Greeting: (see Second Reading)
It is when we are weak that we are strong in the Lord. May
the strength of God's grace be always with you. R/ And also with you.
Introduction
1. Let Prophets Speak; Listen to Them
What do you think when you see around you people being
trodden down and exploited? Most people do nothing. They think: “Who am I to
speak up? What can I do to correct such situations? No one is going to listen
to me. After all, no one is a prophet in his or her own town or country.” Too
many people leave too much good undone because of this self-doubt and lack of
courage. Let us ask the Lord Jesus for the boldness to speak out with him and
to go about doing good.
2. Someone from Down Our Street
A man or woman like us from down the street, whose parents
we know, how dare he or she speak God’s word to us – if it is God’s word?
Jesus, the town carpenter, whose mother and relatives everyone knew, how could
he work miracles and where did he get his strange message? The Church with all
its faults and the priest who is no better than we are, how dare they speak to
us in the name of God? God speaks to us through ordinary people. God’s word and
message are stronger than the weak messengers he sends to speak his prophetic
word. And each of us too has to stand up and speak out for what is right and
good. Jesus will help us.
Penitential Act
Let us ask pardon from the Lord that we have not always
accepted him on his own terms and lacked the courage to do what is right. (pause)
Lord Jesus, your own people rejected you. Never allow us to
deny you. Lord, have mercy. R/ Lord, have mercy. Jesus Christ, you speak
to us your challenging words that ask us to be just and loving servants: Christ,
have mercy. R/ Christ, have mercy.
Lord Jesus, your grace is enough for us: make us strong in
our weakness: Lord, have mercy. R/ Lord, have mercy.
Forgive us all our sins of cowardice, Lord, and make us live
and act according to your Word. Lead us to everlasting life. R/ Amen.
Opening Prayer
1. Let Prophets Speak; Listen to Them
Let us pray that we may not reject the Word of God coming
among his own (pause)
God, our Father without equal, your Son, your Word, came
among us as one of our own, our own flesh and blood. Dispose us to welcome him
always and to listen to what he tells us, even when his word upsets and
disturbs us, for it is a Word of life and grace. And give us the courage to
pass on his word to one another, that it may liberate us all and lead us to you
as your one people. We ask this through Christ our Lord. R/ Amen.
2. Someone from Down Our Street
Let us pray to our gentle God that he may be our strength in
our weakness (pause)
Gentle God of power and strength, you chose us, weak people,
to put the mighty to shame and to stand up and speak up with our words and our
lives for what is right and good. Make us realize more deeply that without your
help our human efforts cannot but fail and that our very weakness entitles us
to your strength. Be our courage and joy through him who was weak with the weak
but lives with you as the Lord of all, Jesus Christ, your Son and our Lord for
ever. R/ Amen.
First Reading: Ezequiel 2:2-5: God Entrusts His Word to
an Ordinary Person
Ezekiel, an ordinary priest, is called by God to be a
prophet. He has to speak God’s word insistently to a people not disposed to
listen.
Second Reading: 2 Corinthians 12:7-10 The Strength of God
Appears in Someone Weak
Paul defends the legitimacy of his ministry. In Paul’s human
weakness God’s power stands out all the stronger.
Gospel: Mark 6:1-6: Jesus, Just Someone from Down the
Street?
The people of Nazareth reject Jesus and his teaching. They
know him: a young carpenter from down the street. How can he bring any special
message and do wonders?
Intercessions
Let us pray that God’s voice may be heard and understood and
put into practice in our communities and in each of us. Let us say:
R/ Lord, let your word stir us.
– That your Church may keep listening to the prophets among
us through whom the Spirit speaks, let us pray:
R/ Lord, let your
word stir us.
– That God’s people may keep listening to the word Jesus
speaks in our assemblies as a word spoken today to each of us, let us pray:
R/ Lord, let your word stir
us.
– That in the silence of the voiceless God’s people may hear
the voice of the Lord crying out for justice and compassion, let us pray:
R/ Lord, let your word stir us.
– That the Word of God may resound and be accepted by those
who hear it when God’s messengers proclaim it among the nations, let us pray:
R/ Lord, let your word stir us.
– That our Christian communities may always keep listening
to our Lord’s Good News and take it as the guide of their lives, let us pray:
R/ Lord, let your word stir
us.
Father, give us your Holy Spirit that he may always move our
hearts to accept and follow what you say to us through Jesus Christ our
Lord. R/ Amen.
Prayer over the Gifts
Lord our God, you ask of us to accept with faith your word
spoken by your messengers and your living Word, Jesus Christ. Make us truly
recognize the humble coming of your Son in these simple signs of bread and
wine. May the strength of his Spirit be stronger than our weakness. Make us
live together in peace and let us be your sign to the world of your justice and
love. May this be our offering to you, our God for ever and ever. R/
Amen.
Introduction to the Eucharistic Prayer
With joy we give thanks to the Father that he speaks among
us his living Word, our Lord Jesus Christ. Through him we offer the Father our
willingness to accept his Word and to live by it.
Introduction to the Lord’s Prayer
Weak as we are, we dare call God our Father and we pray to
him for strength in the words of Jesus himself: R/ Our Father...
Deliver Us
Deliver us, Lord, from every evil and grant us peace in our
day. In your mercy accept us in our weakness and fill us with the strength of
Christ. Keep alive in us the hope that goodness and right will prevail and that
lasting happiness will be ours at the coming in glory of our Savior Jesus
Christ. R/ For the kingdom...
Invitation to Communion
This is Jesus, the Lamb of God, who overcame the sin of the
world by his humble death on the cross. Happy are we, weak as we are, to be
invited to share his table and to be filled with his strength. R/ Lord,
I am not worthy...
Prayer after Communion
Lord God, loving Father, you let us share in your strength through
Jesus, your Son in our midst. Make us fully aware that he became one of us and
that he stays with us not to impress us with his power but to serve us in love.
Help us to serve one another, that he may call us his friends and accompany us
on the way to you. Make us messengers of his word and give us the courage to
proclaim it without false shame or fear. Grant this in the name of Jesus the
Lord. R/ Amen.
Blessing
God comes to us through weak people. He entrusts to them the
message of his word and even the body of his Son. May God strengthen them, that
they may not obstruct our way to God but speak God’s word with boldness. May we
welcome them because they bring God nearer to us. And in our own weakness may
God be our strength and bless you all, the Father, and the Son, and the Holy
Spirit. R/ Amen.
Go, take the word of God with you, live by it and speak it
without fear. R/ Thanks be to God.
Commentary
Too familiar to appreciate
This Sunday’s Gospel presents to us the return of Jesus to
Nazareth, his hometown where he is rejected by his own people. The crowds
admire him, they flock to him. But his success begins to worry the religious
authorities.
Mark the evangelist reports the incident with a question
raised by the people who were listening to Jesus in the Synagogue. “They said,
‘Where did this man get all this? Is he not the carpenter, the son of Mary?’
The Jews were a patriarchal community, where a son was
always identified as son of the father, and never as the son of the mother. The
name of the mother was seldom used to identify the children. Even where the
father is deceased, it is always with the father. When they mention the mother,
it is a way of saying that the paternity of the person is doubtful, uncertain;
"The son of Mary," therefore, is an offense. Evangelist Matthew
reported the incident by saying, “Is he not the carpenter’s son”, but doesn’t mention
his name.
Why do they reject him? The simple answer was jealousy. The
leaders of the people knew Jesus was right in his teachings and performing
mighty deeds. They indeed admired him. But he was too familiar for them to
appreciate. So, they looked for reasons to trap him. Thus they realised that
Jesus often contradicted the traditions of the ancestors and violated the
Sabbath when people were in need. And he frequents the houses of the tax
collectors and sinners; he caresses the lepers, he announces a face of God who
loves all, regards no one as unclean, rejects no one, forgives sinners without
first questioning if they are repentant.
Jesus came to Nazareth with high hopes, and expectations.
But he had a bitter conclusion to his journey. Quoting a proverb, he says:
"A prophet is not without honour except in his native place and among his
own kin and in his own house." There is also a similar reference at the
beginning of the Gospel according to John: "He came to his own, and yet
his own people did not receive him."
Today there is no lack of prophets, but we refuse to accept
them as such. Simply because we know them. We use the same argument that Jesus'
countrymen used. And we close ourselves off to the new possibilities, ways and
hopes that God opens up to us through them. Certainly, they have their
weaknesses as we all do, but through them the Spirit speaks. If we don't listen
to them, too bad for us!
Who are the prophets for you today? To what extent do you listen to them? Do you feel that, if you listened to them, you could live differently?