Decisive Moments: A Morning Meditation (Mark 2:13-17)

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“As he passed by, he saw Levi sitting at the customs post. Jesus said to him, ‘Follow me.'” (Mark 2:13)

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The Greeks have two different understandings of time: there’s chronos and kairos.

Chronos is the type of time we’re all familiar with. It counts days and hours like tick tock on a clock.

Kairos means something different. It’s a decisive moment, one that changes the course of a person’s history.

Think of the moment a young man kneels down to propose to his girlfriend. That’s a different type of time; it’s a decisive moment. 

Regardless of her answer, his life will change.

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Think of the Gospel like a kairos moment. 

Jesus passes by Levi, inviting him to become his disciple.

It’s a decisive moment, one that demands courage and sacrifice.

Thankfully, Levi leaves everything behind – his job, his home, his life – and becomes the Apostle Matthew.

That day his life – and even ours – changed. Because of him we have Matthew’s Gospel.

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Perhaps one of us is on the verge of a kairos moment:

Becoming sober for the first time; making a faith-based career change; ending a relationship that only brings us down; turning to faith in the face of grief.

Like Matthew, let’s pray we make the right decision, choosing to follow Jesus.

Sharing Good News: A Morning Meditation (Mark 1:40-45)

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“He spread the report abroad so that it was impossible for Jesus to enter a town openly” (Mark 1:44).

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One of the best days of my life was the day I was ordained a priest. 

I remember people taking hundreds of pictures with their iPhones. It was such a special occasion that everyone wanted to be a part of it.

I felt like you may have felt on your wedding day, the day when you held your first child, or another day that changed your life.

When exciting things like that happen, we have to share the experience and the pictures with others. 

It’s simply part of being human.

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That’s how this man felt about Jesus.

Jesus changed his life; he cured his leprosy! 

He couldn’t help but shout the name Jesus from his rooftop. As the Gospel tells us, he told so many people that Jesus couldn’t enter a town without being bombarded.

Have we had that same type experience with Jesus? Does the Lord drive us to excitement? 

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Or are we more casual, lukewarm in our faith?

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Joyful moments must be shared. And what better news is there than the friendship and salvation offered in Jesus Christ?

Like the leper who was healed, that’s news we should share joyfully with others today.

Slow to Judge. A Morning Meditation (Mark 1:21-28).

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“In their synagogue was a man with an unclean spirit. He cried out, ‘What have you to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth?'” (Mark 1:23).

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The synagogue was a holy place.

Why, then, is there a man with an unclean spirit present???

He seems wildly out of place.

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Or is he?

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We shouldn’t be quick to judge.

Perhaps he was conflicted.

Both a believer and a sinner, a man in need of grace. 

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Are we any different? 

Our bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit, Saint Paul says. They’re holy, much like the synagogue was.

Yet how many of us need something unclean cast out of us â€“ jealousy, greed, lust, fear, a residual grudge?

As someone once put it, “The greatest sin is thinking you have none.”

Like that man in the Gospel, there’s likely both good and evil, love and sin, at work within us.

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May the same Lord who set this poor man free drive out from us whatever is displeasing to him, so that so that we may love and serve with ever greater freedom.