June 12, Saturday
Tenth Week in Ordinary Time
The celebration in honor of the Immaculate Heart of Mary is closely linked to the solemnity of the Sacred Heart, which it follows by one day. This is not by accident. When we honor the Sacred Heart of Jesus we simply celebrate our Lord’s great love which he showed by dying for us and which he continues to give us day after day. Mary was close to her Son, not only because she was his Mother but because she loves everyone for whom her Son lived, died, and rose from the dead. Her heart is large enough to include us all in her love. She is with us in our sorrows and joys.
First Reading: 2 Corinthians 5:14-21
That keeps us vigilant, you can be sure. It’s no light thing to know that we’ll all one day stand in that place of Judgment. That’s why we work urgently with everyone we meet to get them ready to face God. God alone knows how well we do this, but I hope you realize how much and deeply we care. We’re not saying this to make ourselves look good to you. We just thought it would make you feel good, proud even, that we’re on your side and not just nice to your face as so many people are. If I acted crazy, I did it for God; if I acted overly serious, I did it for you. Christ’s love has moved me to such extremes. His love has the first and last word in everything we do.
Our firm decision is to work from this focused centre: One man died for everyone. That puts everyone in the same boat. He included everyone in his death so that everyone could also be included in his life, a resurrection life, a far better life than people ever lived on their own.
Because of this decision we don’t evaluate people by what they have or how they look. We looked at the Messiah that way once and got it all wrong, as you know. We certainly don’t look at him that way anymore. Now we look inside, and what we see is that anyone united with the Messiah gets a fresh start, is created new. The old life is gone; a new life burgeons! Look at it! All this comes from the God who settled the relationship between us and him, and then called us to settle our relationships with each other. God put the world square with himself through the Messiah, giving the world a fresh start by offering forgiveness of sins. God has given us the task of telling everyone what he is doing. We’re Christ’s representatives. God uses us to persuade men and women to drop their differences and enter into God’s work of making things right between them. We’re speaking for Christ himself now: Become friends with God; he’s already a friend with you.
How? you ask. In Christ. God put the wrong on him who never did anything wrong, so we could be put right with God.
Gospel: Luke 2:41-51
They Found Him in the Temple
Every year Jesus’ parents travelled to Jerusalem for the Feast of Passover. When he was twelve years old, they went up as they always did for the Feast. When it was over and they left for home, the child Jesus stayed behind in Jerusalem, but his parents didn’t know it. Thinking he was somewhere in the company of pilgrims, they journeyed for a whole day and then began looking for him among relatives and neighbours. When they didn’t find him, they went back to Jerusalem looking for him.
The next day they found him in the Temple seated among the teachers, listening to them and asking questions. The teachers were all quite taken with him, impressed with the sharpness of his answers. But his parents were not impressed; they were upset and hurt.
His mother said, “Young man, why have you done this to us? Your father and I have been half out of our minds looking for you.”
He said, “Why were you looking for me? Didn’t you know that I had to be here, dealing with the things of my Father?” But they had no idea what he was talking about.
So he went back to Nazareth with them, and lived obediently with them. His mother held these things dearly, deep within herself. And Jesus matured, growing up in both body and spirit, blessed by both God and people.
Prayer
Lord our God,
we thank you for the love
with which you filled the heart of Mary,
the Mother of your Son and our mother.
In your great kindness, you have given her to us
to open our hearts to your word and to your love,
so that we can seek your will in all we do.
May she also let our hearts be touched
by the needs of people with sorrows and cares.
We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Reflection:
IMMACULATE HEART OF MARY
As in the shadow of the solemnity of the Heart of Jesus, the Church places the obligatory memory of the Immaculate Heart of Mary on the next day after the Feast of the Sacred Heart. Yes, really! it is important to remember and contemplate the Heart of Mary after having contemplated the meaning of the Heart of Jesus. Because, if the Word became flesh, and thus received a heart of flesh, Mary is that flesh of the Word, from whom the Word of the Eternal Father took his mortal flesh. Christians also have a lot to learn from the Heart of Mary. From the meek and humble Heart of Jesus, we receive the revelation of love. From the Heart of Mary we learn to accept and assimilate that love.
Mary is for us a teacher of Christian life. In her there was no resistance, her “fiat/yes” is complete and unconditional. But she had to go through that process of faith in which not everything was clear from the start. She too lost sight of Jesus, felt the anguish of a search that did not bear immediate fruit. the three days of searching, speaks in fact of the three days that Mary went through from death to resurrection. She too heard from Jesus things that were not clear to her … But, Instead of doing what we usually do – “interpreting” according to our best knowledge and understanding, trying to tame the Word – Mary “kept everything in her heart”, leaving with patience and trust, with true faith, the Word to mature, to penetrate to those depths of the soul in which a complete understanding is possible only in the fullness of time – the time designed by God himslef.
This is the humble heart, the open heart, the heart that loves, the heart of a mother, the Immaculate Heart of Mary. If we are to imitate Jesus, the meek and humble of heart, shall we not also imitate the one from whom that heart took its flesh?
Saint Anthony Mary Claret, a 19th-century Spanish missionary, was influential in propagating the devotion of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. He founded the Missionary Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, also known as the Claretian Missionaries. St. Claret composed the following prayer to Mary, which is inscribed in his chapel:
O Heart of Mary, furnace and instrument of love, enkindle me with love of God and my neighbour.
Video available on Youtube: IMMACULATE HEART OF MARY