REJOICING IN THE FULL MEASURE
OF GOD’S GRACE
Our
 opening prayer asks God to “bring us to rejoice in the full measure of 
[His] grace.” We humans love to give in half measures. When we play, we 
wouldn’t even give an inch to our opponent. We weigh. We calculate what 
we give and count the potential returns of our largesse. But we expect 
God, and ask God, to bring us to rejoicing to the full.
 
       I heard about the story of a Protestant couple who risked their 
lives to help Catholic victims during the Second World War in Poland. 
When the couple also died, the people asked their pastor if they could 
be buried in the Catholic cemetery. The pastor refused. So, out of 
obedience, they buried the couple closest to the boundaries of the 
Catholic cemetery, near the fence. During the night, the people went 
back to the cemetery and did something unthinkable. They moved the fence
 to include the lovely and lovable couple within the confines of the 
Catholic cemetery.
      
 Peter was facing a brewing controversy. Believers who were not 
originally Jewish were getting cozy with observant Jews. They complained
 to Peter. Peter patiently taught them and convinced them to allow the 
non- Jewish converts to also rejoice in the full measure of God’s grace,
 without bias, without borders, without resentment.
 
       We humans can be too focused on doing the right things but miss 
out on the need to do them rightly. Last year, Pope Francis surprised us
 with a fresh wisp of pastoral charity. He alluded, in Evangelii 
Gaudium, to what he calls “diagnostic overload,” which to my mind means 
remaining in the state of paralysis (or inaction) due to endless 
analysis.
 
        Come on, fellow believer. “Athirst is my soul for the living 
God.” And so is everyone else. All men and women are called to the 
glorious liberty of God’s children. Who are we to deny that “God has granted life-giving repentance to the Gentiles too?” Fr. Chito Dimaranan, SDB
REFLECTION QUESTION: Do you often hold back in doing things right by the need to follow prescribed rules?
Grant me wisdom, Lord, to know how to do things rightly in every situation I find myself in.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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