DO NOT DESPAIR
Just
recently I talked to someone who told me the story of a couple who were
in their car at the time of super typhoon Yolanda. The winds were
dragging their car down the hill towards the creek. They would probably
have drowned had not a large mango tree fell onto the bonnet of their
new car and stopped it just in time. The couple praised God that their car had been
destroyed by a mango tree as it meant they were now safe. So much of
our attitude towards events can depend on our particular situation.
In the First Reading today, Paul tells us that even suffering can be
used for good. God is so powerful that He can take even negative
circumstances and turn them around if we have faith in Him. This is the mystery of suffering and what it means for our lives. If we have no faith in God, then suffering will be
a meaningless experience and probably a negative thing for us. However,
faith can transform and give new meaning to our painful experiences.
This is not to say that we are going to enjoy suffering. However, we
will
get some satisfaction from our suffering if we know and trust that God is using them
for something good. It is like having to undergo an operation in order
to save your life from a particular ailment. Through the pain comes
healing and a new opportunity for life. Let us meditate on
passages like this one to change our perspectives in life for the better. God does not want us to suffer uselessly and without reason.
In fact, He does not want us to suffer at all. However, sin creates
suffering to the point that we cannot avoid it. We need to accept
suffering when we
cannot avoid it, and pray that God will accept our offering of intercession for the sake of the Gospel. Fr. Steve Tynan, MGL
REFLECTION
QUESTION: Are you willing to endure suffering for the sake of others?
This is what Jesus did when He died on the cross for us.
Lord
Jesus, help me to embrace suffering in my life. Help me to always
remember to offer it to You, through Your cross, as intercession for the
work of the Gospel.
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