love — we become more like Jesus. We make the path toward heaven straight, and what is lame and disjointed in our spirituality is healed.

Questions for Personal Reflection:
Who in your life is difficult to love? (Don’t forget to consider the unloving behaviors you have toward yourself.) How might God be using these hard-to-love people to strengthen your ability to love more perfectly?

Questions for Family & Community Faith Sharing:
People who are difficult to love are saint-makers, because they give us opportunities to identify and overcome (with God’s help of course) the imperfections in our ability to love. What happens if we give God permission to change us when we wish someone else would change? How is this a key to heaven?

Thank you for reflecting with us on this 21st Sunday in Ordinary Time!

© 2022 by Terry A. Modica

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