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XXVII Sunday in Ordinary Time

XXVII Sunday in Ordinary Time

The Lord says: “I chose you so that you bear fruit”

Brothers and sisters, Fiat!

In the biblical texts we find the image of the vineyard. The prophet Isaiah describes Israel as a vineyard to which God gave every care so that it can produce good fruit, but it did not reciprocate. The wonderful expressions of God’s care “I will sing to my love—a song to my lover about his vineyard ” for whatever He did,  are not reciprocated with good fruits but with ” sour grapes “.

In the psalm, starting from this situation of sin, of our lack of response, we implore the Lord that He may have mercy on our lacks, on our sins and give us new life. This prayer is strengthened by a serious purpose of being faithful to the Lord, to His love: ” we will no more withdraw from you,… if your face shine upon us, then we shall be saved.”

But the situation becomes serious – according to the gospel – when we rebel against God in the search for our interests. The parable speaks of the servants who are beaten and mistreated, it speaks of the son who is killed (Jesus speaks of Himself: we can imagine with what deep feeling He spoke so explicitly of His passion and death).

How many signs from God, how many people have been sent (prophets) to help us, how much love in Jesus, the Son of the Father who came to save us! Rebellion against God – in the illusion of building better life by ourselves – is our ruin.

God will always offer His love; His kingdom will be given to a people who produce the fruits….

Jesus often speaks to Luisa about the creatures’ lack of correspondence to the Creator.

Jesus wants refreshment for His flames; He wants to pour His Love out, but His Love is rejected by creatures. In creating man, God issued a quantity of Love from within His Divinity, which was to serve as primary life of creatures, for them to be enriched, sustained, fortified, and for help in all their needs. But man rejected this Love, and His Love has been wandering from the time man was created, and It keeps going round without ever stopping. Rejected by someone, It runs to someone else in order to give Itself; and as It is rejected, It bursts into sobs of crying. So, lack of correspondence forms the crying of Love.

While God’s Love goes wandering and runs to give Itself, if It sees someone who is weak, poor, It bursts into sobs of crying and says to him: ‘Ah! if you did not make Me go wandering and had given Me a place in your heart, you would have been strong, and you would lack nothing.’ If It sees someone else fallen into sin, It bursts into sobs: ‘Ah! if you had let Me enter into your heart, you would not have fallen.’

For another whom It sees dragged by passions, muddied with earth, Love cries and, sobbing, It repeats to him: ‘Ah! if you had taken my Love, passions would not have life over you, the earth would not touch you, my Love would be enough for you in everything.’ So, in each evil of man, small or great, Love has a sob of crying and continues to go wandering in order to give Itself to man. And when in the Garden of Gethsemane all sins presented themselves before Jesus’ Humanity, each sin carried the sob of His Love. And all the pains of His Passion, each blow of the lash, each thorn, each wound, were accompanied by the sob of His Love, because if man had loved, no evil could have come. Lack of love germinated all evils, and even Jesus’ very pains.

In creating man, God acted like a king who, wanting to render his kingdom happy, takes a million and puts it in circulation, so that whoever wants it may take of it. But as much as it circulates, only a few take a few cents. Now, the king is anxious to know whether the peoples are taking the good he wants to do to them, and he asks whether his million is finished so as to put out more millions. But he is answered: ‘Majesty, just a few cents.’ The king feels sorrow in hearing that his people are not receiving his gifts, nor do they appreciate them. So, going out into the midst of his subjects, he begins to see some covered with rags, some infirm, some starving, some shivering with cold, some homeless; and in his sorrow, the king bursts into sobs of crying, and says: ‘Ah! had they taken my money, I would see no one giving me dishonor, covered with rags, but rather, well dressed; nor would I see them infirm, but healthy. I would see no one starving and almost dead from hunger, but full. Had they taken my money, no one would be homeless; they could very well have built themselves a room in which to take shelter.’ In sum, for each misfortune he sees in his kingdom, he has a sorrow, a tear; and he grieves over his million which the ingratitude of the people rejects. But the goodness of this king is so great, that in spite of such great ingratitude, he does not withdraw this million – he lets it continue to circulate, hoping that other generations may take the good which others have rejected, and so he may receive the glory of the good he has done to his kingdom.

So God does: He will not withdraw His Love which has come out – It will continue to go wandering. Its sobbing will last still, until It finds souls who would take His Love down to the last penny, so that His crying may cease, and He may receive the glory of the dowry of the Love that He has issued for the good of creatures. But do you know who the fortunate ones are, who will make the sobbing of His Love cease? The souls who will live in the Divine Will. They will take all the Love rejected by the other generations; with the power of His creative Will, they will multiply It as much as they want, and for as many creatures as have rejected It from Him. Then will Its sobbing cease, and the sob of joy will take its place; and Love, satisfied, will give to these fortunate ones all the goods and the happiness which others did not want.

Paul’s Letter helps us to entrust ourselves to God and to live a new life in faith, a life full of good testimony and good fruits.

 “Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. … whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things.”

 

don Marco

Permanent link to this article: https://bookofheaven.org/2017/10/08/xxvii-sunday-in-ordinary-time-2/

Divine Will – Source of Happiness and Peace

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Permanent link to this article: https://bookofheaven.org/2017/10/06/divine-will-source-of-happiness-and-peace/

Novena Prayer for the Feast of Tabernacles – Oct. 5-13, 2017

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Permanent link to this article: https://bookofheaven.org/2017/10/05/novena-prayer-for-the-feast-of-tabernacles-oct-5-13/

Divine Will Alone Transforms the Creature in God

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Permanent link to this article: https://bookofheaven.org/2017/10/05/divine-will-alone-transforms-the-creature-in-god/

Feast Day of St. Francis of Assisi

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Permanent link to this article: https://bookofheaven.org/2017/10/04/feast-day-of-st-francis-of-assisi-2/

Consecration to the Holy Angels

The Consecration to the Holy Angels

From:  http://www.opusangelorum.org/oa_spirituality/Consecration.html

Opus Sanctorum Angelorum

O Holy Angels of God, here, in the presence of the Triune God and in the love of Jesus Christ, my Lord and Redeemer, I, N.N., poor sinner, want to make a covenant with you, who are his servants, so that in union with you, I might work with humility and fortitude for the glory of God and the coming of his Kingdom. Therefore, I implore you to assist me, especially – in the adoration of God and of the Most Holy Sacrament of the Altar,  – in the contemplation of the word and the salvific works of God, -in the imitation of Christ and in the love of his Cross in a spirit of expiation, – in the faithful fulfillment of my mission within the Church, serving humbly after the example of Mary, my heavenly Mother, your Queen. And you, my good guardian angel, who continually behold the face of our Father in heaven, God entrusted me to you from the very beginning of my life. I thank you with all my heart for your loving care. I commit myself to you and promise you my love and fidelity. I beg you: protect me against my own weakness and against the attacks of the wicked spirits; enlighten my mind and my heart so that I may always know and accomplish the will of God; and lead me to union with God the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen. 

Permanent link to this article: https://bookofheaven.org/2017/10/02/consecration-to-the-holy-angels/

Liturgy of the Hours – Oct. 2 – Feast of the Holy Guardian Angels

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Feast of the Holy Guardian Angels – October 2

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Permanent link to this article: https://bookofheaven.org/2017/10/02/feast-of-the-holy-guardian-angels-october-2/

Office of Readings with Divine Will Truths – Oct. 1, 2017

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Feast of the Archangels — Saints Michael, Gabriel and Raphael – September 29

Feast of the Archangels — Saints Michael, Gabriel and RaphaelThe Archangels — Saints Michael, Gabriel and Raphael

September 29th, the Church celebrates the feast of the archangels. Angels are purely incorporeal, rational beings, extensions of God himself, personifying His grace, majesty and intellect. The Angelic Doctor explains that each individual angel is its own species within the genus “angel”. Archangels have important roles in the history of salvation. There is no doubt that the archangels Michael, Gabriel and Raphael — the only angels named in Sacred Scripture, have been instrumental in advancing God’s divine plan, both in heaven and on earth.

Saint Michael 

St. Michael, the “Prince of the Heavenly Host”, is second only to the Mother of God in leading the angels. His name in Hebrew means “Who is like God?”. It was Michael who commanded heaven’s forces in casting down Lucifer and the fallen angels into hell. In 1886, after receiving a prophetic vision of the evil to be visited upon the world in the 20th century, Pope Leo XIII instituted a prayer invoking St. Michael’s protection. Scripture mentions him four times (in Daniel 10:13-21 and 12:1, in Jude 1:9 and in Revelation 12:7-9).

The Church recognizes four distinct offices of St. Michael; 1.) to oppose Satan, 2.) to defend the souls of the faithful against the power of Satan, especially at the hour of death. 3.) to champion God’s people, 4.) to accompany souls to their particular judgment, bring them to purgatory, and present them to God following their purgation before entering heaven.

Patron saint: against temptations, against powers of evil, artists, radiologists, bakers, bankers, battle, cemeteries, endangered children, dying, emergency medical technicians, holy death, paramedics, paratroopers, police officers, sailors, the sick, security forces, soldiers, and against storms at sea, among others.

Saint Gabriel

Saint Gabriel’s name means “God’s strength”. He is mentioned in Scripture four times. Gabriel is the archangel most affiliated with the Incarnation and earthly ministry of Christ. Twice in Luke’s Gospel, he foretells the arrival of consequential figures: the birth of John the Baptist to his father Zacharias (Luke 1:11–25) and the birth of the Savior to the Virgin Mary (Luke 1:26–38.).

Tradition holds that Gabriel appeared to Saint Joseph and to the shepherds, and that he “strengthened” Christ during his agony in the garden of Gethsemane.

Patron saint: ambassadors, broadcasting, childbirth, clergy, communications, diplomats, messengers, philatelists, postal workers, public relations, radio workers, secular clergy, stamp collectors and telecommunications, among others.

Saint Raphael

All that we know of Saint Raphael, whose name means “God has healed”, comes from the Book of Tobit in which he heals Tobias’ blindness. His office, according to popular piety, is that of healing and facilitating acts of mercy. He is affiliated with young people venturing into world, particularly concerning learning and marriage.

The angel in John’s Gospel who descended to the pool of Bethesda and imbued it with healing powers so that the first to enter it after it moved would be healed of whatever infirmity they possessed is identified with Raphael (John 5:1-4).

Patron saint: physicians, medical workers, love, lovers, mental illness, nurses, pharmacists, shepherds, against sickness, therapists, travelers, young people; young people leaving home for the first time, the blind, happy meetings, matchmakers, Christian marriage, and Catholic studies, among others.

Almighty and everliving God, who disposes in marvelous order ministries both angelic and human, graciously grant that our life on earth may be defended by those who watch over us as they minister perpetually to you in heaven. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

Permanent link to this article: https://bookofheaven.org/2017/09/28/feast-of-the-archangels-saints-michael-gabriel-and-raphael-september-29/