15 Feb
Fri
1st Week of Lent
Ez. 18:21-28
Ps. 130:1-2,3-4,5-6,7-8
Mt. 5:20-26
(Ps Wk I)
How To Pray With Shalom
Home Page of Shalom
Index of This Month
 

Today's responsorial psalm is one of the seven Penitential Psalms (6, 32. 38. 51, 102, 130, 143). Many psalms appeal to God for help, but these seven psalms in a special way appeal to God for mercy, forgiveness and salvation. Encouraged by the doctrine of Ezekiel and other prophets on the need for repentance and its very possibility, the Psalmist expresses in psalm 6 his personal response to God. When we sin, God does not take our sin as a final statement of our relation with him or an eternal and irrevocable choice. The whole Bible affirms that repentance is possible.

Jesus promised us that only one sin is unforgivable, the sin against the Holy Spirit. While Jesus does not clarify what that sin is, we must presume that in some manner it includes a refusal to acknowledge one's sins and to repent. If God calls us to repentance, that call includes the grace we need. In order to repent, we need wisdom, humility and sincerity, so that God may rejoice when we turn from our evil ways and live. Lent is a time when the Church in a special way fosters in our hearts the desire for this necessary grace.



Lord, listen attentively to the sound of my pleading (Psalm 6: 2)

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 the mentally handicapped may not be marginalized, but respected and lovingly helped to live in a way worthy of their physical and social conditions.
Elaboration

- END -


© Copyright Shalom 2008. All rights reserved.