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Today's Gospel passage poses a great challenge for our understanding of Jesus as Jesus seems to be contradicting what any Jew, or indeed any human being, would expect from God or God's messiah. When Jesus speaks about setting people at odds with each other, he points to human problems and expectations and asserts that he did not come to solve such problems. Jesus did not come to rid the world of problems but to respond to the evil that affects our world by bringing love. Pope Benedict is his trilogy Jesus of Nazareth, raises this question: "If Jesus did not bring peace and prosperity and freedom, what did he bring?" He answers: Jesus brought God, and God is love.
When we look at God or Jesus as problem solvers, we have reduced the great mystery of the Incarnation and the salvation which Jesus won for us on the cross to a mere human strategy or, worse, to a gimmick. While Jesus did heal people of illnesses and so, in a certain sense, did "solve some problems", those miracles must rather be seen as manifestations of God's love and as promises. That the love manifested and offered to us on the cross will always finally conquer evil and all its particular manifestations.
Lord, teach us to seek Your Kingdom rather than mere solutions to temporary problems.
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DAILY OFFERING
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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.
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PRAYING WITH THE CHURCH
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INTENTION
We pray that, in social economic and political situations of conflict, we may be courageous and passionate architects of dialogue and friendship.
Elaboration
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