Thirteenth Week of the Year, June 29 – July 4, 2009

Monday, June 29

The Solemnity of Sts. Peter and Paul, Apostles

 

Meditation:

Readings: Acts of the Apostles 12, 1-11; 2Timothy 4.6-8,17-18; Matthew 16.13-19

 

This feast's significance is important for those who are intent upon the path of contemplative prayer.  At the heart of our union with Christ is our union with the Church.  You cannot separate what some call the institutional church from the spiritual, mystical reality of union with God in Christ.

 

We cannot enter into union with Christ in his word and sacrament, indeed we would never have had contact with Him unless it was through those who have borne witness to Christ and the Kingdom.  The witness of the Spirit to Christ is carried in the preaching of the Word and the administration of the Sacraments.  The “Handing On,” Tradition, with a capital "T" is entrusted to the apostles and after them, to their successors, the bishops in communion with the Pope.  In this way, Peter and Paul stand as the great instruments of this work of salvation and deification accomplished in grace, in faith, hope and love. 

 

Peter and Paul would not be here in this 21st century if Christ had not been incarnate among us and chosen them.  It is true to say that Christ would not be now in the Spirit present to us leading us into the Father if it were not for Peter and Paul and their fidelity to their mission.  The mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God and the manifestation of the Church, the Bride of Christ, His Mystical Body, are of one divine reality.  This is the plan of our redemption.  Christ is present to the world through the witness of his Apostles, as Church.

 

As the Word is incarnate in flesh, in the particularity of the Man, Jesus, so the mystery of Christ in the Spirit is incarnate in the particularity of the Church, and in its fullness, in the Catholic Church, gathered in communion with the successor of Peter, the Holy Father, the Pope.

 

Peter's own personal spirituality, his union with God, is manifested in his confession of faith in the Gospel Reading.  You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God.  But in the mystery of the Church with its gift of hierarchy, that grace becomes ecclesiastical mission.  For my part I declare to you, you are "Rock," and on this rock I will build my Church, and the jaws of death shall not prevail against it.  I will entrust to you the keys of the kingdom of heaven."

 

Jesus is identified with each and every one baptized in him and in his Spirit, but to one is given the keys and upon one is designated the rock upon which the unity and indefectibility of the Church is founded.  That one is St. Peter.  His ministry continues now through the Pope.

 

What has this to do with my spirit, with my heart's longing for union with God?  It has to do with the foundation of our life in Christ.  The body needs the structure of the bones to hold its vital organs and to give mobility.  The structure exists that the vital organs sustain life.  Being creatures who must know to love, who must proclaim the truth out of love, who come to God through His Revelation, we must have the structure of the teaching authority to hand on the Great Teaching that is the Truth and to maintain the unity of Christ's Body.  The structure serves the heart which is the Spirit making alive within us and to the world, the Presence of the Father in his glorified Son.

 

When we oppose the guiding light of the Teaching Authority then we have error, factions, and schism.  It is painful to see those, who see themselves as spiritual, in opposition to the Church and disobedient to the ecclesial authority.  Christ who was obedient unto death cannot be found in that condition.  The Spirit who enlightens the Word cannot be in contradiction with Word.

 

When those in the Teaching Authority ministry neglect the spiritual life we see a weakened presence of authority, a self-serving authority as was evidenced in the recent scandals of the clergy.

 

What is solemnly celebrated today in the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul is the manifestation of holiness with the gift of Apostolic Authority.  The Lord will continue to rescue me from all attempts to do me harm and will bring me safe to his heavenly kingdom.  To him be glory forever and ever.  Amen (Second Reading).

 

The Church is called in the Letter to the Ephesians, "the fullness of Him who fills all things."  It is the one Spirit and the one Lord who fills the Church and who seek to transform me into the image of Christ.  My surrender must be to those two aspects of the one Mystery of Christ, the spiritual and the visible authority.

 

Ultimately we are centered into the Father with Christ in the Spirit.  That is the heart of our contemplative prayer founded on the Rock of the Church.  Blest are you, Simon son of John!  Flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my heavenly Father (Gospel Reading).

 

Tuesday

Matthew 8.23-27

My prayer many times is about my fears and my lack of faith in the power of Jesus to conquer that which that would destroy me.  In my prayer I hear Christ’s rebuke, “O one of little faith, why do you fear?”  I fear because I hold myself as the source of my rescue.  I fear because I do not allow myself to experience the presence and work of Christ.  Then again, much of my prayer is looking into the face of Jesus and asking what sort of man is this that even the seas and winds obey him?  My prayer is about sinking into the divinity of Jesus and going in the Spirit with the Son into the Father within the mystery of the Trinity.  I must learn to leave aside even the question, “What sort of man is this?”  I must go beyond the questions and answers and dwell simply in the state of being in Christ, seeing with the eyes of Christ, loving with the heart of Christ.  I must dwell here in these deep levels of my silence in prayer.  I receive the wordless testimony of the Spirit of Christ within me, crying: “Abba Father,” “Come to the Father.”

 

Wednesday

Matthew 8.28-34

The demoniacs who came out to meet Jesus were so fierce that no one could pass by them.  How far from that picture is the peace and repose of a believer in silent prayer enfolded in the divine Presence.  People should feel safe passing by such a person in prayer with the fruits of that prayer wafting out into the spiritual environment.  Each time I pray I share in the exorcism of the world, starting with myself.  The demons cry out that they were being "tormented before the time."  "The time" that demons refer to, is the time of Christ, the full reign of God among all people and all creation through the manifested glory of Christ.  Before that fullness of time comes, there is the gradual expulsion of the demons that dominate aspects of creation.  The demons come out of the possessed and rush into the swine, into the sea.  The sea’s depths represent the darkness of the outer kingdom.  Jesus, my prayer is not separated from your work to establish the Kingdom of the Father.

 

Thursday

Matthew 9.1-8

One of the struggles in my prayer is that I want to cling to my sins.  Not that I would want to repeat them.  But rather that the sorrow over them and the regret cling to me.  It is a form of self-reliance.  I cannot get over the fact that I could sin or that I could fail in important matters.  To be in grace is to be in seminal innocence restored.  God in his forgiveness does not remember my particular sins anymore.  The words of Jesus have a creative power.  If the sea and the wind obey his word, and if the paralytic takes up his mat and walks, the state of our troubled souls obey him equally.  “Have courage.  Son, daughter, your sins are forgiven.”  My life of prayer is sustained by the sacramental absolution of the Church in Reconciliation-Penance.  The Church is in constant praise that such power remains with men so ordained.  The faith of the Church carries me on my mat into the presence of the forgiving Lord.  The faith and hope of my prayer open the flood gates of forgiving mercy.  My prayer is to rest in the total and absolute forgiveness of Christ.  All that the Lord does is total and absolute.  Rest in that.

 

Friday

Matthew 9.9-13

Prayer is my contact with Jesus, the physician of my soul.  He is the one who heals the distorted, wounded, diseased condition of my person.  He is the one who summons from the depths of my being the goodness, the truth, the beauty, the resiliency of nature created in his image and likeness.  The summons and empowering flow from the gift of grace.  Grace means the power of Christ's resurrection made present by the Holy Spirit given by the Father.  Jesus calls me to prayer like he called Matthew to follow him.  Immediately I will respond to every invitation to pray.  I will enter prayer with my being open to all that God will do for me.  God thirsts to fill me with his knowledge and love.  He is intent on filling me with the bliss and blessedness of union.  I come to the banquet as well as to the healing.

 

Saturday

Matthew 9.14-17

The disciples of John bring up religious observance and practice of particular followers.  Jesus goes beyond the details of practices.  He talks of wedding guests and bridegrooms, the patching of garments, the pouring of new wine into skins.  There is where I will dwell in my prayer.  My life with God is like being at a wedding feast, with the bride and the groom.  I will gladly patch my garments with the old rags that God provides.  I will fill my wineskins with the new wine of God's Kingdom.  Soon enough will I fast when in my prayer I experience the Absence more than the Presence.  Either way God comes to me.  I am ready to greet the Bridegroom in whatever form He comes.

 

--William Fredrickson, Obl.OSB, D.Min.