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Author Topic: Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live  (Read 38766 times)

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Offline cassini

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Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live
« on: September 14, 2023, 05:18:55 AM »
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  • Here is a letter from a Father Sean Sheehy, an Irish priest who's homily against abortion went worldwide after he was criticisded for it in Irish media.God works in strange ways.

    God has given us emotions so that we can handle all our feelings that are generated by our thoughts. Every time we interpret something – a look, a word, a scene, a touch, a stance, or a principle – feelings, positive or negative, follow from our interpretation. Strong feelings seek expression in action. Action expresses and defines our character – at least in that moment. Feelings never just happen. They’re always preceded by thoughts. Our thoughts lead us to feel good, sad, bad, joyful, happy, anxious, angry, fearful, guilty, responsible, numb, frustrated, etc. Our feelings identify how we want to relate to the world at any given situation. It’s silly to deny feelings. Instead we need to manage them lest they control us and lead us to behavior we regret. So how do we manage our feelings? We use our emotions.
      Emotions and feelings are often confused. People who’re upset or crying are often labeled as “emotional.” But actually they are simply expressing their feelings.  What matters is whether they are being controlled by their feelings or their feelings are being directed by their emotions. Emotions are gifts from God enabling us to decide the most effective way to express how we feel. Four basic emotions are anger, fear, guilt, and love. Anger and fear direct us to protect ourselves from threats to our safety. Guilt directs us to take responsibility for our sins. Love directs us to connect with others. We can use any emotion to direct any feeling, positive or negative. For example, I can have an angry feeling toward someone and express it through the emotion of anger, fear, guilt, or love. I can have an angry feeling toward someone and use my emotion of guilt to express it by taking personal responsibility for it and apologizing for it. I can also express it through the emotion of anger by constructively confronting the person toward whom I have the angry feeling. The relationship between feelings and emotions can be a whole study in itself. When we use emotions to direct our feelings we act rationally. When we let our feelings direct us we lose control and act irrationally. God wants us to be in control of ourselves so we can do His will. This week God speaks to us about anger and mercy.
      As an emotion anger is a gift from God. But In the Book of Sirach (27:30-28:9), God tells us that, “Wrath and anger are hateful things …” Jesus’ Church lists anger as one of the seven deadly sins? How can anger be a gift and a sin at the same time? Wasn’t Jesus angry? “And He looked around at them with anger, grieved at the hardness of their heart …” (Mk 3:5). What are we to make of this?
        God isn’t talking about the emotion of anger, which is a gift from Him. The emotion of anger is part of being human. It generates the energy we need to attack what threatens our security. But it’s how we attack that makes the difference. When we choose our emotion of anger to attack an enemy we’ll be in control of our action and God will be guiding us through His gift. When our angry feeling directs our attack we’ll not be in control and so will act destructively. Anger becomes a hateful thing when we attack destructively. Murder, revenge, self-harm, or wishing evil upon others are the result of angry feelings that are expressed in hateful actions towards others or toward oneself. It’s normal to feel anger when somebody wrongs us and threatens our safety. If we choose our emotion of anger to express our feelings God will lead us to act constructively. Angry feelings move us toward vengeance that blind us to God’s will. We must remember that, “The vengeful will suffer the Lord’s vengeance, for He remembers their sins in detail.”
      Forgiveness restores our emotions to their rightful role in managing our feelings when we are wronged. God’s Word teaches us to, “Forgive your neighbor’s injustice; then when you pray, your own sins will be forgiven.” Too often we react to injustice with angry feelings and seek revenge. Vengeful behavior causes destruction, which can’t be healed except by repentance and reconciliation. Sirach asks a reasonable question: “How can you expect healing from the Lord if you nourish anger against another?” Unless we’re hypocritical, we can’t. We have to change our vengeful feelings by replacing our vengeful thoughts with thoughts of repentance, forgiveness, and reconciliation. To live peacefully we must forgive and let live. That doesn’t mean we don’t confront the wrongdoer; we do, but through our God-given emotions that direct our feelings in a positive manner. Sirach asks another reasonable question: “How can a person refuse to be merciful toward another and ask for mercy himself or herself?” Again, we can’t, if we’re honest. God will give us only what we are willing to give others.
      Jesus tells us that in God’s mind forgiveness is reciprocal. To be forgiven we must be willing to forgive.  Jesus made it part of the prayer He gave us: “Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us” (Mt 6:12). He enshrined it in one of the Beatitudes (Mt 5:7) and instituted it as a special Sacrament of His Church (Jn 20:23). The condition for receiving God’s forgiveness is our willingness to forgive others. That calls for us to change our feelings by changing our thinking through God’s grace. We do that by replacing our thoughts with God’s thoughts. St. Peter asked Jesus if it was enough to forgive his brother who sinned against him seven times. Jєωs thought that four times was generous. Jesus shocked him by saying, “You must forgive your brother more than seventy-seven times seven times.” In other words, we must forgive every time someone offends us. It’s important to realize that forgiving those who hurt us must not depend on their repentance. Forgiveness is for our own freedom to live in peace in accord with God’s will.
      A man met a monk as he passed a monastery. He asked him, “How often should I forgive my neighbor for slapping me?” The monk queried: “How many times did your neighbor slap you?” The man answered, “Once.” “Then,” said the monk, “forgive him once.” The man then asked, “If he slapped me fifty times, how often should I forgive him?” The monk answered, “You should forgive him forty nine times.” The man said, “But he slapped me fifty times, why shouldn’t I forgive fifty times?” The monk said, “The reason is that you deserved the 50th slap for allowing yourself to be slapped 49 times.” God doesn’t want us to remain in situations where we're being attacked.
      Jesus reinforces God’s revelation through Sirach and emphasizes the reciprocity of forgiveness in the parable of the unjust steward (Mt 18:21-35). The steward begged his master to cancel his debt while he refused to cancel the debt of one who owed him. Upon hearing about this unforgiving steward whom he had previously forgiven, he ordered that he be handed over to “the torturers until he should pay back the whole debt.” Led by his angry feeling toward his debtor the steward lost everything. Jesus warned His listeners, “So my heavenly Father will do to you, unless each of you forgives your brother from your heart.” 
      St Paul reminds us that we don’t live for ourselves, rather we live for the Lord (Rom 14:7-9). In living for Christ we embrace His Beatitudes in which He blesses our emotions so we can direct our feelings in every situation toward him. The Christian life calls us to fully possess ourselves so that we can freely give ourselves to Christ. Thus we use our emotions to direct our feelings toward behavior that is sanctified by the Holy Spirit in the bosom of Jesus’ Church. That’s what makes Christians different from others. There we learn to forgive so we can live and let live using our emotions to direct our feelings toward free, just, loving, and peaceful behavior. (Fr Sean)


    If any like it I can  post others as they come in.


    Offline Soubirous

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    Re: Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live
    « Reply #1 on: September 14, 2023, 08:33:26 AM »
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  • The man then asked, “If he slapped me fifty times, how often should I forgive him?” The monk answered, “You should forgive him forty-nine times.” The man said, “But he slapped me fifty times, why shouldn’t I forgive fifty times?” The monk said, “The reason is that you deserved the 50th slap for allowing yourself to be slapped 49 times.” God doesn’t want us to remain in situations where we're being attacked.

    :laugh1:  Another reason why forgiveness can be so difficult. Very often it entails also forgiving oneself, which in turn entails owning up to personal faults and failings that in some way provided an opening for the affront to begin with. Hence the adage, "Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me." :fryingpan:
    Let nothing disturb you, let nothing frighten you, all things pass away: God never changes. Patience obtains all things. He who has God finds he lacks nothing; God alone suffices. - St. Teresa of Jesus


    Offline Patriley

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    Re: Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live
    « Reply #2 on: September 14, 2023, 09:13:54 AM »
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  • Here is a letter from a Father Sean Sheehy, an Irish priest who's homily against abortion went worldwide after he was criticisded for it in Irish media.God works in strange ways.

    God has given us emotions so that we can handle all our feelings that are generated by our thoughts. Every time we interpret something – a look, a word, a scene, a touch, a stance, or a principle – feelings, positive or negative, follow from our interpretation. Strong feelings seek expression in action. Action expresses and defines our character – at least in that moment. Feelings never just happen. They’re always preceded by thoughts. Our thoughts lead us to feel good, sad, bad, joyful, happy, anxious, angry, fearful, guilty, responsible, numb, frustrated, etc. Our feelings identify how we want to relate to the world at any given situation. It’s silly to deny feelings. Instead we need to manage them lest they control us and lead us to behavior we regret. So how do we manage our feelings? We use our emotions.
      Emotions and feelings are often confused. People who’re upset or crying are often labeled as “emotional.” But actually they are simply expressing their feelings.  What matters is whether they are being controlled by their feelings or their feelings are being directed by their emotions. Emotions are gifts from God enabling us to decide the most effective way to express how we feel. Four basic emotions are anger, fear, guilt, and love. Anger and fear direct us to protect ourselves from threats to our safety. Guilt directs us to take responsibility for our sins. Love directs us to connect with others. We can use any emotion to direct any feeling, positive or negative. For example, I can have an angry feeling toward someone and express it through the emotion of anger, fear, guilt, or love. I can have an angry feeling toward someone and use my emotion of guilt to express it by taking personal responsibility for it and apologizing for it. I can also express it through the emotion of anger by constructively confronting the person toward whom I have the angry feeling. The relationship between feelings and emotions can be a whole study in itself. When we use emotions to direct our feelings we act rationally. When we let our feelings direct us we lose control and act irrationally. God wants us to be in control of ourselves so we can do His will. This week God speaks to us about anger and mercy.
      As an emotion anger is a gift from God. But In the Book of Sirach (27:30-28:9), God tells us that, “Wrath and anger are hateful things …” Jesus’ Church lists anger as one of the seven deadly sins? How can anger be a gift and a sin at the same time? Wasn’t Jesus angry? “And He looked around at them with anger, grieved at the hardness of their heart …” (Mk 3:5). What are we to make of this?
        God isn’t talking about the emotion of anger, which is a gift from Him. The emotion of anger is part of being human. It generates the energy we need to attack what threatens our security. But it’s how we attack that makes the difference. When we choose our emotion of anger to attack an enemy we’ll be in control of our action and God will be guiding us through His gift. When our angry feeling directs our attack we’ll not be in control and so will act destructively. Anger becomes a hateful thing when we attack destructively. Murder, revenge, self-harm, or wishing evil upon others are the result of angry feelings that are expressed in hateful actions towards others or toward oneself. It’s normal to feel anger when somebody wrongs us and threatens our safety. If we choose our emotion of anger to express our feelings God will lead us to act constructively. Angry feelings move us toward vengeance that blind us to God’s will. We must remember that, “The vengeful will suffer the Lord’s vengeance, for He remembers their sins in detail.”
      Forgiveness restores our emotions to their rightful role in managing our feelings when we are wronged. God’s Word teaches us to, “Forgive your neighbor’s injustice; then when you pray, your own sins will be forgiven.” Too often we react to injustice with angry feelings and seek revenge. Vengeful behavior causes destruction, which can’t be healed except by repentance and reconciliation. Sirach asks a reasonable question: “How can you expect healing from the Lord if you nourish anger against another?” Unless we’re hypocritical, we can’t. We have to change our vengeful feelings by replacing our vengeful thoughts with thoughts of repentance, forgiveness, and reconciliation. To live peacefully we must forgive and let live. That doesn’t mean we don’t confront the wrongdoer; we do, but through our God-given emotions that direct our feelings in a positive manner. Sirach asks another reasonable question: “How can a person refuse to be merciful toward another and ask for mercy himself or herself?” Again, we can’t, if we’re honest. God will give us only what we are willing to give others.
      Jesus tells us that in God’s mind forgiveness is reciprocal. To be forgiven we must be willing to forgive.  Jesus made it part of the prayer He gave us: “Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us” (Mt 6:12). He enshrined it in one of the Beatitudes (Mt 5:7) and instituted it as a special Sacrament of His Church (Jn 20:23). The condition for receiving God’s forgiveness is our willingness to forgive others. That calls for us to change our feelings by changing our thinking through God’s grace. We do that by replacing our thoughts with God’s thoughts. St. Peter asked Jesus if it was enough to forgive his brother who sinned against him seven times. Jєωs thought that four times was generous. Jesus shocked him by saying, “You must forgive your brother more than seventy-seven times seven times.” In other words, we must forgive every time someone offends us. It’s important to realize that forgiving those who hurt us must not depend on their repentance. Forgiveness is for our own freedom to live in peace in accord with God’s will.
      A man met a monk as he passed a monastery. He asked him, “How often should I forgive my neighbor for slapping me?” The monk queried: “How many times did your neighbor slap you?” The man answered, “Once.” “Then,” said the monk, “forgive him once.” The man then asked, “If he slapped me fifty times, how often should I forgive him?” The monk answered, “You should forgive him forty nine times.” The man said, “But he slapped me fifty times, why shouldn’t I forgive fifty times?” The monk said, “The reason is that you deserved the 50th slap for allowing yourself to be slapped 49 times.” God doesn’t want us to remain in situations where we're being attacked.
      Jesus reinforces God’s revelation through Sirach and emphasizes the reciprocity of forgiveness in the parable of the unjust steward (Mt 18:21-35). The steward begged his master to cancel his debt while he refused to cancel the debt of one who owed him. Upon hearing about this unforgiving steward whom he had previously forgiven, he ordered that he be handed over to “the torturers until he should pay back the whole debt.” Led by his angry feeling toward his debtor the steward lost everything. Jesus warned His listeners, “So my heavenly Father will do to you, unless each of you forgives your brother from your heart.” 
      St Paul reminds us that we don’t live for ourselves, rather we live for the Lord (Rom 14:7-9). In living for Christ we embrace His Beatitudes in which He blesses our emotions so we can direct our feelings in every situation toward him. The Christian life calls us to fully possess ourselves so that we can freely give ourselves to Christ. Thus we use our emotions to direct our feelings toward behavior that is sanctified by the Holy Spirit in the bosom of Jesus’ Church. That’s what makes Christians different from others. There we learn to forgive so we can live and let live using our emotions to direct our feelings toward free, just, loving, and peaceful behavior. (Fr Sean)


    If any like it I can  post others as they come in.
    What about family abuse and being abused as a child by your parent. How can the example of the monk be applied to that situation? Children aren't capable of removing themselves from abusive situations or defending themselves. So how do you approach forgiveness when you were mistreated as a child?

    Offline Soubirous

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    Re: Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live
    « Reply #3 on: September 14, 2023, 10:15:52 AM »
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  • What about family abuse and being abused as a child by your parent. How can the example of the monk be applied to that situation? Children aren't capable of removing themselves from abusive situations or defending themselves. So how do you approach forgiveness when you were mistreated as a child?

    Other more able members here have dealt with the theology of permissive will, basically that The Lord indirectly allows things to happen which will eventually bring a greater good out of whatever evil occurred.

    What I can say in practice is that first you pray, a lot. Once we slowly begin to get our own souls in order, then it becomes easier to see habitual abusers less as oppressors and more as the mistaken and broken creatures that they really are. It can be a two-steps-forward, one-step-back process for a long time, and the sense of bafflement does persist. But acceptance, forgiveness, and a definite sort of freedom do follow.
    Let nothing disturb you, let nothing frighten you, all things pass away: God never changes. Patience obtains all things. He who has God finds he lacks nothing; God alone suffices. - St. Teresa of Jesus

    Offline cassini

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    Re: Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live
    « Reply #4 on: September 20, 2023, 11:57:35 AM »
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  • Fr Sean again:

    My Way or God’s Way?
      A well-known singer told the world in a song, “I did it my way.” Should he be proud of that? I don’t think so because it was all a lie. People often claim to be living their way, when in fact they’re influenced by someone else. As God revealed in Ecclesiastes 1:9-10, none of us is original. “What has been, that will be; what has been done, that will be done. Nothing is new under the sun. Even the thing of which we say, ‘See, this is new!’ has already existed in the ages that preceded us.” The only two ways we do things in this world are either God’s way or Satan’s way. There’s no truly original way, despite those who think so. This is why the Holy Spirit speaks urgently through Isaiah (55:6-9) warning us to, “Seek the Lord while He may be found, call Him while He is near,” if we want to follow God’s way. If we don’t take full advantage of God where He said He could be found and where He is near to us, we won’t be able to benefit from His thoughts and Commandments that show us His way. He reminds us that, “As high as the heavens are above the earth, so high are my ways above your ways, and my thoughts above your thoughts.” Where has God enabled us to find Him? We find God in the Person of Jesus Christ who is present in His Church. Through His Church, Jesus, by the power of the Holy Spirit, teaches us God’s thoughts and leads us along His way, the Way of the Cross – the way to freedom, justice, love, peace, and joy.
      The opposite to the Way of the Cross is the way of selfishness, which is the way of Satan – pride, envy, wrath, lust, greed, sloth, and gluttony. The Holy Spirit warns those following the evil way, “Let the scoundrel forsake his way, and the wicked his thoughts.” Since the Way of the Cross is the only way that leads to Heaven, God wants everyone to choose that way and abandon other ways we might be tempted to do things. Satan’s way is literally a dead end - eternal death - preceded by spiritual starvation, emptiness, and loneliness. God’s way, on the other hand, never leaves a person feeling disappointed because He is always true to His promise that all who embrace Him will experience joy and eternal happiness. Why can we believe in God? Because, “The Lord is just in all His ways and holy in all His works. The Lord is near to all who call upon Him, to all who call upon Him in truth” (Ps 145: 2-18).
      Having chosen God’s way, by embracing Jesus as His Lord and Saviour, St. Paul urges us to, “conduct yourselves in a way worthy of the Gospel” (Phil 1:20-27). Jesus spells out for us what that conduct entails in His parable about the labourers in the vineyard (Mt 20:1-16). By conducting ourselves in a manner worthy of the Gospel we privately and publicly witness our faith in Jesus who gives us membership in God’s kingdom on earth, made visible in His Church.  Jesus tells us that God is like the landowner who, in this story, calls people to work in his vineyard. He continuously searched for workers throughout the day, at 9.00 A.M, Noon, 3.00, and 5.00 P.M. At the end of the day he paid all the workers the same wage beginning with those hired last. Those who worked a full day complained thinking that they should get more. The owner said to one of them, “‘My friend, I do you no injustice. You agreed to the usual wage, did you not? … I am free to do as I please with my money, am I not? Or are you envious because I am generous?’ Thus the last shall be first and the first shall be last.” God is the “landowner” and the “workers” are sinners whom God wants to continually save whenever and wherever He can find them. Those who worked the full day are the Jєωs who thought their reward should be greater than others, and those hired late in the day are the Gentiles. Jesus’ message is that God’s way provides those who answer His call with what they need, not with what they want.
      Here we see the difference between God’s ways and our ways. A just wage is one that meets the needs of the worker, which are to take care of his family. Those who were hired in the afternoon and evening wanted to work but didn’t have the opportunity. The landowner, in his generosity, gave them that opportunity so that they could feed, clothe, and house their family. God’s way is the way of generosity. On the other hand the selfish human way - the way of Satan - is to look out for ourselves and be envious of those whom we view as getting preferential treatment. It is called begrudgery. Jesus was highlighting what God revealed in Deuteronomy 15:4, namely that, “There should be no one of you in need.” Those who worked all day received a full wage that enabled them to take care of their needs. Those who weren’t hired couldn’t take care of their needs. The last hired were first to be paid so that the first hired could witness the generosity of the owner and face their own envy. Thus God confronts us with the difference between His way and thoughts and Satan’s ways and thoughts. God deals with us in accord with our needs while Satan’s way encourages us to deal with one another in accord with our wants.
      God’s way provides for our needs through nature and through His Son. Our bodies need water, air, food, and light to live. Our soul also needs water, air, food, and light to be fully alive and magnify the Lord. God provides for our physical needs through creation. He provides for our spiritual needs through Jesus Christ, sacramentally present in His Church. Someone pointed out that in Jesus our soul finds Living Water, the Breath of Life, the Bread of Life, and the Light of the World. Our soul receives these necessities when we embrace Jesus in His Church. Through His Church Jesus continuously calls sinners whenever and wherever He can find them to embrace His thoughts and ways in their daily lives. There is no other way that leads us to become fully human and fully alive, physically and spiritually. Knowing the Gospel and striving to be worthy of it enables us to make sure that the way we do things isn’t Satan’s way but God’s way, the way of the Cross and to Way to Heaven. (fr sean)


    Offline Patriley

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    Re: Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live
    « Reply #5 on: September 20, 2023, 12:12:18 PM »
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  • Other more able members here have dealt with the theology of permissive will, basically that The Lord indirectly allows things to happen which will eventually bring a greater good out of whatever evil occurred.

    What I can say in practice is that first you pray, a lot. Once we slowly begin to get our own souls in order, then it becomes easier to see habitual abusers less as oppressors and more as the mistaken and broken creatures that they really are. It can be a two-steps-forward, one-step-back process for a long time, and the sense of bafflement does persist. But acceptance, forgiveness, and a definite sort of freedom do follow.
    Thanks. Good answer.

    Offline Cera

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    Re: Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live
    « Reply #6 on: September 20, 2023, 03:41:30 PM »
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  • What about family abuse and being abused as a child by your parent. How can the example of the monk be applied to that situation? Children aren't capable of removing themselves from abusive situations or defending themselves. So how do you approach forgiveness when you were mistreated as a child?
    Adults who were abused as children have a responsibility to protect other children. For example, if the predator could possibly have any access to children, the abuse must be reported to the authorities in order to protect present or future child victims of sɛҳuąƖ assault. This is an act of Charity, not only toward other potential victims, but also to the predator who may not repent until he or she is held accountable.

    In regard to forgiveness, a traditional priest once said "Just because you forgive someone, that doesn't mean you have to have lunch with them." In terms of an unrepentant sinner, the act of forgiveness is between you and God. You are not required to socialize with an unrepentant perpetrator who abused you, nor are you required to be around the "silent perpetrators" that is, other persons who ignored or facilitated the abuse and are unrepentant.
    Pray for the consecration of Russia to the Immaculate Heart of Mary

    Offline cassini

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    Re: Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live
    « Reply #7 on: September 27, 2023, 08:17:14 AM »
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  • Fr Sean again:

    26th Sunday A Cycle    Our Actions Define Our Future
      In a sermon in 1200 A.D, St Anthony of Padua gave us the proverb, “Actions speak louder than words.” In the film “Batman Begins” Rachel stops Batman from jumping back into the fight and asks him who he is behind the mask. He answers; “It’s not who I am underneath, but what I do that defines me.”  It’s what we do that defines us rather than what we say. It’s easy to talk the talk but quite another thing to walk it. In other words, what we do reflects what we value. Nowhere is this more applicable than in religion and politics where it’s easy to say what we believe but quite another thing to behave accordingly. We’re all prone to hypocrisy because we’re sinners and want to be liked. Hypocrisy is pretending to be what one is not. For example, a person identifies as a Catholic but breaks the first and third Commandments by not participating in the Holy Mass every Sunday. Persons who identify as members of the Church but support abortion, transgenderism, and reject Biblical and Church teaching on marriage are pretending to be what they are not, whether or not they realize it. What they do contradicts who they say they are. Their actions contradict their Christian Faith. That is hypocrisy. God hates hypocrisy. This is why Jesus confronted Pharisees and scribes and said to them, “Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, you frauds! You are like whitewashed tombs, beautiful to look at on the outside but full of filth and dead men’s bones” (Mt 23:27). The opposite of hypocrisy is authenticity. To be authentic is to be real, to be true, which involves saying what you mean and meaning what you say through your actions.  It’s our actions that define us as either Christian or non-Christian. Jesus revealed that, “Not everyone who says ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the Kingdom of Heaven” (Mt 7:21-23). It is not enough to say “Lord, Lord,” we must do what He tells us.
      God calls us to be authentic which means “let it be ‘Yes’ if you mean yes and ‘No’ if you mean no” (Jas 5:12). Because God created us to be like Him, and there’s no duplicity in Him, you and I are called to be genuine by making sure that our “yes” and “no” are backed up by our actions. God addresses this in the Book of Ezra (18:25-28). The Israelites complained that God was being unjust to them. He confronted them and asked, “Is it my way that is unfair, or rather, are not your ways unfair?” They thought that if a virtuous person turned to sin that his previous goodness should be enough to save him from its consequences, namely death – as if he had savings in a spiritual bank from which to draw and save him. God informed them that,  “When someone virtuous turns away from virtue to commit sin, and dies, it is because of the sin he committed that he must die. But if he turns from the wickedness he has committed, and does what is right and just, he shall preserve his life.” God reveals here that He judges us on the basis of our actions, good or bad, in the present, not what we did in the past. In the eyes of God it is our actions now that define us and are subject to reward or punishment. This is spelled out clearly in Matthew chapter 25 where Jesus revealed that it’s what we do to others that defines us in relationship to Him, not what we say to Him. It’s not our prayers that matter to God but what we do as a result of our prayers.
      God’s ways are always fair because He’s always authentic and just. Our ways aren’t always fair because our words and actions don’t always match and so we aren’t always authentic or just. The Holy Spirit speaking through the Psalmist (25: 4-9) reminds us that, “Good and upright is the Lord; thus He shows sinners the way. He guides the humble to justice, and teaches the humble His way.” God’s way was laid down by Jesus and received by the Apostles through the power of the Holy Spirit. This “way,” the only way to Heaven, is spelled out for us in the Holy Bible and the Church’s Apostolic and moral teaching. Thus the inspired St. Paul warns us: “Do nothing out of selfishness or vainglory; rather humbly regard others as more important than yourselves, each looking out not just for his own interests, but also for those of others” (Phil 2;1-11). Jesus exemplified this when “He humbled Himself, becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. Though He was in the form of God he did not deem equality with God as something to be grasped at...” Jesus’ words and actions mirrored one another. Words without action are empty.  “What good is it to profess faith without practising it? …So it is with faith that does nothing in practice. It is thoroughly lifeless” (Jas 2:14-17).
      To emphasize the importance of actions, Jesus gives us the Parable of the Two Sons (Mt 21:28-32). A father asked the oldest son to work in his vineyard, to which he replied, “I am on my way, sir.” But he didn’t go. He asked the second son to work in the vineyard, but he refused. Later he “regretted it and went.” Jesus asked, “Which one did what the father wanted?” The answer was obvious. Jesus was sending a message to the Pharisees and scribes likening them to the eldest son who said “yes” to God’s request to bring His blessing to the world, but they reneged. He likened the Gentiles to the second son, who at first rebelled but then repented and did what God asked of them. This is why Jesus described the scribes and Pharisees as, “This people pays me lip-service but their heart is far from me” (Mt 15:8).
      You and I will be judged on what we do with the Faith we have been given, and not on what we say about it. We cannot call ourselves Christian if we don’t practice the Tradition that Jesus handed on to His Apostles and continues to be handed down through the ages in and through His Church. At the moment of death we’ll be judged on whether or not we let God’s Word come alive in our life here on earth. Jesus warns us: “Whoever rejects me and does not accept my words already has his judge, namely the word I have spoken – it is that which will condemn him on the last day” (Jn 12:48). This is urgent because none of us knows when death will come. Jesus urges us to, “Stay awake, therefore! You cannot know the day your Lord is coming …Keep your eyes open, for you know not the day nor the hour” (Mt 24:42; 25:13). Staying awake means that we remain alert, making sure that we match our professed Faith with our actions each day because the good we have done yesterday isn’t sufficient if we sin today and die in that sin. The good we may have done in our past can be quickly erased if we decide to turn away from God at any moment in our life. Jesus gives us the Sacrament of Reconciliation as the antidote to hypocrisy to which none of us is immune. In the first Gospel to be written Jesus proclaimed: “This is the time of fulfilment. The reign of God is at hand! Reform your lives and believe in the Gospel” (Mk 1:15). The time is now for us to believe in the Gospel through letting our actions define us as Christians, faithful members of Jesus’ Church. Jesus stated clearly that, “Whoever acknowledges me before men I will acknowledge before my Father in heaven. Whoever disowns me before men I will disown before my Father in heaven” (Mt 10:32-33). Our actions define us and in them we decide our eternity. (frsos)


    Offline Viva Cristo Rey

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    Re: Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live
    « Reply #8 on: September 27, 2023, 10:53:05 AM »
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  • Thank you, Father Sheehy.  Thank you, Cassini. 


    , “Whoever acknowledges me before men I will acknowledge before my Father in heaven. Whoever disowns me before men I will disown before my Father in heaven” (Mt 10:32-33). Our actions define us and in them we decide our eternity. (frsos)

    May God bless you and keep you

    Offline Viva Cristo Rey

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    Re: Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live
    « Reply #9 on: September 27, 2023, 10:57:40 AM »
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  • Please keep posting.  
    May God bless you and keep you

    Offline cassini

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    Re: Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live
    « Reply #10 on: September 27, 2023, 11:29:52 AM »
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  • Please keep posting. 

    I will of course Viva.  God bless.


    Offline cassini

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    Re: Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live
    « Reply #11 on: October 03, 2023, 10:54:56 AM »
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  • Fr Sean again:

    The Urge to Control
      Have you ever been a back-seat driver or tried to drive with a back-seat driver in the car? An American bus company’s slogan wisely said: “Leave the driving to us.” It’s frustrating to have someone else telling you how to drive, like Hyacinth with Richard in “Keeping Up Appearances.” There can only be one driver in a vehicle. The rest are passengers. Back-seat drivers have an overriding need to be in control. It has to be their way.
      There’s nothing wrong or abnormal with wanting to be in control of our world. Self-control is a characteristic of maturity. Every human being, from conception until death, tries to control reality for himself or herself. The question is not whether we should be in control, rather it’s what and how we can control that will make us successful. Problems arise when we try to control what is beyond us. We fail.
      The Gospel from Matthew (21:33-43) outlines a situation where people attempted to gain control over something unsuccessfully. Jesus illustrates this in the Parable of the Tenants. The tenants weren’t satisfied to rent the land to grow grapes, they wanted to possess it for themselves. They killed the owner’s servants when they came to collect his share of the grapes. Then they killed his son in the belief that his death would assure them of full ownership. Their attempt to get control over what wasn’t theirs caused them  to lose the source of their livelihood.
      The purpose of control is to achieve an end, but the end, if it is obtainable, doesn’t justify the means, especially when the means upends the end. We cannot successfully control God, His Church, or one other. We can try to manipulate them, but we can’t control them. The only person we can have control over is ourselves. We can’t even do that successfully without God’s grace. Without Him we can’t successfully control our sinful nature or fulfill our deepest yearnings.
      St. Paul explains what we need to do in order to gain control over our lives. God teaches through him that we must “Dismiss all anxiety from your minds. Present your needs to God in every form of prayer and in petitions full of gratitude. Then God’s own peace which is beyond all understanding, will stand guard over your hearts and minds, in Christ Jesus.” (Phil 4:6-9)
      The vineyard tenants were anxious about their security and future. They didn’t want to have to rely on the willingness of the owner to rent his land. They wanted to secure their future. They were led by a spirit of fear and greed instead of a spirit of faith and generosity. They killed the proverbial goose that laid the golden egg because they wanted control over what wasn’t theirs. The irony is that they could have all the gold if they relied on the goose. By killing the goose they destroyed the source of gold.
      
    Is this happening in the Church today with this so-called Synod on Synodality? Are there people in and outside the Church who are trying to wrest control over her from Jesus her Head? Are they, like the vineyard tenants, trying to possess her for themselves so that they can use her to endorse their agendas? They want to make the Church “more welcoming,” “inclusive,” “accompanying,” etc. Typical of controllers, in their urge to control, they use appealing language but give the words their own definition. They ignore that the Church belongs to Jesus. He’s her Head. Reason says that since Jesus is the founder of the Church He is the one to control her, not her leaders or members. It’s Jesus who forms and teaches through His Church and as the Teacher He calls us to listen – hear and heed what He says (Rev 2:29). The key question, ignored by those trying to control the Church, should be, “What does Jesus want His Church to be and do for mankind?” The controller’s question is, “How do we want the Church to endorse our agenda today?” Imagine a child attempting to tell the parent how to raise him or her. The controller always wants things on his terms, not on Jesus’ or His Church’s terms. Jesus and His Church includes, accompanies, and welcomes every man, woman, and child, not on their terms but on God’s terms. It doesn’t take a Synod to tell us what these terms are. Jesus spells them out for all and sundry in the Gospels: “Reform your life, repent and believe in the Gospel” (Mk 1:15) by living the Ten Commandments and the Beatitudes. “If you love me,” He said, “keep my commandments” (Jn 14:15) and what will bring you blessings (Beatitudes). That’s what Jesus calls Church leaders to preach and teach because that is what each of us needs to hear and heed. The Synod’s working docuмent never mentions sin and rarely mentions Jesus. Those who try to control the Church simply impose their own sinfulness on her.
      When we submit to Jesus, present in His Church, we do things on His terms, not ours. Thus we then gain control over our wayward, self-centered egos, and sinful world. We’re then changed for the better. How? “Your thoughts (become) wholly directed to what is true, all that deserves respect, all that is honest, pure, admirable, decent, virtuous, or worthy of praise.” 
      To gain control we must commit to the truth that alone sets us free from Satan’s lies. As Catholic Christians we know that Jesus Christ is the truth. Therefore, to be in control we must have a firm commitment to Him. With Christ we can do all things (Phil 4:13); without Him we can do nothing good. We must respect the Church as the means through which Jesus enables us to gain control over our sinfulness. Attempting to control the Church to suit our agendas makes the tenants’ fate our fate. We must be honest in our dealings with ourselves and others and recognize that it is us that must change, not Jesus or His Church. Purity of intention and action keeps us on the road that leads to freedom and security. It eliminates duplicity and arrogance, which are characteristics of Satan. Remember what Jesus said to Peter when Peter tried to control Jesus? “Get behind me, Satan” (Mk 8:33). That’s what He says to those who are trying to change the Church today.
      We must continue to ask ourselves whether our intentions are admirable in the eyes of God. Are we committed to decency and virtue in the manner we have chosen to attain security? Is our approach worthy of praise in our home, parish, diocese, or place of work? These questions provide us with a test to see whether our attempts to gain control over our world will succeed or fail. The vineyard tenants didn’t reflect on the truth of what was or wasn’t theirs. Thus they acted disrespectfully, dishonestly, impurely, murderously, indecently, viciously, and unworthily of praise. Like those trying to make a name for themselves attempting to build the Tower of Babel, they ended up in failure.
      In closing, Paul tells us that the surest way to success is to “Live according to what you have learned and accepted” about Christ from His Church’s Apostolic Tradition. Then God’s peace will reside in us. We must direct our urge to control by reforming our lives from sinners to saints through the power of the Holy Spirit who guides Jesus’ Church.
      Jesus isn’t a back-seat driver – He is the Driver of His Church, not us, in which He teaches us how to drive our lives along the pathway outlined by His Church’s Tradition. He accompanies us if we travel His way. He includes us when we do His will. He welcomes us when we repent and seek His forgiveness. He shows us what we must do to control our life in a manner that doesn’t bring eternal death. Our urge to control must be disciplined with the humble awareness that we must submit to Jesus. In that submission we control events in a manner that brings happiness. A key question this week: "Am I trying to control things in a manner that brings blessings or curses?" (fr sean)

    Offline Seraphina

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    Re: Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live
    « Reply #12 on: October 03, 2023, 02:11:18 PM »
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  • Adults who were abused as children have a responsibility to protect other children. For example, if the predator could possibly have any access to children, the abuse must be reported to the authorities in order to protect present or future child victims of sɛҳuąƖ assault. This is an act of Charity, not only toward other potential victims, but also to the predator who may not repent until he or she is held accountable.

    In regard to forgiveness, a traditional priest once said "Just because you forgive someone, that doesn't mean you have to have lunch with them." In terms of an unrepentant sinner, the act of forgiveness is between you and God. You are not required to socialize with an unrepentant perpetrator who abused you, nor are you required to be around the "silent perpetrators" that is, other persons who ignored or facilitated the abuse and are unrepentant.
    How true!  I used to tell my first graders, “You don’t like everyone, (being mostly Protestants, they’d gasp), it’s worse.  You have to love everyone!”  (Looks of dismay!)  Then I’d explain by reading from I Corinthians, ch. 13.  It tells us what “love” is.  There are no “feelings” involved, only actions and character traits.  I go on to do impromptu skits with volunteers, what that looks like in common children’s squabbles.  The rest of the class watches, then I put them in pairs or triplets and everyone acts it out together.  
    Forgiveness is not a feeling; it’s an act of the will.  
    The same with making an apology.  Put aside how you feel and decide to apologize.  Ask for forgiveness.  The offended party likewise puts aside his anger, hate, hurt and asks himself, “Which do I want?  Peace in my heart from Jesus, or my feelings?  If you want peace, say, “Yes, I forgive you.”  Do this and you’ll see the bad feelings go away.  Do it as often as needed.  Jesus says up to 70 times seven every day.  
    Forgive each person 490 times a day. 
    When someone apologizes to you, say, “I forgive you.”  Do not say, “It’s okay.”  Chances are, whatever was done was NOT “okay.”  
    How is it possible to follow these instructions?  Forgive 490 times every day?  Only with much grace from Our Lord.  As for the feelings part, ask Our Lady for help.  She’s a good mother who is eager to help you clean your skeleton closet.  She can reach that high shelf where you tucked your feelings out of sight behind the box old gloves, and dispose of the trash.  
    Daily, pray well her Rosary and you’ll save your soul.

    Offline cassini

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    Re: Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live
    « Reply #13 on: October 12, 2023, 07:50:00 AM »
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  • Fr Sean again:
    You’re Invited to Heaven
      Through the prophet Isaiah (25:6-10) God speaks about Heaven when He revealed Himself as “providing for all peoples a feast of rich food and choice wines.” Jesus likens Heaven to a wedding feast (Mt 22:1-14). A feast symbolizes an enjoyable time of nourishment, conviviality, laughter and friendship. But it is temporary. Heaven is a permanent banquet in God’s presence where you can feast your eyes on everything that’s real, true, good and beautiful. It is joyful because “The Lord will wipe away the tears from every face” (Is 25:8). We can’t fully grasp Heaven. The Holy Spirit reveals through St. Paul that, “Eye has not seen, ear has not heard, nor has it so much dawned on man what God has prepared for those who love Him.” (1 Cor 2:9). It is beyond our imagination. It can only be described metaphorically, like love. In the parable of the Wedding Feast (Mt 22:1-14), Jesus reveals that His Father invites everyone to Heaven. He also reveals that not everyone accepts God’s invitation. Even some who accept the invitation refuse to act properly and are thrown out.
      Three times God sends out His invitations. The messengers were rejected by some, ignored by others and even killed. Why would an invitation to participate in such a happy event evoke such a rude and callous reaction?  Selfish priorities do that. “One went to his farm, another to his business.” Other things were more important than honouring the king’s invitation. At the end of the parable Jesus said, “Many are invited, but few are chosen.”
      What does all this have to do with us? God continues to invite everyone to join Him in Heaven. He does this through Jesus present in His Church until the end of time. Accepting the invitation means embracing Jesus because the only way to Heaven is through, with and in Him. Jesus reveals, “I am the way, the truth and the life; no one comes to the Father except through me” (Jn 14:6). The way to God is the way to Heaven, which requires us to let God’s presence fill our consciousness with His truth. Jesus is God’s presence on earth. Why doesn’t everyone follow Jesus in order to reach Heaven? Jesus tells us that, “No one comes to me except the Father who sent me draws him.” (Jn 6:44) The reason people don’t follow Jesus is that they’re not listening to God. Their spirit is closed to God’s Spirit. They are listening to false gods. Because of our sinfulness we want to follow our way, which is why we get lost or take the wrong turn. Because of our sinfulness we want to accept Jesus’ invitation on our terms rather than on His. Look at how many, even within the Church, want to change Jesus’ and His Church’s Traditional Apostolic teaching to suit their agendas and endorse their immorality! Look at the many who want to normalize sin and even bless it! Those people want God and His Church to do their bidding. They will not enter Heaven unless they repent, recant, and seek forgiveness through the Sacrament of Reconciliation. Jesus reminded Peter, when he recognized Him as Messiah, that “No mere man has revealed this to you, but my Heavenly Father.” (Mt 16:16) Those who embrace Jesus as the way to Heaven have allowed the Holy Spirit to guide, inspire, and strengthen their human spirit. God the Father calls everyone to follow Jesus as their Teacher, Leader, and Saviour. At Jesus' Transfiguration God spoke and told everyone who listened, “This is my Son, my beloved. Listen to Him.” (Mk 9:7)
      God invites everyone to join His Son, but many ignore it because they have other priorities. Some mistreat and even kill the messengers because their false beliefs are threatened by the truth of the Gospel.  By shutting out the messengers they avoid the message’s truth. The message, of course, as Pope Benedict said, is that there is no future without God. There is no Heaven without God. Since Jesus is God’s Son, and the perfect image of His Father, there is no true personal knowledge of God without knowing Jesus personally. Jesus said, “If you knew me you would know my Father too” (Jn 8:19). “Everything has been given over to me by my Father. No one knows the Son but the Father, and no one knows the Father but the Son – and anyone to whom the Son wishes to reveal Him” (Mt 11:27).
      The consequence of accepting Jesus’ invitation to join Him forever in Heaven is evident in St. Paul. Here is a marvellous example of what it means to listen to Jesus and accept His invitation on His terms and not on the terms of sinful human nature. In his letter to the Philippians (4:12-20) St. Paul said that he was able to adapt to anything and “do all things in Him (Jesus) who strengthens me.” Jesus is not only the way to Heaven. He also provides the wherewithal we need to get there. Jesus has made Himself the food wherein His followers are loved, nourished, comforted, sustained, encouraged, offered forgiveness, and a joyful future to hope in. Jesus said, “I myself am the bread of life come down from Heaven for a man to eat and never die … the bread I will give is my flesh for the life of the world.” (Jn 6:51) This is why the Church calls everyone to embrace Jesus Christ and requires all of His followers to meet Him in the Sacraments and unite with Him at Sunday Mass worshipping, praising, and thanking the Heavenly Father for all His blessing through the power of the Holy Spirit. Sunday Mass is a participation in the Heavenly Liturgy where God is adored by all the angels and saints. It signifies their acceptance of God’s invitation to listen to Jesus and participate in His sacrificial Supper. The chosen are those who have accepted Jesus’ invitation on His terms to worthily eat “my body and drink my blood … For my flesh is real food and my blood real drink … the man who feeds on me will have life because of me.” (Jn 6:54-57) You’re invited. Have you accepted the invitation to become one of the chosen? Remember, Jesus allows you into Heaven on His terms, not on yours. (fr sean)

    Offline cassini

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    Re: Forgive So We Can Live and Let Live
    « Reply #14 on: October 18, 2023, 10:02:24 AM »
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  • Fr Sean again:

    I Have Called You by Your Name
      Many people call you by your name, but do they really know you? Who is the person whom you think knows you the best? By “know” I mean someone who is really in touch with what makes you a unique individual and recognize your intrinsic qualities. Does the meaning of your name sum you up? Would you like to change it?
      Many years ago upon arriving at a parish I met a little girl whose family lived across the street from the church. She asked if she could roller-skate in the parking lot. I told her she could. She had long blond hair and, since I didn’t know her name, I called her “blondie.” At first she didn’t say anything. One evening I was leaving the parish office and she crept up behind me. She said in a half shy voice, “My name isn’t blondie.” Then she told me her name. I asked her why she didn’t like being called “blondie.” She said simply, “But that’s not my real name.” I thanked her for correcting me. From then on I called her by her real name. She was happy about that.
      In the first reading (Is 45:1.4-6) God reminds us that He calls each of us, believer and non-believer, by our name. “I have called you by your name, giving you a title, though you knew me not.” While some of us have difficulty remembering names, God doesn’t forget our name. Remembering a person’s name is an indication that he or she means something to us. An individual who makes a genuine effort to remember names is someone who considers relationships to be important. The first step in a relationship is to remember the person’s name.  Imagine going on a date with someone who asks, “What’s your name again?” Imagine a father or mother coming home in the evening after work and asking  the children, “Who are you?” God never asks “Who are you” because He knows us better than we know ourselves.
      As with my little Church neighbour, the name and the person go together. Making an effort to know the person’s name indicates the person’s importance to us. Calling a person by his or her correct name is a mark of respect for the person’s uniqueness. When I was in National school the principal - we called him “the Master” - called the girls by their mother’s names. He taught their mothers. The girls wanted to be called by their own names. Those who had the same names as their mothers fared a little better, but they too were somewhat disgruntled since they felt he was recognizing their mothers rather than them.
      When God tells us that he calls us by name we know that He doesn’t mistake us for someone else. Not only does God know us, but He wants us to know Him and to be in a personal relationship with Him. No two of us are the same. This is a reflection of God’s versatility. Have you ever heard God calling you by name? He called you by name on the day of your Baptism and Confirmation. He continually calls you through His Church, especially in her Sacraments and at every Holy Mass. He calls us by name in our prayer. Very often we’re so busy telling Him our problems that we don’t hear Him. Or else we’re too preoccupied with ourselves and become deaf to His gentle pronunciation of our name. Think about Mary Magdalene when Jesus called her by name, “Mary!” Just so He calls you!
      Not only does God call us by our name, He also wants us to call Him by His Name. “I am the Lord, there is no other, there is no God besides Me.” Do we reverently call God by His proper Name? His second Commandment teaches us: “You shall not take the Name of the Lord your God in vain.” When we take God’s Name in vain - swearing, cursing, expressing anger, using the OMG, or “by God,” etc. - we also degrade our own names. When we disrespect and abuse God’s name we can’t help but disrespect and abuse what He has created in His Holy Name, namely you and me and all creation. Our attitude towards God is reflected in how we use His Holy Name.
      The Pharisees refused to call Jesus by His proper name - Son of God. Instead they tried to name Him themselves. We didn’t name ourselves so how can we name God who created us.  Our parents named us at birth and God named us as His adopted children the day we were baptized marking our soul indelibly as His gifted child. Hopefully the name our parents gave us will reflect that new identity. Our parents may have named us at birth. But it is we who give a reality to that name by the way we live. Remember what comes to mind when you hear a person’s name mentioned! The name evokes an image in your mind. The image reflects the person’s attitude, behavior, beliefs, demeanor, spirit, etc. The person communicates a particular image by the way he or she acts. In this sense we all name ourselves either as God’s friends or His enemies. He wants to be able to name all of us as His friends but He respects our freedom to say “Yes” or “No” to His call. Our name evokes an image of ourselves through what we do and say every day.
          Jesus named the Pharisees as hypocrites because they tried to mis-name Him (Mt 22:15-21). They wanted to get rid of Jesus even though they said they loved God. They saw Jesus’ characteristics - “truthful, teach the way of God in accordance with the truth, not concerned with anyone’s opinion, not regard a person’s status” – as a means of entrapment. Knowing that He would give a clear answer, they asked, “Is it lawful to pay tax to Caesar?” If He said “Yes” He would be rejected by the Jєωs. If He said “no” He would be punished by the Romans. Jesus asked whose image was on their coins. They said, “Caesar’s.” Jesus then said, “Give to Caesar what belongs to Caesar but give to God what belongs to God.” What had Caesar’s image on it belonged to him. But since they had God’s image they belonged to Him Caesar owns the coins but God owns human beings. But while God owns us, unlike Caesar, He doesn’t impose His will on us. He calls us by name to freely do His will. In His utter humility God invites us to freely give Him permission to possess us so that He can perfect us and give us back to ourselves, freed from sin and equipped to overcome what pulls us down.
      So when God calls us by name He reminds us that He has a legitimate claim on us because He created us in His image. The key question is that when He calls my name, as He does every day, do I honour His claim on me or do I reject it? Do I respond daily in the Biblical words, “Here I am, I have come to do Your will” (Heb 10:9). God is daily calling you and me by name to, “Worship the Lord in holy attire; tremble before Him, all the earth; say among the nations: The Lord is King, He governs the people with equity” (Ps 96:1-10).    (fr sean)