18th Sunday of the Year (a)

Ordinary Season of the Year. (a)

 Weekdays – Year 1

 

Sunday 6th August:        Feast of the Transfiguration of the Lord.

The Transfiguration of the Lord is always celebrated on 6th August each year and it is one of the few feasts which are celebrated even on a Sunday. It is also the anniversary of the dropping of the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima in 1945. So perhaps today more than ever we need to pray for peace in our world especially in the Middle East where so many innocent people are being killed each day while world governments stand by and watch.

The first reading is from the Prophet Daniel and has been seen by the Church as referring to Jesus whose glory was seen at the Transfiguration.

The second reading is from the 2nd Letter of St. Peter. He was privileged to be present at the Transfiguration and uses this fact to call for a genuine renewal of faith.

The Gospel presents St. Mark’s account of the events of the Transfiguration. He explains it in terms of Jesus being the fulfilment of the Law and the Prophets. The whole incident is meant to prepare the disciples for the struggles they will face as disciples in the days that lie ahead of them.

 

Monday 7th August:     Monday in the 18th week of the Year.

This week we move on to the Book of Numbers for our first reading. We follow the history of the people of Israel in the desert. The people are still complaining about having no food and Moses feels they are blaming him for their predicament. He turns to God for help.

In the Gospel we hear of Jesus’ disappointment at Peter’s lack of faith. Along with the other disciples they had shown they did not completely trust him and recognise him for who he was. He continues to stress the need for faith.

 

Tuesday 8th August:       Memorial of St. Dominic.

Dominic was born in Castille in Spain in 1170. He studied for the priesthood and, when he was 46, Pope Honorius entrusted to him and his companions the mission to preach the Word of God to combat heresy that was rampant at the time. This was the beginning of the Dominican order. They worked from smaller houses rather than traditional monasteries and combined a life of study and contemplation. Dominic died in 1221.

 

Tuesday 9th August:       Feast of St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross.

Born in 1891 in Germany, Edith Stein was the eleventh child of a Jewish family. Initially she opted for atheism but gradually she came to realise she wished to become a catholic and was baptised on January 1st in 1922. She joined the Carmelites in Cologne in 1933 before moving to Holland to be with her sisters. She was arrested by the Germans in August 1942 and gassed in Auschwitz on August 9th. She was canonised by Pope John Paul in 1998. She left behind a legacy of deeply spiritual writings which reflected her own deep faith and wish to identify her life with that of the suffering Christ.

 

Wednesday 10th August:          Feast of St. Lawrence

Deacon Lawrence is one of the most heroic of the age of martyrs. He was a Spaniard called from Toledo to Rome. In 258, the Emperor Valerian began a fierce persecution of the Church. He had the Pope put to death. Lawrence was one of the Pope’s chief executives and had charge of the Church’s property. Knowing this would be confiscated by the Emperor, and that he himself would probably be captured and put to death, he devised a plan to distribute all the Church’s wealth to the poor of Rome. As a result, he was sentenced to a particularly cruel death being burned on a gridiron. His basilica is one of the seven major churches of Rome.

 

Friday 11th August:        Memorial of St. Clare.

Clare was born into an aristocratic family in 1193 and was a life long friend of St. Francis of Assisi. They possessed the same love of Christ and commitment to poverty. After receiving the habit from St. Francis, St. Clare founded the first convent of Franciscan (Poor Clare) nuns at San Damiano. Her mother and sister were among those who formed this first community. She ruled her community for forty years until her death in 1253.

 

Saturday 12th August:   Saturday in the 18th week of the year.

          We pick up the first reading from the Book of Deuteronomy. Moses reminds the people that their first duty is to honour and love God.

Jesus reminds his followers that to be a true follower you must have a strong faith. If you have real faith nothing will be impossible.

 

 

Lord our God,

By the power of Jesus our Transfigured Lord,

You call us to transform the world in which we live and move and have our being in the image of Jesus your Son.

Commit us to Justice and Love

That we might play our part in transforming this harsh and cold world

Into a sign and token

That you are with us.

We ask this through

Christ our Lord.

Amen.