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  • Writer: Admin
    Admin
  • Dec 13, 2024
  • 3 min read

ree

December 16 - December 21, 2024



Numbers 24:2-7, 15-17 Balaam was a prophet in Moab. When the king of Moab tried to get him to curse Israel, he uttered instead a remarkable blessing. The last lines speak of a star and a sceptre, symbols of the coming Messiah, picked up in Matthew 1-2.


Matthew 21:23-27 Jesus counters a trick question and yet it is obvious that he think John the Baptist came from God. In these nal days leading up to the feast of Christmas, the readings are very carefully chosen. They provide a very rich biblical tapestry against which it is possible to understand the teaching offered in Matthew 1-2 and Luke 1-2.



Genesis 49:2, 8-10 The great patriarch Jacob is about to die and he gathers his sons around him for a nal blessing. The blessing to Judah (= son, tribe and tribal area) includes a reference to the sceptre—pointing to the much later Davidic dynasty.


God’s delity to David’s line is fullled in Jesus. It thus prepares for the Gospel, which is the genealogy in Matthew. Matthew 1:1-17 The genealogy locates Jesus in real time with real people, warts and all. Neither the men nor the women were particularly moral—think only of David and the wife of Uriah.


Matthew 1:1-17 is a kind of Gospel in miniature: God writing straight with crooked human lines. The gures in the last two generations are consciously ambiguous: Jacob and his son Joseph, evoking the earlier father and son.


St Flannan, bishop


Jeremiah 23:5-8 The oracle cited here has its historical place in the Exile (as is very clear from the reading itself). But the real reason for the choice lies in the rst couple of verses, which underline God’s faithfulness to David and his offspring. This prepares directly for the Gospel.


Matthew 1:18-24 This passage continues where yesterday’s left off. God-with-us—Emmanuel—reminds us of God’s word to Jacob, Moses, Joshua, David, Solomon, Jeremiah and so forth. Also to us, if we reect back.



Judges 13:2-7, 24-25 The birth stories of Jesus in Matthew 1- 2 and Luke 1-2 often echo highly signicant accounts in the Old Testament. Today’s reading from Judges is an example: an annunciation to a women who is childless. There is even a similarity between the word nazirite (a kind of prophet) and Nazareth (or Nazarene).


Luke 1:5-25 Our Gospel is also an annunciation but this time to a childless father, to Zechariah the priest who is to become the father of John the Baptism.


St Fachanan, bishop


Isaiah 7:10-14 This passage from Isaiah is explicitly cited in Matthew’s account of the annunciation to Joseph in a dream.


Luke 1:26-38 The annunciation to Mary (the fourth in our sequence) matches the pattern of Old Testament annunciation scenes and then, signicantly, breaks it. Mary is open to God’s call.


St Peter Canisius, priest and doctor


Song of Songs 2:8-14 You may be surprised to hear in Advent a reading often used at weddings. It is however very suitable for two reasons. (1) Love is the ‘reason for the season’ as they say. (2) Like the lover bounding over the hills, Mary in the Gospel travels across the hill country to visit Elizabeth, her cousin.


or: Zephaniah 3:14-18 This delightful reading already appeared on the third Sunday of Advent this year. Being such a ringing invitation to rejoice, it is good to hear it again. The image of God dancing for joy is, perhaps, not so usual among us!!


Luke 1:39-45 Luke joins his two strands of narrative in this encounter between the two mothers. We notice the deep things said about Jesus before his birth.


References

-United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. (2024ai, December 15). Third Sunday of Advent. USCCB. https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/121524.cfm

-Sunday readings. (n.d.-s). Hearers of the Word. https://www.tarsus.ie/SundayReadings/


 
 
 
  • Writer: Admin
    Admin
  • Dec 6, 2024
  • 3 min read

ree

December 09 - December 14, 2024


The Immaculate Conception of the BVM


Genesis 3:9-15, 20 The early stories in Genesis explore common human experiences , including sin, shame and the “outsourcing” of blame! All very human, of course. The serpent symbolises something more sinister—the power of sin, against which we need the grace of God.


Ephesians 1:3-6, 11-12 The great hymn from Ephesians explores God’s grace in Christ, thus inviting us to engagement gratitude.


Luke 1:26-38 Mary’s yes is in contrast to the “no” of Adam and Eve...and all the rest of us of course! It is really good news that “nothing is impossible for God.”


Our Lady of Loreto


Isaiah 40:1-11 Powerful images in this reading should awaken a deep longing in our hearts. Let us come again to the great shepherd of our souls, holding us and leading us in all circumstances.


Matthew 8:12-14 The parable of the lost sheep makes a direct link with Isaiah. Of course, the ninety-nine who don’t stray at all also don’t really exist! We are, all of us, lost sheep and in need of guidance.


St Damasus I, bishop of Rome


Isaiah 40:25-31 Our reading today is really a meditation on God and in particular on the “beyond-ness” of God (his transcendence). The fact that God is so other in this reection is a source of hope and renewed energy.


Matthew 11:28-30 “Yoke” was a term used by the rabbis to refer to the guidance of Torah, by which we plough straight furrows in life. Jesus himself is now our Law and his guidance is light.


Our Lady of Guadalupe; St Finian, bishop


Isaiah 41:13-20 The opening line of this poem give the key to the rest: Do not be afraid. The reading goes on to explore such deep trust using several metaphors: harvesting, drought and barrenness.


Matthew 11:11-15 So, who really was John the Baptist? In Jesus’ estimation, John was the greatest of the old dispensation. In orthodox tradition he is called the forerunner, the prodromos. Yet even he falls into the second rank compared with the least in the kingdom of heaven!


St Lucy, virgin and martyr


Isaiah 48:17-19 There is a great promise in this reading, but also one big “if ”: if only you had been alert to my commandments. Isaiah can tell us the rest!


Matthew 11:16-19 There’s no pleasing some people seems to be the message of this passage.


[The very last line, puzzling to us, calls for special comment. The passage comes from the Q community, who produced the Sayings Source (Q), behind parts of Matthew and Luke. In the view of that community, John, Jesus and their members were all children of transcendent wisdom. Originally, the last verse read: But Wisdom was vindicated by her children. (Q 7:35; see Luke 7:35.) For Matthew, Jesus himself is our Wisdom and so he alters the text and continues his portrait to Jesus as wisdom in Mt 11:25-30.]


St John of the Cross, priest and doctor


Ecclesiasticus 48:1-4, 9-12 Elijah remained a gure of fascination long after his death, as we hear in this reection. An Elijah-type gure was expected to usher in the long-expected Messiah. The blessedness of this is caught in the very appealing beatitude which closes the reading.


Matthew 17:10-13 As noted above, the expected Elijah-type gure was based on Mal 3:1. By identifying John as Elijah, Jesus afrms the signicance of the present moment and his own ministry.


References

-United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. (2024ag, December 8). Second Sunday of Advent. USCCB. https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/120824.cfm

-Sunday readings. (n.d.-s). Hearers of the Word. https://www.tarsus.ie/SundayReadings/


 
 
 
  • Writer: Admin
    Admin
  • Nov 29, 2024
  • 3 min read

Updated: Dec 5, 2024


ree

December 02 - December 07, 2024



Isaiah 2:1-5 As a new church year opens, our rst reading is a clarion call to start again and set out on the pilgrimage of faith fresh vision and energy. The marvellous image of transforming weapons of war into instruments of agriculture speaks in every age.


Matthew 8:5-11 The faith of the centurion is indeed remarkable: “just give the word.” What “word” from the Lord do I need at this moment in my life?


St Francis Xavier, religious and priest


Isaiah 11:1-10 The human hope for harmony is portrayed in this reading as a harmony in nature itself, even among the most unlikely animals.


Luke 10:21-24 Jesus pronounces a remarkable prayer in today’s gospel, a very encouraging prayer: we all stand before the mystery and mercy of God, thank God!


St John Damascene, priest and doctor


Isaiah 25:6-10 This reading is familiar from funerals; it offers a great vision of God and God’s gift of ultimate, comprehensive consolation. The idea that God will destroy death for ever was a hope at the time of writing; in our Christian faith we know that God has achieved this in Jesus.


Matthew 15:29-37 The compassion of Jesus is outstanding in this reading: it is he who names the need and supplies the food. What hunger does he identify in us today? How are we nourished by him?



Isaiah 26:1-6 As you listen, you may notice all the words to do with protection: strong city, gates, rock, citadel, forming a great call to faith and trust in God.


Matthew 7:21,24-27 It is always tempting to think that once you’ve said your prayers, you’re done. The prophets regularly pillory such complacency and so does Jesus. In addition, awareness of local geography adds over to his words. In the Judean desert, there are dry river beds called wadis, subject to ash oods. To build on such an exposed foundation is the very height of foolishness.


St Nicholas, bishop


Isaiah 29:17-24 As often in the Bible, there are promises to the deaf, the blind and the poor. Each of us is precisely dead, blind and poor and so the message is for us all today, if only we would pay attention. We hold fast to conviction that the Lord is our light and our help.


Matthew 9:27-31 Miracle stories, like today’s, are always meant to be taken at two levels. Rather than wonder about the past, we could ask in the present, how am I blind? What is my need of the gift of sight which comes with faith?


St Ambrose, bishop and doctor


Isaiah 30:19-21,23-26 The prophet raises the hopes of his hearers with a grand vision of peace and prosperity, a gift of God himself. Such harmony and well being come from following the way offered by God. Their delight is in the law of the Lord, and on his law they meditate day and night. They are like trees planted by streams of water, which yield their fruit in its season, and their leaves do not wither. (Psalms 1:2–3).


Matthew 9:35-10:1,5,6-8 Again, it is the compassion of Jesus which is outstanding. He feels and he acts and he sends out. Our need for the word of compassion and the healing touch of God is great. Perhaps I too am being called to some ministry in the community of faith or in society at large?


References

-United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. (2024ac, December 1). First Sunday of Advent. USCCB. https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/120124.cfm

-Sunday readings. (n.d.-s). Hearers of the Word. https://www.tarsus.ie/SundayReadings/


 
 
 
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