Reflection for Wednesday, August 4, 2004: 18th week in Ordinary Time.

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Authors

Kuhlman, Mary Haynes

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2004-08-04

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Essay

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en_US

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Abstract

Today's readings promise that God hears us. The first reading and the song from Jeremiah promise that "with age old love I have loved you... again I will restore (or 'build') you" and claim "The Lord will guard us." Then we have this nice story from Matthew of the persistent foreign woman who wore our Lord down until he finally said, "O woman, great is your faith," and healed her daughter.|We all pray our prayers of petition: "Cure this illness. Help me do this. Make my car start, the storm pass, the decision come my way." We want favors, we want comfort, we want miracles. During the Cold War era of the 1950's, my mother prayed devoutly for "the conversion of Russia," and within 20 years after her death, the "Evil Empire" of the Soviet Union collapsed. Yet the economic and social situations in Russia and other nations of the former USSR are surely not models of fully "converted" societies today_- nor do we see perfection in any nation. We are always praying for "peace in the world." We persist in asking for the miracle, the healing.|In fact, Jesus taught us to ask for miracles, teaching us to pray "Our Father ... Thy Kingdom come.... Give us this day our daily bread ... Deliver us from evil." Look at the newspaper, turn on CNN: we haven't exactly been delivered from evil, have we? Yet this Canaanite woman's story encourages us to keep praying. After all, it's only 20 centuries, a tiny bit of time in this planet's history, since Jesus taught us to pray. We might as well persist a while longer! |I'm on the phone list of a "prayer line" in my parish. Every week I get and pass along a list of requests for specific prayers. We pray for such needs as cures of diseases, jobs for the unemployed, successful pregnancies, easeful deaths for the dying, comfort for grieving families, support for our nation's armed services. I believe that our prayers benefit the people we pray for. I know that praying for these people benefits me. |Today is the feast day of St. John Vianney, the "Cure of Ars" (meaning the parish priest of the village of Ars in France), the patron saint of priests. He was famous for his faith, love, prayer and sacrifices, and huge numbers of people came from all over the world to have him hear their confessions. Remembering his example, let us pray today for the needs of our priests, and of all men and women who minister to their fellow Christians, teaching them to persist in prayer for the world's healing as Jesus did, "Thy Kingdom Come."

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University Ministry, Creighton University.

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These reflections may not be sold or used commercially without permission. Personal or parish use is permitted.

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Lectionary number: 409

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