Thursday February 27, 2025

Good News Reflections:
Making scripture meaningful to your daily life
by Terry Modica
God will enable us to do what he asks of us.
Good News Reflection for:
Thursday of the 7th Week in Ordinary Time
February 27, 2025
Today’s Prayer:
Lord, bless the people who have shown me love in any way. Deliver me from being a stumbling block to those who seek You. May my life be full of good deeds. Amen.
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Today’s Readings:
Sirach 5:1-8
Ps (40:5a)1:1-4,6
Mark 9:41-50
bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/022725.cfm
USCCB Podcast of the Readings:
bible.usccb.org/podcasts/audio/daily-mass-reading-podcast-february-27-2025
Getting free of the excuses that trap us
Today’s first reading contains a list of common excuses that people use to justify their sinful behaviors or to put off change. Lest we assume that since we’ve already experienced conversion we’re above all this, let’s reflect on the ways that our old thought patterns might still be entrapping us.
Wealth and power, prestige and clout, and the ability to make life happen the way we want it to is very dangerous. The deception is that we don’t need God when we can take care of everything ourselves. Do you pray for help only when things go wrong? If so, this trap has ensnared you.
Following the desires of our hearts can be very misleading. Our feelings, motives, longings and wishes are not always in line with God’s desires. Do you ask God to purify your desires, distrusting them until after you’ve talked to him about it and have handed them over to him for him to do with as he chooses? If not, this trap is ensnaring you.
The idea that “Anything’s okay as long as it doesn’t hurt someone,” or that “It’s okay to disregard an inconvenient or unpleasant law or teaching of the Church because God understands and he’ll forgive me,” carries with it the arrogant presumption that sins are not always sinful and that they don’t always produce bad consequences. Do you rationalize away a Church teaching about faith and morals by saying that it doesn’t apply to you? If so, this trap is crushing you so slowly and subtly that you don’t even notice.
Delaying repentance holds us back from wonderful growth and spiritual healing.
Do you procrastinate because change is uncomfortable? Do you put off whatever seems humiliating, impossible, or less beneficial than your old ways? Old behavior patterns feel like cozy blankets, raggedy and full of holes, but familiar and valuable. Even when we’re aware of being smothered by them or of hurting others with them, we don’t know what the new blanket would feel like, so we hang onto the old. Or we don’t know how to get the new blanket, so we don’t really try. The old one has ensnared us; it’s smothering our souls and covering our ears so that we fail to hear the loving, beckoning call of Christ.
Today’s responsorial Psalm reminds us of the benefits of escaping from the snares of sin: We prosper from doing the Lord’s will. And the Gospel reading gives us the key that opens every trap: Get rid of whatever causes you to sin.
It’s a free-will decision. First we choose to do things God’s way, no matter how uncomfortable or impossible or unbeneficial it seems. God will enable us to do what he asks of us. The freedom to be holy is a partnership with the Almighty.
Reflect further on this subject with our Faith Booster: “What’s familiar is not always what’s best” @ https://wordbytes.org/faith-booster-minis/whats-familiar-not-always-whats-best/
© by Terry A. Modica, Good News Ministries
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