April 11,2020
7:07am
Black Saturday
“ Come Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of thy faithful,
enkindle in them the fire of thy Divine Love, send forth your Spirit, and it
shall be created, and thou shall renew the face of the earth.”
**
This is the 2nd consecutive day I wake up with
my super parched throat. Ruel gets me ginger,lemon and honey hot water in one
mug…and in another steaming water with
salt.
I breathed and swallowed the salty water for as long as I
could stand it, with covered towel over my head.
I salute and continue to pray for all frontliners and
those who do not have a choice but to go out each day for their important
errands.
I continue to hold on to the promise of Our Great God, Our Creator’s mighty
protection in these very challenging times.
**
After having my fill, getting dressed for the day, I
roused Marina asking her to help me locate my eyeglasses.
I kept looking around everywhere I have been since I woke
up…only to hear her say, “ Mama, you are wearing it!”
I hear the BeeGees in the background crooning like birds : Tragedy…lalalalalalaalaa…Tragedy.
Am I so used to seeing the world in blurry glasses?
Am I so absent minded to put in the right perspective of
the world around me?
And so, we shall see.
**
Christina Mead’:I KILLED JESUS
I
think it’s easy to read the Bible like it’s a history book. Moses parted the
sea, Jesus died on a cross, Columbus sailed across the ocean.
I know it’s more than an account of historic events but I often struggle
to see how it applies to my life.
“They” (that collective, scholarly, holy group of people) say that when
you read the Bible you should place yourself in the story. So the other day I
was doing that while I read the story of Christ’s passion and death in the
gospel of Matthew. I was looking for myself in the story. Which character am I?
What is God trying to teach me? Well…
I think that I am every character in the story of the passion and death
of Christ. And I think that’s the whole point.
Let me explain…
I am
an apostle, sleeping in the Garden of Gethsemane (Matthew 26:40). I’m
prone to give in to laziness in the presence of holiness. In the most sacred
places, like before Christ in the Eucharist, I allow my flesh to dictate how
attentive my soul is. I don’t put up a fight against the pull of distractions
or sometimes even sleep.
I am
Judas. Jesus has every right to call me both “friend” and
“betrayer” barely 30 seconds apart (Matthew
26:46, 50). My heart is fickle and weak and sometimes my commitment
to being Jesus’ friend is blown off on the whim of an emotion.
I am
Caiaphas, the high priest. I want Jesus to prove Himself to me (Matthew 26:63). I
want signs and wonders to know that I really can trust Him. I want my prayers answered in my way. I want concrete proof over
humble faith.
I am
Peter. Sometimes I deny Jesus (Matthew 26:72). I
deny Him in the face of the homeless when I chose to look away. I deny that I
know Him when I don’t pray before eating in a restaurant. I deny Him when I am
afraid of being judged and condemned by those around me.
I am
in the crowd yelling, “crucify Him” (Matthew 27:21-23).
And I say it again and again every time I knowingly choose to sin.
I am
Barabbas. I am chained in sin and holed up in the
prison of my own pride. And instead of suffering the full punishment for my
sins for which I am guilty… Christ takes my place (Matthew 27:26). And
I often forget to thank Him.
I am
Pilate. I want to give up when life is too challenging (Matthew 27:24). I’m
ready to wash my hands of Christianity when being a follower of Jesus means
pursuing virtue over mediocrity, a life of prayer over a life of pleasure.
I am
Simon of Cyrene (Matthew 27:32). I
suffer reluctantly. I will take the cross but I won’t seek it. I’ll only take
it if it’s been placed on my shoulders… and I don’t love it.
I am
a passer-by. These passers-by mocked Jesus while He was
hanging on the cross (Matthew
27:30). How quickly they had forgotten all the good works He had
done among their cities and towns. When popular opinion about Jesus changed,
they followed suite. How quickly I forget the
good He’s done for me. In a brief moment of pain all my gratitude is forgotten
and replaced by resentment.
I am
one of the Roman soldiers (Matthew 27:35). I
killed Jesus. My sins were the reason He was nailed to that cross. It was my
fault and I know it.
But sometimes…
I am
the centurion. My eyes are opened to who Jesus is in my
life (Matthew 27:54). My
heart swells with the truth that God became man and died for me. And this
knowledge brings me peace and a resignation to amend my life.
I am
one of the women standing by the cross (Matthew 27:55-56).
When I’m open to God’s grace, I can be a faithful and constant Christian. In
the midst of pain and suffering, I can stay close to the cross. Jesus, my
beloved, is my strength and He’s all I need.
I am
Joseph of Arimathea (Matthew 27:59).
Again, only by God’s grace, I can be selflessly compassionate, putting others’
needs before my own. Moved by God, I will use what He has given me in the
service of others. My time, talent, and treasure are all for Him.
I am every character in the story of the passion and death of Christ. And
I think that’s the whole point. Why wouldn’t every
dimension of the human heart be represented in the greatest story of all time?
It only makes sense because the story is timeless. We have to apply it to our
lives today because the reality of it’s events matter today.
This isn’t just a story in some history book. It’s the story of your
salvation… how God saw the good and the bad in our humanity and He came anyway.
He died anyway.
I killed Jesus. But I am also the reason He rose from the dead.
Do you have the courage to see yourself in these characters? Can you
blame yourself for the nails in His hands? The stripes in His flesh? Do you
realize that your sins killed Him, also? And that because of you, because of
His intense, unending love for YOU… He rose again.
(reprinted from LIFE TEEN website)
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