오늘의 복음

June 25, 2021 Friday of the Twelfth Week in Ordinary Time

Margaret K 2021. 6. 25. 06:25

2021 6 25 연중 제12주간 금요일 


오늘의 복음 : http://info.catholic.or.kr/missa/default.asp

1독서

창세기. 17,1.9-10.15-22
1 
아브람의 나이가 아흔아홉 살이 되었을 때, 주님께서 아브람에게 나타나 말씀하셨다. “나는 전능한 하느님이다. 너는 내 앞에서 살아가며 흠 없는 이가 되어라
.” 
9 
하느님께서 다시 아브라함에게 말씀하셨다. “너는 내 계약을 지켜야 한다. 너와 네 뒤에 오는 후손들이 대대로 지켜야 한다. 10 너희가 지켜야 하는 계약, 곧 나와 너희 사이에, 그리고 네 뒤에 오는 후손들 사이에 맺어지는 계약은 이것이다. 곧 너희 가운데 모든 남자가 할례를 받는 것이다
.” 
15 
하느님께서 다시 아브라함에게 말씀하셨다. “너의 아내 사라이를 더 이상 사라이라는 이름으로 부르지 마라. 사라가 그의 이름이다. 16 나는 그에게 복을 내리겠다. 그리고 네가 그에게서 아들을 얻게 해 주겠다. 나는 복을 내려 사라가 여러 민족이 되게 하겠다. 여러 나라의 임금들도 그에게서 나올 것이다
.” 
17 
아브라함은 얼굴을 땅에 대고 엎드려 웃으면서 마음속으로 생각하였다. ‘나이 백 살 된 자에게서 아이가 태어난다고? 그리고 아흔 살이 된 사라가 아이를 낳을 수 있단 말인가?’ 18 그러면서 아브라함이 하느님께 이스마엘이나 당신 앞에서 오래 살기를 바랍니다.” 하고 아뢰자, 19 하느님께서 말씀하셨다
. 
아니다. 너의 아내 사라가 너에게 아들을 낳아 줄 것이다. 너는 그 이름을 이사악이라 하여라. 나는 그의 뒤에 오는 후손들을 위하여 그와 나의 계약을 영원한 계약으로 세우겠다. 20 이스마엘을 위한 너의 소원도 들어 주겠다. 나는 그에게 복을 내리고, 그가 자식을 많이 낳아 크게 번성하게 하겠다. 그는 열두 족장을 낳고, 나는 그를 큰 민족으로 만들어 줄 것이다. 21 그러나 나의 이 계약은 내년 이맘때에 사라가 너에게 낳아 줄 이사악과 세우겠다
.” 
22 
하느님께서는 아브라함과 말씀을 마치시고 그를 떠나 올라가셨다.

 

복음

마태오. 8,1-4
1 
예수님께서 산에서 내려오시자 많은 군중이 그분을 따랐다. 2 그때에 어떤 나병 환자가 다가와 예수님께 엎드려 절하며 이렇게 말하였다. “주님! 주님께서는 하고자 하시면 저를 깨끗하게 하실 수 있습니다.” 3 예수님께서 손을 내밀어 그에게 대시며 말씀하셨다. “내가 하고자 하니 깨끗하게 되어라.” 그러자 곧 그의 나병이 깨끗이 나았다. 
4 
예수님께서는 이렇게 말씀하셨다. “아무에게도 말하지 않도록 조심하여라. 다만 사제에게 가서 네 몸을 보이고 모세가 명령한 예물을 바쳐, 그들에게 증거가 되게 하여라.”

June 25, 2021

Friday of the Twelfth Week in Ordinary Time


Daily Readings — Audio

Daily Reflections — Video

http://www.usccb.org/bible/ 

Daily Mass : http://www.catholictv.com/shows/daily-mass 


Reading 1
Gn 17:1, 9-10, 15-22
When Abram was ninety-nine years old, the LORD appeared to him
and said: "I am God the Almighty.
Walk in my presence and be blameless."

God also said to Abraham:
"On your part, you and your descendants after you
must keep my covenant throughout the ages.
This is my covenant with you and your descendants after you
that you must keep:
every male among you shall be circumcised."

God further said to Abraham:
"As for your wife Sarai, do not call her Sarai;
her name shall be Sarah.
I will bless her, and I will give you a son by her.
Him also will I bless; he shall give rise to nations,
and rulers of peoples shall issue from him."
Abraham prostrated himself and laughed as he said to himself,
"Can a child be born to a man who is a hundred years old?
Or can Sarah give birth at ninety?"
Then Abraham said to God,
"Let but Ishmael live on by your favor!"
God replied:  "Nevertheless, your wife Sarah is to bear you a son,
and you shall call him Isaac.
I will maintain my covenant with him as an everlasting pact,
to be his God and the God of his descendants after him.
As for Ishmael, I am heeding you:  I hereby bless him.
I will make him fertile and will multiply him exceedingly.
He shall become the father of twelve chieftains,
and I will make of him a great nation.
But my covenant I will maintain with Isaac,
whom Sarah shall bear to you by this time next year."
When he had finished speaking with him, God departed from Abraham.


Responsorial Psalm
Ps 128:1-2, 3, 4-5
R. (4) See how the Lord blesses those who fear him.
Blessed are you who fear the LORD,
who walk in his ways!
For you shall eat the fruit of your handiwork;
blessed shall you be, and favored.
R. See how the Lord blesses those who fear him.
Your wife shall be like a fruitful vine
in the recesses of your home;
Your children like olive plants
around your table.
R. See how the Lord blesses those who fear him.
Behold, thus is the man blessed
who fears the LORD.
The LORD bless you from Zion:
may you see the prosperity of Jerusalem
all the days of your life.
R. See how the Lord blesses those who fear him.


Gospel
Mt 8:1-4
When Jesus came down from the mountain, great crowds followed him.
And then a leper approached, did him homage, and said,
"Lord, if you wish, you can make me clean."
He stretched out his hand, touched him, and said,
"I will do it.  Be made clean."
His leprosy was cleansed immediately.
Then Jesus said to him, "See that you tell no one,
but go show yourself to the priest,
and offer the gift that Moses prescribed;
that will be proof for them."

http://onlineministries.creighton.edu/CollaborativeMinistry/daily.html

 Our first reading is rather unusual: God is promising Abram something, even changes his name to “Abraham” (in a verse that the lectionary passes over), and only asks for the circumcision of all Abraham’s male descendants.  Abraham might prostrate himself before God, yet in response he laughs within himself at the idea of his elderly wife having another son.  God is clearly aware of this, and yet he says nothing before he departs. 

I remember myself as a baby, maybe 13-15 months old, when I would put everything in my mouth and so would have a very dirty and sticky face.  I would often hold a Cheerio tightly in my fist, or maybe a bit of cheese, and I would not allow anyone to take from me whatever it was that I held, no matter that I could see something fresher and nicer being offered to me.  I could not let go and open my hand to receive...

I think that in spite of all that God had done for Abram/Abraham, the patriarch could not believe in God’s unending love for him, God’s faithfulness and power, and so he had trouble letting go of his ideas of what God was able to do and so become able to praise God fully in gratitude.  He had to learn the faith that led him to the fortunately incomplete sacrifice of Isaac, that promised son, years later. 

I think that we might learn from Abraham’s mistake when God is asking for our trust and we cannot believe that what God is doing is really going to be good for us. 

 http://www.presentationministries.com/obob/obob.asp

 

THE LAST LAUGH

“Abraham prostrated himself and laughed as he said to himself, ‘Can a child be born to a man who is a hundred years old? Or can Sarah give birth at ninety?’ ” —Genesis 17:17

Abraham and Sarah laughed at jokes God didn’t even tell (Gn 18:12). We often laugh when God is serious. God is serious about fulfilling His promises. He’s serious about healing the leprous (Mt 8:3) and those incurable by medical standards. Many times doctors and Christians have laughed at God before He healed the terminally ill or even raised the dead (Mt 10:8).

The Lord is also extremely serious about saving us. Nobody in their right mind cracks a smile at the foot of the cross. He’s serious about cleansing us of our sins in His blood. Shed blood is no laughing matter.

However, the Lord isn’t all serious. He laughs at the learned and clever who take themselves too seriously (Lk 10:21; cf 1 Cor 1:25). He gets a laugh out of mighty nations who think they’re something more than a moment in time (Ps 2:4). He considers our preoccupation with money and material possessions ludicrous. It would be even more hilarious if we weren’t so foolish (Lk 12:20).

The Lord laughs a lot and even cries (Lk 19:41). We do the same. Yet do we laugh and cry for the same reasons as He does?

Prayer:  Father, teach me to laugh when You laugh and cry when You cry (Jas 4:9).

Promise:  “Jesus stretched out His hand and touched him and said, ‘I do will it. Be cured.’ Immediately the man’s leprosy disappeared.” —Mt 8:3

Praise:  Robert maintains an Internet ministry that encourages Christians to be on fire with the Word and let it shine in society.

 http://dailyscripture.servantsoftheword.org/readings/

 What might hold us back from approaching the Lord Jesus with expectant faith and confidence that he can change us and make us holy - perhaps fear, pride, and the risk of losing one's reputation or friends? Jesus did something which was both remarkable and unthinkable at the same time. He approached the unapproachables - he touched the untouchables. Lepers were outcasts of society. Their physical condition was terrible as they slowly lost the use of their limbs and withered away with open sores over their entire bodies. They were not only shunned but regarded as "already dead" even by their relatives. The Jewish law forbade anyone from touching or approaching a leper, lest ritual defilement occur.


Approaching the Lord Jesus with expectant faith
The leper who came to Jesus did something quite remarkable. He approached Jesus confidently and humbly, expecting that Jesus could and would heal him. Normally a leper would be stoned or at least warded off if he tried to come near a rabbi. Jesus not only grants the man his request, but he demonstrates the personal love, compassion, and tenderness of God in his physical touch. The medical knowledge of his day would have regarded such contact as grave risk for incurring infection. Jesus met the man's misery with compassion and tender kindness. He communicated the love and mercy of God in a sign that spoke more eloquently than words. He touched the man and made him clean - not only physically but spiritually as well.

Some twelve centuries later, a man named Francis (1181-1226 AD) met a leper on the road as he journeyed towards Assisi. A contemporary of Francis wrote, "Though the leper caused him no small disgust and horror, he nonetheless, got off the horse and prepared to kiss the leper. But when the leper put out his hand as though to receive something, he received money along with a kiss" (from the Life of St. Francis by Thomas of Celano). Francis did what seemed humanly impossible because he was filled with the love and compassion of Jesus Christ.

The Holy Spirit inflames our hearts with the fire of Christ's love that we may reach out to others with compassionate care and kindness, especially to those who have been rejected, mistreated, and left utterly alone. Do you allow the Holy Spirit to fill your heart with the love and compassion of Jesus Christ for others?

May the power of your love, Lord Christ, fiery and sweet as honey, so absorb our hearts as to withdraw them from all that is under heaven. Grant that we may be ready to die for love of your love, as you died for love of our love. (Prayer of St. Francis of Assisi,1181-1226 AD)

Psalm 137:1-6

1 By the waters of Babylon, there we sat down and wept, when we remembered Zion.
2 On the willows there we hung up our lyres.
3 For there our captors required of us songs, and our tormentors, mirth, saying, "Sing us one of the songs of Zion!"
4 How shall we sing the LORD's song in a foreign land?
5 If I forget you, O Jerusalem, let my right hand wither!
6 Let my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth, if I do not remember you, if I do not set Jerusalem above my highest joy!

Daily Quote from the Early Church Fathers: The authority to heal and make clean belongs to Christ, by John Chrysostom (347-407 AD)

"With great fervor before Jesus' knees, the leper pleaded with him (Mark 1:40) with sincere faith. He discerned who Jesus was. He did not state conditionally, 'If you request it of God' or 'If you pray for me.' Rather, he said simply, 'If you will, you can make me clean.' He did not pray, 'Lord, cleanse me.' Rather, he leaves everything to the Lord and makes his own recovery depend entirely on him. Thus he testified that all authority belongs to him. One might ask, 'What if the leper had been mistaken in this assumption?' If he had been mistaken, wouldn't it have been fitting for the Lord to reprove him and set him straight? But did he do this? No. Quite to the contrary, Jesus established and confirmed exactly what he had said." (excerpt from THE GOSPEL OF MATTHEW, HOMILY 25.1)

 

 

More Homilies

June 30, 2017 Friday of the Twelfth Week in Ordinary Time