Thursday, January 13, 2011

If Today You Hear His Voice, Harden Not Your Hearts.

Thursday of the First Week in Ordinary Time
Reading I
Hebrews 3:7-14
The Holy Spirit says:
Oh, that today you would hear his voice,
“Harden not your hearts as at the rebellion
in the day of testing in the desert,
where your ancestors tested and tried me
and saw my works for forty years.
Because of this I was provoked
with that generation
and I said,
‘They have always been of erring heart,
and they do not know my ways.’
As I swore in my wrath,
‘They shall not enter into my rest.’”
Take care, brothers and sisters,
that none of you may have
an evil and unfaithful heart,
so as to forsake the living God.
Encourage yourselves daily
while it is still “today,”
so that none of you may
grow hardened by the deceit of sin.
We have become partners of Christ
if only we hold the beginning
of the reality firm until the end.
+++    +++    +++    +++
Responsorial
Psalm 95
R. If today you hear his voice,
harden not your hearts.
Come, let us bow down in worship;
let us kneel before the LORD who made us.
For he is our God,
and we are the people he shepherds,
the flock he guides.
R. If today you hear his voice,
harden not your hearts.
Oh, that today you would hear his voice:
“Harden not your hearts as at Meribah,
as in the day of Massah in the desert,
Where your fathers tempted me;
they tested me though they had seen my works.”
R. If today you hear his voice,
harden not your hearts.
Forty years I was wearied of that generation;
I said: “This people’s heart goes astray,
they do not know my ways.”
Therefore I swore in my anger:
“They shall never enter my rest.”
R. If today you hear his voice,
harden not your hearts.
+++    +++    +++    +++
Gospel
Mark 1:40-45
A leper came to him
and kneeling down begged him
and said,
If you wish, you can make me clean.”
Moved with pity, he stretched out his hand,
touched the leper, and said to him,
“I do will it. Be made clean.”
The leprosy left him immediately,
and he was made clean.
Then, warning him sternly,
he dismissed him at once.
Then he said to him,
“See that you tell no one anything,
but go, show yourself to the priest
and offer for your cleansing
what Moses prescribed;
that will be proof for them.”
The man went away
and began to publicize the whole matter.
He spread the report abroad
so that it was impossible
for Jesus to enter a town openly.
He remained outside in deserted places,
and people kept coming to him from everywhere.
=================================
St. Hilary
(315?-368)
This staunch defender of the divinity of Christ was a gentle and courteous man, devoted to writing some of the greatest theology on the Trinity, and was like his Master in being labeled a “disturber of the peace.” In a very troubled period in the Church, his holiness was lived out in both scholarship and controversy.

Raised a pagan, he was converted to Christianity when he met his God of nature in the Scriptures. His wife was still living when he was chosen, against his will, to be the bishop of Poitiers in France. He was soon taken up with battling what became the scourge of the fourth century, Arianism, which denied the divinity of Christ.

The heresy spread rapidly. St. Jerome said “The world groaned and marveled to find that it was Arian.” When Emperor Constantius ordered all the bishops of the West to sign a condemnation of Athanasius, the great defender of the faith in the East, Hilary refused and was banished from France to far off Phrygia (in modern-day Turkey). Eventually he was called the “Athanasius of the West.” While writing in exile, he was invited by some semi-Arians (hoping for reconciliation) to a council the emperor called to counteract the Council of Nicea. But Hilary predictably defended the Church, and when he sought public debate with the heretical bishop who had exiled him, the Arians, dreading the meeting and its outcome, pleaded with the emperor to send this troublemaker back home. Hilary was welcomed by his people.

Comment:
Christ said his coming would bring not peace but a sword (see Matthew 10:34). The Gospels offer no support for us if we fantasize about a sunlit holiness that knows no problems. Christ did not escape at the last moment, though he did live happily ever after—after a life of controversy, problems, pain and frustration. Hilary, like all saints, simply had more of the same.

Saint of the Day
American Catholic.org

1 comment:

Sarah in the tent said...

So, we have to thank the arianists for the beautiful, mind-expanding Nicene Creed - indirectly, they gave the Church a wonderful gift!