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Our Parish
Our Mission & Patron
Parish History
Join our Parish
Bulletins
Latest News
Catholic Faith Resources
Calendar
Blog
Giving
Contact Us
Stewardship
Newsletters
Event Form
Love One Another Capital Campaign 2023
Community Life
Fish Fry
Donut Sundays
Meet the Team
Pastoral Staff
Pastoral Council
Finance Council
Committees
Careers
Liturgy & Sacraments
Mass Times
Pray With Us
Funerals & Cemetery
Sacraments
Baptism
Eucharist
Reconciliation
Confirmation
Anointing of the Sick
Marriage
Holy Orders
Become Catholic
Faith Formation
Contact Faith Formation
Catholic Social Teaching
Adult Formation
Lent Resources
2023
Alpha
Knights of Columbus
Men's Group
Women's Group
Small Groups
RCIA: Adult Sacraments
Student Formation
Busy Bees & Parents @ the Playground
Registration Information
Family Class
Pre K- 1st Grade: CGS
Grades 2-5
Middle School
High School
Ministries
Get Involved
Outreach Ministry
Console the Sick
Feed the Hungry
Clothe the Naked
Comfort the Mourning
Strengthen Families
Sister Parishes
Liturgical Ministry
Music Ministry
Minister at Mass
Console the Sick
Ready the Church
Hospitality
February 17
Our Parish
February
14
,
2019
What an audience Jesus has in today's Gospel! "A great crowd of his disciples and a large number of people from all over Ju-dea and Jerusalem and the coastal region of Tyre and Sidon." Disciples, pagans, and devout Jews gathered together to hear Jesus speak in the Sermon on the Mount. All of these people had something in common. God was someone to be bargained with, and if God liked you, you were rewarded with good for-tune. This Sunday, Jesus tells us a different story. "Woe to you who are rich ? who are filled now ? who laugh ? when all speak well of you. Blessed are you who are poor ? you who are now hungry ? when people hate you and when they exclude you and insult you." Jesus completely flips the script on what it means to be blessed by God. What he proclaims as "woe" are states of life we often strive for, and "blessed" are the states we work hard to avoid!
Jesus is concerned with the kingdom of God and the world to come, not the typical structures of power and privilege. The word "now" appears often in these statements. Why? If you are well "now," that's beside the point. To be rich in this life has no direct bearing on your immortal soul. If you're strug-gling "now," that's not an indication that God has forgotten you or that - in light of eternity - you're worse off than some-one else. In fact, it could be an indicator that you're enduring something that will bring you to a place of greater, eternal joy in the future.
This Sunday, consider your priorities. Who do we reject as not blessed, and thereby inflict woe upon ourselves? When we encounter difficult situations in our own lives, do we see them as opportunities to remember God and lean on His mercy and grace?
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