Monday, March 31, 2014

Monday of the 3rd Week of Lent, Cycle A - March 24, 2014

Monday of the 3rd Week of Lent
March 24, 2014    8:30am

 

Part of the daily prayer that Saint Ignatius of Loyola recommends is called a Review.
Ignatius recommends that in our prayer, we look back to the previous day.
We ask ourselves: how did God come to me yesterday?
How did I experience the light and consolation of God?

It might have been in my prayer, where I sensed or felt very keenly Jesus’ closeness.
It could have been seeing the excitement of a child.
It could have been a phone call when I needed the caring of a friend.
It could have been a wise word, maybe even unintended from someone in a casual conversation.

Ignatius’ guidance is that God comes to us usually in very ordinary, not extraordinary ways, and it is important to identify these and be in touch with them.

Both of today’s readings lead me to recall this part of Saint Ignatius’ spiritual method.
In our first reading, it is a little girl – no one extraordinary – a little girl who has been captured in war who advises the army commander, the enemy of her people, where to go to be healed of his leprosy.
This general, Naaman, goes to the Prophet Elisha in Israel
Elisha tells him to do something very ordinary – wash seven times in the Jordan River. 
Naaman cannot believe that something so ordinary would do him any good.
But again, his servants – ordinary servants – advise him to do what Elisha says.
They reason: if Elisha had advised something extraordinary, he would do it.
Why not do something ordinary like bathe in the Jordan?

So ordinary persons and ordinary activity become the vehicle for healing and the message is that they are the vehicle for God coming to us.
They are the vehicle for experiencing the light and consolation of God in our lives.

It is valuable to be aware of these and to make this part of our daily prayer.