To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 66:10-14; 1 Cor 13:4-13; Mt 18:1-4
St. Therese of the Child Jesus is one of my most
favourite saints. I admire and am inspired by her for a number of reasons, but
one of the most important reasons is her response to life. She had more
challenges than most of us will ever have, yet her response was always positive
no matter what the challenge she faced. In this regard she teaches us how we
too must be able to see the hand of God in everything that happens to us.
She was born in 1873 and died very young at the
age of 24 (1897). At the age of 14, she had an experience that transformed her
life. She decided to give her whole life to God and entered the Carmelite
convent in Lisieux. Though she was often sick and plagued with doubts, she
remained faithful and received the ability to find God in all things and all
things in God. Her focus was not on doing great things but on doing all that
she did with unconditional love. She would do even the most ordinary tasks with
extraordinary love.
The Gospel text for the feast is taken from Matthew’s “Community Discourse”
(18:1-35). It is the fourth of the long discourses in Matthew. Some see the
discourse as divided clearly into two parts (18:1-14 and 18:15-35), with
various indications, which point to such a division. Some of these indications
are as follows: Both sections end with a parable (18:12-13 and 18:23-34), after
the parable is a concluding statement of Jesus, which begins with the word “So”
(18:14.35), there is also in the sayings, a reference to the heavenly Father
and the saying is about the subject of the preceding section (“little ones” and
“brother/sister”).
The discourse begins with a question about the
disciples regarding greatness. In his response, Jesus makes clear that being in
the kingdom or coming into it, is not a matter of one’s talents or qualities,
but “becoming like a child”. In first-century Judaism, children were often
regarded as inferior and were treated as property rather than as persons. The
point Jesus makes here is that one must acknowledge dependence on the Father.
The reception of a child is an indication that one has accepted the values of
the kingdom and one is no longer concerned about being greatest.
This was the attitude of St. Therese to life and
she lived as a child of God all through her life. She inspires and invites us
to the same.
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