17 Dec
Mon
3rd Week of Advent
Gen. 49:2, 8-10
Ps. 72:3-4, 7-8, 17
Mt. 1:1-17
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The approach of death is a time of special perspicacity, a time of special grace, and frequently a time of special blessing. In the reading from Genesis, Jacob [Israel] is on his deathbed in Egypt. He looks to the future happiness of his sons and blesses them. The passage chosen for today is his blessing for Judah. In his act of blessing, Jacob shows himself a true patriarch, but in what he says he shows himself a prophet as well. Just as God has spoken to us through the history of the chosen people of Israel, so too God speaks now through Jacob, the ancestor of the people of Israel. As a prophet, Jacob speaks of a future that will extend long after his sons are dead. God will bless that in a way that no human being could bless it. That future would see the fullness of every blessing and the climax of grace in the Incarnation and the re-creation of the human race in Jesus.

Jacob was wise to bless Judah, but human wisdom can never compare with divine wisdom. Hence we pray in the Alleluia verse that the wisdom of God most high might come. That prayer has been answered for us in Christ.



Come, Lord Jesus, Wisdom of God, lead us wisely in the ways of truth.

DAILY OFFERING
Eternal Father, I offer You everything I do this day; my thoughts, words, joys and sufferings. Grant that, vivified by the Holy Spirit and united to the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary, my life this day may be of service to You and to others. I also pray that all those preparing for marriage discover in Sacrament the source of Christ's grace for living a fithful and fruitful love. Amen.

PRAYING WITH THE CHURCH
INTENTION
That Christians may free themselves from the subtle forms of cultural conditioning which prevent them from recognising the dignity and rights of others
Elaboration

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P R A Y I N G    W I T H    T H E    C H U R C H    

INTENTION : That Christians may free themselves from the subtle forms of cultural conditioning which prevent them from recognising the dignity and rights of others

Our vocation and mission as Christians is to bring the light of Christ to the world in order to preserve the world from corruption by permeating it with the values of the Gospel. We need, ourselves, first and foremost to be enlightened by Christ. We do not generate light, we only refract, reflect and radiate. It is His light that we must cast on the world. The more transparent our lives are with the values of the Gospel, the better is the light of Christ reflected and the less we are seen.

The world in which we live is mixed with wheat and weeds. There is good and evil. Consumerism is but the logical sequence of a materialistic way of life. Spiritual values are forgotten. Our wants are made to appear as our needs and we are forced to get so immersed in the joys of this world as to forget the joys of the world to come. We are admonished to be aware lest we be trapped by these and other forms of cultural conditioning that mark this world.

Awareness is the first step to change. We pray that this awareness may help us to be delivered from the cultural conditioning that hinders and hampers our vision and prevents us from recognising the dignity and the rights of others.




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