Monday, July 29, 2013

8/1/2013 – Thursday of 17th week in Ordinary Time - St Alphonsus Liguori – Matthew 13:47-53

       I love the imagery we have in our Gospel reading, about a fishing net full of all kinds of fish, in which the fisherman sorts out the good from the bad.  This image is compared to our eternal life, when the righteous will be separated from the wicked.  And what we value here on earth and judge to be worthy might be very different from the criteria God uses.  In Ecuador, we used to eat this fish that had a very tough skin on it and that had to be smoked over a wooden fire and marinated for several days before it could be cooked and eaten.  It was the shredded and when it was served the consistency was similar to pulled pork.  It was not until the end of my time in Ecuador that I realized that I was eating stingray.  It was once considered a junk fish by the people, more often thrown out than eaten, but it later became a prized delicacy.  
         There are only 35 Doctors of the Church, valued for their writings and their enduring contributions to the development of our faith.  Today, we celebrate another Doctor of the Church: St Alphonsus Liguori,  the founder of the Redemptorists, an influential men’s religious congregation in the Catholic Church.  Liguori lived in the 18th century.  His greatest contribution to the faith is his system of moral theology, which avoided both laxity and strict legalism.  He tried to form a system of moral theology that provided a practical way of dealing with the moral issues that we human beings face in our daily lives.  This is one quote I particularly like of his: “He who puts his trust in himself is lost.  He who trusts in God can do all things.”

         As we place our trust in God, as we make decisions big and small to follow the values of our faith in our daily lives, may we strive toward the path of righteousness.

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