
Sometimes there are no words but His:


“Who else?” He replied
The priest we have when we go to the cabin always has a funny story or joke. This weekend was no different. Our large family took up an entire pew at this little church and we tried hard not to be a spectacle, but completely failed. It seems it is inevitable that we get stares and do some entertaining during mass. Not in a disrespectful way but just naturally by having so many children. It seems it should be the one place where we shouldn’t get stares for having a large family. Unfortunately there are not a lot of young families at mass. I wonder if God is asking these missing families, “Do you love me?” I wonder if he is asking the families that are there, “Do you love me enough to share me with others?” What if we told people about the love Jesus has for them? If they really understood I don’t think they could stay away, even if they have a gaggle of children to tend to during mass.
I love the rosary almost as much as I love the mass. It gives me a peace that can only be from Jesus. However, I have always struggled with the mystery of the ascension. Why would Jesus leave? I’m sure the apostles struggled with this too. They must have felt abandoned, lonely, confused, and maybe even unloved. We heard this past Sunday from the gospel of John chapter 14 verse 28; “If you loved me you would rejoice that I am going to the Father; for the father is greater than I.” We are reminded in this to love Jesus. To rejoice in the fact that He is ascending to heaven. The very place He died to open for us. He has gone to be there with His father who is The Almighty. There is no question about His love for us. He even asks his father to send us an advocate, the Holy Spirit, so that we can be reminded of Jesus’ love for us and not use the fleeting feelings we as humans experience as an excuse to forget what He has taught us.
His love for us cannot be denied, it is our love for Him that falters. So as we prepare to celebrate Pentecost, the great gift of the Holy Spirit, in just a couple of weeks I will be praying;
“Come Holy Spirit fill me with your love so I can trust in You. So I can spread your love to others and encourage them boldly to love you back. So we are all strengthened by your love and have no choice but to live in it and share it.”
Love: to will the good of others. It is easy to love those who love us, who are kind to us, who help us, or do things for us. We aren’t asked to do only what is easy though we are told to love our enemies.
Who are our enemies?
People who are out to physically harm us? Yes. However loving them doesn’t mean allowing them to hurt us. It means wanting justice for them. Loving them means wanting them to be healed of their cruelty and set free from it. We are to move past our anger and desire what is best for that person. This is not to say we need to continue a relationship with them. We do need to look out for our safety and protect ourselves from harm.
For the average person the “enemy” might be people in our lives that irritate us. We are called not to just be kind but to love them. They maybe people we have to interact with on a daily basis; co-workers, neighbors, family members. They may make our blood boil and our emotions erupt with anger but we are called to love them. Actually it doesn’t end there. The passage goes on to say “… and do good for them.”
So not only do we have to want good for them we are told to do good for them. It is easy to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, shelter the homeless when you don’t know them. What if I knew their political views and their sins before I scooped a warm heap of hot dish onto their plate? What if I knew how they treated their children before I handed over handmade blankets to their shivering bodies? It clearly doesn’t matter we are called to love and act.
It seems to me this is what the command love your enemies is getting at, there are no if, ands, or buts. God calls us to: “Love your enemies and do good for them.” Luke 6:35
Photo from pixabay.com Bible verse from New American Bible Standard Edition 1970

My husband and I are always looking for ways to get our kids to learn about their faith, read the bible, and to pray. They all seem to have a decent start. The little ones love to hear bible stories and talk about Jesus and pray for their friends. The older ones enjoy our nightly prayers and hearing bible stories too but they are at the age where they really need to make it their own. They have to want it. We struggle or at least I do wondering if I’m doing enough or maybe pushing too hard.
I have bought them copies of the YouCat (Youth Catechism), they each have a bible and there are many children’s versions all throughout our house, I send them colorful notes with scripture written on them, I even write scripture quotes on the bathroom mirror some days. We pray together daily, we read them bible stories, and we attend mass every Sunday. We are doing our doing our best to raise holy children but they are in a world that doesn’t always support their faith so daily we have to find the energy to fight for their souls. It can be exhausting. Sometimes we put so much of this pressure on ourselves we forget that God can not only help us but that He is in charge. God wants to help us get our children to heaven one day.
Getting overwhelmed with parenting six children happens here. I bring it to prayer often. During my prayer time last week I was reading the book of Tobit. It is a great story full of adventure! When I came to chapter 4 I paused and read it again. It is titled “A Father’s Instruction” because it is Tobit’s instruction for his son Tobiah. As with much of the bible it is also instruction for the reader from our heavenly Father. I thought it would be a great read for my older kids. I tucked it away in my mind and moved on with the days activities.
That night after bedtime prayers I mentioned to my older kids to read chapter 4 of Tobit because it was very much something we would want them to follow. I know at this moment many of you who are parents of teenagers are thinking something like, “your kids must be saints to actually go read the bible.” Trust me they are regular kids who do not always make the best decisions but this time they were left with just enough interest and a reason they didn’t have to go to bed immediately that they all went and read it. I did have to give some explanation; No we do not have money hidden in another town or country, No your father and I are not praying for death, and No you don’t need to marry someone in our family. However we could take that last one to mean it is best to marry someone with like values and religion as you. After those short caveats the chapter really made sense to them and is filled with Godly advice for their lives. I am so in awe of the Bible and how we can relate it to our lives today. What a gift to let me see it that way but also for my children to see it as relevant to their lives.
I love it when God is so clearly working in our parenting! It is a difficult job and we need Him as our guide. When we look we find Him helping us at every twist and turn. If it was just my husband and I doing this gig alone we would surely falter more than we already do. Thank God for all the gifts little and big that He sets before us, may we always see them clearly!
Here is Chapter 4 of Tobit from The New American Bible from http://www.USCCB.org:
A Father’s Instruction.1That same day Tobit remembered the money he had deposited in trust with Gabael at Rages in Media.2He thought to himself, “Now that I have asked for death, why should I not call my son Tobiah and let him know about this money before I die?”3So he called his son Tobiah; and when he came, he said to him:* “Son, when I die, give me a decent burial. Honor your mother, and do not abandon her as long as she lives. Do whatever pleases her, and do not grieve her spirit in any way.a4Remember, son, how she went through many dangers for you while you were in her womb. When she dies, bury her in the same grave with me.
5“Through all your days, son, keep the Lord in mind, and do not seek to sin or to transgress the commandments. Perform righteous deeds all the days of your life, and do not tread the paths of wickedness.6b For those who act with fidelity, all who practice righteousness, will prosper in their affairs.*
7“Give alms from your possessions. Do not turn your face away from any of the poor, so that God’s face will not be turned away from you.c8Give in proportion to what you own. If you have great wealth, give alms out of your abundance; if you have but little, do not be afraid to give alms even of that little.9You will be storing up a goodly treasure for yourself against the day of adversity.d10For almsgiving delivers from death and keeps one from entering into Darkness.11Almsgiving is a worthy offering in the sight of the Most High for all who practice it.e
12“Be on your guard, son, against every kind of fornication, and above all, marry a woman of your own ancestral family. Do not marry a foreign woman, one who is not of your father’s tribe, because we are descendants of the prophets, who were the first to speak the truth. Noah prophesied first, then Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, our ancestors from the beginning of time. Son, remember that all of them took wives from among their own kindred and were blessed in their children, and that their posterity would inherit the land.f13Therefore, son, love your kindred. Do not act arrogantly toward any of them, the sons and daughters of your people, by refusing to take a wife for yourself from among them. For in arrogance there is ruin and great instability. In idleness there is loss and dire poverty, for idleness is the mother of famine.
14“Do not keep with you overnight the wages of those who have worked for you, but pay them at once. If you serve God thus, you will receive your reward. Be on your guard, son, in everything you do; be wise in all that you say and discipline yourself in all your conduct.g15Do to no one what you yourself hate. Do not drink wine till you become drunk or let drunkenness accompany you on your way.h
16i “Give to the hungry some of your food, and to the naked some of your clothing. Whatever you have left over, give away as alms; and do not let your eye begrudge the alms that you give.17j Pour out your wine and your bread on the grave of the righteous, but do not share them with sinners.*
18“Seek counsel from every wise person, and do not think lightly of any useful advice.19k At all times bless the Lord, your God, and ask him that all your paths may be straight and all your endeavors and plans may prosper. For no other nation possesses good counsel, but it is the Lord who gives all good things. Whomever the Lord chooses to raise is raised; and whomever the Lord chooses to cast down is cast down to the recesses of Hades. So now, son, keep in mind these my commandments, and never let them be erased from your heart.
20“Now, I must tell you, son, that I have deposited in trust ten talents of silver with Gabael, the son of Gabri, at Rages in Media.21Do not fear, son, that we have lived in poverty. You will have great wealth, if you fear God, avoid all sin, and do what is good before the Lord your God.”l
* [4:3–19] A collection of maxims that parallel those in the wisdom literature, especially Proverbs and Sirach (see Introduction): duties toward parents (vv. 3–4; cf. also 14:13); perseverance in virtue and avoidance of evil (vv. 5–6, 14b); necessity and value of almsgiving and charity (vv. 7–11, 16–17); marriage within the clan (vv. 12–13a); industry (v. 13b); prompt payment of wages (v. 14a); the golden rule (v. 15a); temperance (v. 15b); docility (v. 18); prayer (v. 19).
* [4:6] It was commonly thought in the Old Testament that virtue guaranteed earthly prosperity, and sin earthly disaster (Prv 10:2; cf. Dt 28).
* [4:17] Tobit counsels his son to give alms in honor of the dead or, more probably, to give the “bread of consolation” to the family of the deceased. Cf. Jer 16:7; Ez 24:17.