On this Fourth Sunday of Easter, as we gather for and participate in worship, as we reflect on Jesus as shepherd and as ourselves as dear to him, we will very likely sing a version of Psalm, 23 The Lord is my shepherd…” probably the most memorised text of the entire Bible, after the Lord’s Prayer, reflects Br Julian McDonald CFC.. Psalm 23 initially looks like an idyllic, pastoral prayer of trust and confidence in God as shepherd. But then comes mention of valleys filled with darkness and the shadows of death. The “sheep” in the psalm trust in God’s providence, but still have eyes wide open to the dangers that they risk as they travel the way of justice and righteousness.
Change of heart & mind takes time
Reflecting our divine spark
Love your enemies & do good to them
A good place to begin venturing into what Jesus is calling us to consider in loving our enemies is to be found in the opening verses of today’s gospel-reading: “Pray for those who treat you badly” (Luke 6, 28). Our first inclination may well be to set about planning how to even the score. To move into the territory of praying for those who treat us badly is not about asking God to help them see things as we see them. Surely it’s more about opening ourselves up to begin seeing others as God sees them - people worthy of compassion, love, forgiveness and mercy. And isn’t that precisely how God sees us?
Blessed are you who are poor ...
As we try to come to terms with how today’s gospel-reading applies to us, the one thing of which we can be sure is that Jesus is not proclaiming that there is virtue in living in destitution and struggling to eke out a minimal existence. There is certainly nothing to be recommended about living in conditions that are dehumanising, reflects Christian Brother Julian McDonald. If, however, we can learn to weep for our sisters and brothers in pain and reach out to them in compassion, we will be on the way to transformation of mind and heart