THE TRUTH OF THE KINGDOM
IS TO MAKE THE KINGDOM TRUE
To
say that St. Thomas Aquinas, whose feast we celebrate today,was an
intellectual giant is an understatement. His vast works in almost all
areas of theology and beyond is more than enough to fill a library. But
more than an intellectual, he was a mystic. He wrote on theology not
because he had to write to earn his keep. His works were the fruit of
his rich interior life.
This
reminds me of what Archbishop Whatley once said: “Preach not because
you have to say something but because you have something to say.” There
are professional preachers — they have to say something, otherwise they
will grow hungry as preaching is their livelihood. There are, however, de facto preachers.
They preach because they have (read: they possess) something to say.
They possess the treasure, the Pearl of Great Price. They cannot hold it
in. Their lives simply proclaim
it.
When Jesus ordered Christians to “proclaim that the Kingdom of heaven has
come near,” it was not simply an academic task of explaining the truth
of the Kingdom, although it certainly contains an aspect of it. Rather,
it is visibly making the Kingdom true in their lives. And what is that
Kingdom? It is making the Apostles’ presence a living presence of God to
others. And this is the best kind of evangelization we need nowadays.
We can claim that we are all apt to partake of the same mission and be
His Apostles.
To be an apostle and sent into mission is simply to let the people acknowledge
that God is really true, that He is loving, compassionate, forgiving,
understanding, and that He is never far from those who call on Him. God
does not require us to make ordinary things extraordinary to make His
presence known. What He asks from us is only to make the extraordinary
things ordinary in our own little ways every day. That way, we can be
effective apostles or “proclaimers” in today’s time. You don’t even have
to speak. Fr.
Joel Jason
REFLECTION
QUESTION: Think about this line: “What you do speaks so loud, I cannot
hear what you are saying.” Is your “doing” aligned with your “saying”?
Lord
Jesus, give us the grace to overcome selfish desires that block us from
being more like You. Help us that, by our presence, others may see that
Your Kingdom has really come near. Amen.
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DIDACHE (dee-da-ke), the Greek word for teaching. It wishes to encourage the use of Sacred Scriptures among Catholics. It also wishes to reach the entire Christian people.
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