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Saturday, December 24, 2022

Luke 1:67 - 79

Joy Sets Us Free

We’ve journeyed so far this Advent. It’s flown by, and there’s hardly been time to breathe.

 Here we are, the day before Christmas. Many of us will go to Mass tonight. This morning’s Gospel reading — different from what we’ll hear at a vigil Mass or the Mass for Christmas Day — is Zechariah’s first speech after nine months of silence. It’s a reminder that the Lord is behind all the good things in our lives.

It points to the joy at the heart of how we live and what we live for. “Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel,” Zechariah begins, “for he has come to his people to set them free.”

Our joy sets us free, free from the bondage of sin, free from the bondage of fear, free from the bondage of busyness.

Our joy is Jesus. He came as a baby. He comes as the Eucharist.

Let your joy loose. You’ve been building up to this moment for all of Advent, and now the Christmas season awaits you. 

“In the tender compassion of our God the dawn from on high shall break upon us, to shine on those who dwell in darkness and the shadow of death, and to guide our feet into the way of peace.”

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Daily Prayer

Thank you, Jesus, for the joy you are and the joy you bring. Praised be your holy name!

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Misc Activity - Food, Drink, etc.

If you’re done with all the Christmas preparations and have a moment to sit at home on Christmas eve, reflect on these last four weeks of Advent. Did you experience and share Hope, Peace, Love, and Joy? Let’s make this a goal for 2023 in our journey to move closer to Christ.

Friday, December 23, 2022

Luke 1:57 - 66

He will be called John

Imagine the happiness of Elizabeth and Zechariah! Their baby has been born, so long awaited and so miraculous. At the point of circumcision and naming, everyone was ready to call him Zechariah. It made sense, after all. It’s how things were done.

Elizabeth pushed back: “No. He will be called John.” Zechariah still didn’t have his voice, but they handed him a tablet to get confirmation from him.

He gave it, and the first words he spoke, now that he could, were to bless God.

“Fear came upon all their neighbors,” we read. This was no ordinary baby, and they knew it. 

We know it, too. He was the forerunner, the precursor, the beginning of the prophecy.

God has a track record of mercy. He gives more than he takes, and he knows what’s best for us. And whether we accept the gift he’s offering or not, he won’t stop holding it out to us.

Are we ready?

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Daily Prayer

Bless you, God, for the great abundance and beauty that surround me, for the joy that fills my moments and the opportunity that surrounds my days.

SOURCE: Creighton University Online Ministries

Thursday, December 22, 2022

Luke 1:46 - 56

Be Like Mary

My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior. (Luke 1:46)

Mary’s song, the Magnificat, focuses on God’s great works, especially his tendency to turn everything upside down. He “looked upon his lowly servant” when choosing a mother for the Messiah, rather than selecting a woman of prominence. The Lord “scattered the proud in their conceit,” rather than honoring them. “He has cast down the mighty from their thrones and has lifted up the lowly. He has filled the hungry with good things, and the rich he has sent away empty.” God’s kingdom inverts worldly structures and values.

When we read Mary’s song, we are challenged to take seriously what she said. I must confess that the “Magnificat” unsettles me. Why? Because I tend to be proud and even haughty. Because, though I’m not mighty, I am a person with authority and not necessarily all that humble. Moreover, I am certainly not hungry, and I live in the richest nation in the world, where every convenience and opportunity are at my fingertips. 

So, Mary’s song can be unsettling for me, as, indeed, it should be. It challenges me to consider my values and goals. Am I striving for the wrong things in life? How much of my life is devoted to seeking security, reputation, and power? How often do I hold on to my material blessings rather than sharing them with the poor and hungry?

The purpose of the “Magnificat” is not intended to make us feel guilty for what we have in the way of possessions or influence. Rather, it challenges us to devote our entire way of life to being, like Mary, a willing and humble servant of God. It reminds us that, like Israel, we are called to be God’s servants in the world, serving others as a reflection and extension of God’s kingdom. Mary’s song stirs in me a desire to live today for what really matters so that God might use me for his purposes and glory.

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Daily Prayer

Dear Lord, My soul proclaims your greatness, my spirit rejoices in you, my savior.  Help me each day to be your presence in the world. Assist me in choosing to do good – helping others and being less self-centered. I love you, Lord. You have done great things for me. I dedicate this day to showing you my love for you.  Amen.

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Peace be with you

Where there are loneliness and sadness, God’s peace is coming. And so, during Advent, we boldly recognize all places where our world is not peaceful. Take a moment and reflect on the reading below.

And the effect of righteousness will be peace, and the result of righteousness, quietness and trust forever. Isaiah 32:17

Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Luke 1:39 - 45

Blessed are you who Believed

Have you ever heard news so good, so amazing, and life-changing that you can’t sit still? You have to share it with someone else?

Isn’t it comforting to know that the Mother of God felt the same way?

Upon hearing that her cousin Elizabeth was pregnant, Mary dropped everything and made the 80-mile journey — on foot! Across the dangerous countryside! — to see her. When she arrived and greeted Elizabeth, baby John leapt in utero.

It’s a beautiful witness to what we have at every Mass. The Lord and Savior is present to us, fully and completely. It’s a gift we’re given whenever we take the time to go.

We probably don’t have to make a long journey on foot across the countryside to get there. We may find ourselves taking it for granted and even tuning it out.

“Blessed are you who believed,” Elizabeth cried loudly to Mary.

Would she say the same to us?

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Daily Prayer

Jesus, I believe. Help my unbelief.

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Family Activity

It’s time to jump in the car and take a tour of the local Christmas lights. Singing Christmas Carols while sipping hot cocoa adds to the Advent spirit!

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

Luke 1:26 - 38

Full Of Grace

Yesterday, we see how Zechariah’s questioning the Angel Gabriel leads to him losing his speech for the duration of Elizabeth’s pregnancy. In today’s Gospel, Mary questions Gabriel and…gets an answer. At first, it doesn’t make sense.

As with so many things, the intention behind the words makes all the difference. Zechariah wasn’t asking an innocent question; he was challenging a miracle offered by God. On the other hand, Mary was marveling and sincerely wondering: “How can this be?” She knew how babies were made and that nothing was too much for God.

How do we know? Because Gabriel replies to her the way, you would reply to a child asking an innocent question about how something works: “The Holy Spirit will come upon you,” he says, “and the power of the Most High will overshadow you.”

She was already “full of grace,” perfectly and completely grace-filled. God made her that way. And we have evidence of it from how Gabriel treats her with that kind of reverence normally reserved for angels.

A four-year-old will innocently ask, “How?” without malice. It’s different from how a fourteen-year-old will demand to know why.

Mary is innocent and utterly open to the Holy Spirit. She stands as an ongoing inspiration to each of us, as we waLuke through the last days of Advent that we may be as open to joy as she was.

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Daily Prayer

God, you made me. Open me to the joy right in front of me, to the gifts you have for me in everyday life. Make my questions fruitful and innocent without the malice and demand of disbelief.

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Act of Kindness

As temperatures drop, let’s not forget those in need. Drop socks, toothpaste, razors, treats, etc., at the local homeless shelter or your church pantry. Sharing your fortune during the last week of Advent is a beautiful act of kindness.

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Come,
Lord Jesus

Monday, December 25, 2023

Luke 2: 15 - 20

We come in haste

The Nativity of the Lord (Christmas) Mass at Dawn

For some of us, Advent seems like the fastest four weeks of the year. The month of Advent flies by, and suddenly, we’re standing over a manger, in shock and out of breath, like the shepherds in today’s Gospel for Mass at Dawn.

The reading today occurs just after the shepherds were visited by an angel who told them that a savior had been born for them, that he is the Messiah and Lord, and they could actually go and see him. When the army of angels showed up to celebrate the birth, that was enough to convince them, so they took off in a hurry, leaving their flock, to go and find Jesus.

Imagine simple shepherds racing to search Bethlehem’s barns and stables for the one manger holding an infant savior born for them. And they found him! Their excitement to have been given this message was palpable. “Listen to what we heard! We’re just shepherds! Why should this happen to us?” All the while looking on the baby, swaddled, and lying in the manger as they were told.

“And Mary kept all these things, reflecting on them in her heart.”

She kept this moment, those shepherds, their excitement, wonder, and even obedience, in her heart. And not just to remember but to reflect. It all meant something; it all still means something.

Today, we have come “in haste” to the Nativity of the Lord. We have spent the last four weeks searching for the manger that holds the infant savior. We have heard angels proclaim his coming, witnessed signs that help us to believe, marveled at God’s power to do what seems impossible, and examined our hearts in preparation for this day.

Christmas Prayer by Gerard Manley Hopkins, S.J.

Moonless darkness stands between.

Past, the Past, no more be seen!

But the Bethlehem star may lead me

To the sight of him who freed me

From the self that I have been.

Make me pure, Lord; Thou art holy;

Make me meek, Lord; Thou wert lowly;

Now beginning, and alway:

Now begin, on Christmas day.

The celebration of Christmas is just beginning! Our Christmas Time starts today and goes through the Sunday after Epiphany. So, like the shepherds, we can continue “glorifying and praising God” for all we have seen and heard.

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Come,
Lord Jesus

Sunday, December 24, 2023

Luke 1:26 - 38

The fiat

This is the fourth time we have had this Gospel reading in Advent. Why? What is the Church trying to tell us?

Reading the story of the Annunciation on the final Sunday in Advent gives us another chance to let this moment in salvation history sink deep into our hearts and penetrate our minds. Repeating it, rather than being simply redundant, can help us to retain it long after Christmas day.

Every part of the Scripture is familiar but astonishing. The appearance of the angel. The astounding greeting. The significance of Jesus’ human lineage. Mary’s conception by the power of the Holy Spirit. The virgin’s fiat.

The infant Son of God.

I think this final Gospel reading in Advent presents us with a challenge. Not to manufacture a feeling or even try to comprehend anything intellectually. I think it is another push by the Holy Spirit to consider surrendering our hearts entirely to God, as Mary did, and then become Christ-bearers to the world.

Try this: In preparation for Christmas, together with your family, pray the words the angel Gabriel spoke to the Virgin Mary.

“Behold, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall name him Jesus. He will be great and will be called Son of the Most High, and the Lord God will give him the throne of David his father, and he will rule over the house of Jacob forever, and of his kingdom there will be no end.”

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Come,
Lord Jesus

Saturday, December 23, 2023

Luke 1:57 - 66

Foretold

We have probably all experienced the thrill and excitement of a relative or friend giving birth to a much-hoped-for and most-prayed-for child. It is a cause for celebration, thanksgiving, and even more prayers for the baby to grow up happy and healthy.

That’s the scene in today’s Gospel reading. John has finally been born. When asked his name, Elizabeth had to reply since Zechariah could not speak. They couldn’t believe the couple would go against tradition, so they asked Zechariah to confirm, and when he did, he could finally speak. His first words after nine long months were to bless God. A right response, which didn’t go unnoticed by his neighbors. “What, then, will this child be? For surely the hand of the Lord was with him.”

John and Jesus are inextricably connected. Jesus’ coming was foretold. John’s birth was also foretold. John’s birth was important because it was his destiny to proclaim Christ and to prepare people to receive him. He went all in. Will we?

Try this: Prepare for the final Sunday in Advent by reading tomorrow’s scriptures and asking God to reveal something new for you. Then listen for it at Mass tomorrow.

Lord, I thank you and bless you as Zechariah did. Free my tongue to praise you before my friends, family, and neighbors.

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Come,
Lord Jesus

Friday, December 22, 2023

Luke 1:46 - 56

Treasure in your heart

Today’s Gospel is the Magnificat, the great song prayer of the Blessed Mother. It is so significant to the Church that it is sung daily in the Evening Prayer liturgy. While in Scripture, Mary often treasured things “in her heart,” in this prayer, she lets it all out–indeed, it is the single longest quote attributed to the Blessed Mother.

Mary was a devout Jew and familiar with Scripture, so the Magnificat references many Old Testament passages and themes. It centers on her gratitude for God’s perpetual care for the poor and the outcast. To Mary, it was not just a concept; it was personal.

Try this: Spend some quiet moments meditating on the words of the Magnificat, especially how Mary describes God as our savior. How has he shown you his mercy, strength, generosity, saving power, and faithfulness?

Bless us Mary, maiden mild; bless us, too, Her tender Child.

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Come,
Lord Jesus

Thursday, December 21, 2023

Luke 1:39 - 45

Going, and letting go

As Catholics, today’s Gospel reading is very familiar. We meditate on the Mystery of the Visitation in the Joyful Mysteries of the Rosary, traditionally prayed on Mondays and Saturdays. We celebrate the Feast of the Visitation in the spring on May 31. It is a critical moment in salvation history, but we might tend to pass over it precisely because it is so familiar.

What can we learn from Mary in this reading?

Go. The angel Gabriel had just told Mary she was to be the mother of the Son of God and that her infertile and elderly relative was also bearing a child. So what did she do? She went to her. It would have been easier to stay home, but instead, she traveled “in haste.” There are times we can and should physically go to a friend or relative to offer help, hope, and care as Mary did, even if it can be difficult or inconvenient.

Pope Benedict XVI said of Mary, “May we imitate her example of readiness and generosity in the service of our brethren. Indeed, only by accepting God’s love and making of our existence a selfless and generous service to our neighbor, can we joyfully lift a song of praise to the Lord.”

Rejoice. Mary rejoiced that she was chosen of all women to be the Christ-bearer. Elizabeth was rejoicing that her prayers were answered and she was at last going to have a child, and one who was destined to be great. Even the babies were rejoicing! Little John the Baptist lept in his mother’s womb.

We can imitate Mary in finding joy in our salvation. In his Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium, Pope Francis wrote, “The joy of the gospel fills the hearts and lives of all who encounter Jesus. Those who accept his offer of salvation are set free from sin, sorrow, inner emptiness and loneliness. With Christ joy is constantly born anew.”

Let go. The third way we can imitate Mary is perhaps one that we may always be striving for, and that is abandonment to God’s will. “Blessed are you who believed that what was spoken to you by the Lord would be fulfilled,” Elizabeth told Mary. What would it be like if others could say that of us?

St. John Paul II said, “By accepting the divine will, Mary offered her active cooperation so that God could become man in her maternal womb. She bore the divine Word within her as she went to visit her elderly cousin who, in turn, was awaiting the Baptist’s birth.”

Try this: Meditate on who you might need to see, how you might rejoice more today, or where you could start letting go of something that is hindering you in your walk with Christ.

Lord, give me the grace to imitate the Blessed Mother, who always leads people to you.