Before child labor laws were enacted, a ten-year-old
boy was working in a factory in Naples, Italy. He wanted to earn money for
music lessons. After singing for a schoolteacher, however, he was told to save
his time and money. “Forget about singing,” the teacher said;
Dec 7 Monday (St. Ambrose, Bishop, Doctor of the Church): https://www.franciscanmedia.org/saint-of-the-day/saint-ambrose Lk 5: 17-26:17 On one of those days, as he was teaching, there were Pharisees and teachers of the law sitting by, who had come from every village of Galilee and Judea and from Jerusalem; and the power of the Lord was with him to heal. 18 And behold, men were bringing on a bed a man who was paralyzed, and they sought to bring him in and lay him before Jesus; 19 but finding no way to bring him in, because of the crowd, they went up on the roof and let him down with his bed through the tiles into the midst before Jesus. 20 ……. 26 .. (Cfr. Mt 9: 1-8). USCCB reflections: https://youtu.be/1aqVBJogCY4Daily Catholic reflections:https://catholic-daily-reflections.com/daily-reflections/
Advent is a time of joy – joy in the waiting and this Sunday we wear the joyful rose-coloured vestment. The messenger in the first reading is the ‘joyful messenger’, and his joy is that God is near and God is coming. This would be the message of Jesus –that he was the joyful messenger of his Father’s love. He would be the shepherd – the one who cares, knows and actively looks after the sheep. John the Baptist is the voice of joy and energy, preaching the new message.
In God of
the Oppressed James Cone describes what Sunday worship meant for
black slaves in pre-Civil War days: “How could black slaves know they were
human beings when they were treated like cattle? How could they know that they
were somebody when everything in their environment said that they were nobody?”
Cone answers: “Only because they knew that Christ was present with them and
that presence included the divine promise to come again to take them to the
‘New Jerusalem.’”
When you cry out, he will answer you. The harvest
is great, "Send workers to gather it in. "
Kate Drexel
came from a wealthy Philadelphia family. While riding about the city, she saw
the tragic plight of black children living in hideous slum conditions. In her
reading she learned about the plight black children in the South and of Native
American children in the West. Moved to pity, Kate founded the Sisters of the
Blessed Sacrament to work among these children. Before Mother Katherine Drexel
died at age 97, she spent nearly $20 million of her own personal fortune to
care for and educate blacks and Indians.Today, her order continues her work.
Bob Evans had been blind since birth. When
he was 50 years old, an operation gave him eyesight for the first time in his life.
Suddenly his world changed beyond belief. He said in a Chicago Sun-Times
interview: “It’s the most amazing thing in the world. ... I can’t wait to get
up each day to see what I can see. . . .“And
at night I look at the stars. . . . Everything is a constant high. You could never
know how wonderful everything is.” This story gives us an insight
into Isaiah’s prophecy in today’s reading, about how life will be changed for
people when the Messiah comes.