Lent 1st Week, Monday, Mar 2nd: Reflection & Liturgy
Leviticus 19:1-2, 11-18 / Matthew 25:31-46
Jesus talks about judgment
"I was hungry and you gave me food,"
"I was hungry and you gave me food,"
Mike Peters won the 1981 Pulitzer prize for political cartoons. Reporter Joe Urschel asked him, "How did you feel when you got the news?"
“I couldn’t believe it," said Mike.
Lent 1 Sunday A - Liturgical Prayers
A. I Will Serve
B. Forty Days to Easter
Greeting
We are gathered in the name of Jesus.
He brought us life instead of death;
by his obedience he made up for our disobedience.
May his grace and peace be always with you.
R/ And also with you.
Saturday after Ash Wednesday, Feb 29th - Reflection & Liturgy
Isaiah 58:9-14 / Luke 5:27-32
God speaks: “Help others and I will help you.”
A woman named Linda was in a state mental hospital. She
said she was without hope for the future and without faith in God. Then one day
she happened to notice a small sign: “Volunteers needed to help the elderly.” She
says she doesn’t know why she responded to that sign, but she did. Several
months later she wrote about her experience, “Each day spent with these elderly
patients awakened something within me.” Linda’s experience with the elderly
patients restored not only her faith in the future but also her faith in God.
Friday after Ash Wednesday, Feb 28th: Reflection & Liturgy
Isaiah 58:1-9 / Matthew 9:14-15
This is the fast I want: “Share your bread with the
hungry.”
Under the listing of “Dog” in the yellow pages of the
Evanston, Illinois, telephone directory there is an ad for American Pet Motels.
Here are some of the services these kennels provide for their clients’ pets. Deluxe
and imperial suites FM music in every room Beauty salon Senior citizens’ care
plan Daily cookie breaks When the initial humor of the ad fades, we suddenly
realize that we take better care of our pets than we do of the poor.This is the kind of thing God confronts us with, through
the prophet Isaiah, in today’s reading.
Lentan Thoughts, Decisions and Activities
To be spectacular is so much our concern that we, who have been spectators most of our lives can hardly conceive that to be unknown, unspectacular, and hidden can have any value.
How do we overcome this all-pervading temptation? It is important to realize that our hunger for the spectacular - just as our desire to be relevant - has very much to do with our search for self-hood. Being a person and being seen, praised, liked, and accepted have become nearly the same for many. Who am I when nobody pays attention, says thanks, or recognizes my work? The more insecure, doubtful, and lonely we are, the greater our need for popularity and praise.
How do we overcome this all-pervading temptation? It is important to realize that our hunger for the spectacular - just as our desire to be relevant - has very much to do with our search for self-hood. Being a person and being seen, praised, liked, and accepted have become nearly the same for many. Who am I when nobody pays attention, says thanks, or recognizes my work? The more insecure, doubtful, and lonely we are, the greater our need for popularity and praise.
Lent: Stories and Illustrations
ILLUSTRATIONS:
From Father Tony
Kadavil’s Collection:
1) Alluring music of the
Sirens:
In
Greek mythology the sirens are creatures with the heads of beautiful women and
the bodies of attractive birds. They lived on an island (Sirenum scopuli; three
small rocky islands) and with the irresistible charm of their song they lured
mariners to their destruction on the rocks surrounding their island (Virgil V,
846; Ovid XIV, 88). They sang so sweetly that all who sailed near their home in
the sea were fascinated and drawn to the shore only to be destroyed. When
Odysseus, the hero in the Odyssey, passed that enchanted spot he tied himself
to the mast and put wax in the ears of his comrades, so that they might not
hear the luring and bewitching strains. But King Tharsius chose a better way.
He took the great Greek singer and lyrist Orpheus along with him. Orpheus took
out his lyre and sang a song so clear and ringing that it drowned the sound of
those lovely, fatal voices of sirens. The best way to break the charm of this
world’s alluring voices during Lent is not trying to shut out the music by
plugging our ears, but to have our hearts and lives filled with the sweeter
music of prayer, penance, word of God, self control, and acts of charity. Then
temptations will have no power over us (RH).
Thursday after Ash Wednesday, Feb 27th: Reflection & Liturgy
Deuteronomy 30:15-20 / Luke 9:22-25
I set before you
life and death: “Choose life!”
Sometimes news reporters embarrass us by the insensitive
questions they ask people, especially people who have just suffered a major
tragedy. For example, a news reporter asked John Cogan, a 51-year-old victim of
terminal cancer, “What are your feelings as you face death?” Cogan stunned the
reporter and his audience by saying: “There’s a joy I can’t express deep down
inside me. I feel perfectly free. . . .I want to reach out and embrace the whole
universe.” Cogan’s terminal illness had set before him the choice of life or
death. He chose life—eternal life.
Lent - 1st Sunday A - Temptations of Jesus
1st Lent A from Jaimelito Gealan
Michel DeVerteuil
General Comments
Like all who see their lives as a grateful response to God’s call, Jesus must make the basic choice to trust God, whatever the circumstances he finds himself in. In this story, under very great pressure, Jesus makes his choice. Who does he remind you of at this moment of decision?
Gospel text : Matthew 4:1-11

General Comments
Like all who see their lives as a grateful response to God’s call, Jesus must make the basic choice to trust God, whatever the circumstances he finds himself in. In this story, under very great pressure, Jesus makes his choice. Who does he remind you of at this moment of decision?
7th Week, Tuesday, Feb 25th - Reflection & Liturgy
James
4:1-10 / Mark 9:30-37
Be humble!
“God resists the proud.”
Charles Colson was a close aide to President Richard
Nixon. He was convicted in the Watergate scandal and sent to prison. As a
result of the Watergate experience, he underwent a deep religious conversion. One
book that influenced him tremendously was C. S. Lewis’s Mere Christianity. This
passage touched him, especially: “I don’t think I have heard anyone who was not
a Christian accuse himself of this vice. The more we have it in ourselves, the
more we dislike it in others. The vice I am talking about is Pride. . . . Pride
leads to every other vice. Pride is a spiritual cancer; it eats up the very
possibility of love, or contentment, or even common sense.”
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