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Regular Posts Tagged ‘st john the baptist’
11 years, 10 months ago Posted in: Daily Scripture Reflections, Podcast, The Discerning Hearts Blog 0

For the hand of the Lord was with him

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an excerpt from today’s reflection by Don Schwager:

John the Baptist’s life was fueled by one burning passion – to point others to Jesus Christ and to the coming of God’s kingdom. tissot-the-voice-in-the-desScripture tells us that John was filled with the Holy Spirit even from his mother’s womb (Luke 1:15, 41) by Christ himself, whom Mary had just conceived by the Holy Spirit. When Mary visited her cousin Elizabeth, John lept in the womb of Elizabeth as they were filled with the Holy Spirit (Luke 1:41). The fire of the Spirit dwelt in John and made him the forerunner of the coming Messiah. John was led by the Spirit into the wilderness prior to his ministry where he was tested and grew in the word of God. John’s clothing was reminiscent of the prophet Elijah (see Kings 1:8). John broke the prophetic silence of the previous centuries when he began to speak the word of God to the people of Israel. His message was similar to the message of the Old Testament prophets who chided the people of God for their unfaithfulness and who tried to awaken true repentance in them. Among a people unconcerned with the things of God, it was his work to awaken their interest, unsettle them from their complacency, and arouse in them enough good will to recognize and receive Christ when he came.

What is the significance of John the Baptist and his message for our lives? When God acts to save us he graciously fills us with his Holy Spirit and makes our faith come “alive” to his promises. Each and every day the Lord is ready to renew us in faith, hope, and love. Like John the Baptist, the Lord invites each of us to make our life a free-will offering to God. God wants to fill us with his glory all the days of our lives, from birth through death. Renew the offering of your life to God and give him thanks for his mercy and favor towards you.

“Lord Jesus, you bring hope and salvation to a world lost in sin, despair, and suffering. Let your grace refresh and restore your people today in the hope and joy of your great victory over sin and death.”

for the full reflection visit : Daily Reading and Meditation


14 years, 8 months ago Posted in: Podcast, Saints, Spirit Morning Show, The Discerning Hearts Blog 0
Truly, I say to you, among those born of women there has risen no one greater than John the Baptist; yet he who is least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he. “
– Matthew 11:11 RSV
 
“John the Baptist is the only saint in the calendar (apart from St Joseph) who has two feasts to himself. One, in August, celebrates his death, and one, in June, celebrates his birth. And this is as it should be, for as Christ himself said, John was the greatest of the sons of men.
  The greatest, but also the most tragic. A prophet from before his birth, leaping in the womb to announce the coming of the incarnate God, his task was to proclaim the fulfilment of all prophecies – and thus his own obsolescence. And he did it: with unequalled courage he spread the news that he, the greatest of all men, was the least in the kingdom of heaven. His disciples, and the devil, would have preferred him to fight, to build his sect, to defeat this upstart whom he himself had baptized, to seize his place in history. But he did not – and so, rightly, he has his place, and he has glory in heaven.
  We envy the great and the talented, and sometimes we think that they themselves are beyond envy. But when they come across someone with greater gifts, as one day most of them will, they will see for the first time what it means to feel like us. Let us pray that they, like John the Baptist, may pass that test.”  See the article in the Catholic Encyclopaedia.
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The Martyrdom of John the Baptist is a nasty one.  To behead a man in payment for a dance?  It kind of makes you sick to your stomach, doesn’t it?  The heads of the seven deadly (cardinal) sins really show themselves in this incident:  pride (Herod, Herodias), envy (Herodias), anger (Herodias), lust (Herod’s for his dancing step-daughter, Salome), gluttony (Herod, the party goers, Herodias), sloth (Herod), greed (Herodias).  And yet, it is part of one of the greatest stories of the triumph of humility every told. 
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Indeed, the earthly body of John the Baptist was killed that day, but, of course, not his soul.  But I suspect something uglier occured that day long ago; the potential death of the souls of those who committed this act against him.  For in the case of John the Baptist, I don’t doubt for one second, that the same Holy Spirit that was with the child in the womb, was with the man at the moment of his death, anointing him with the same superabundance of God’s loving grace.
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Bruce and I spoke with Alexander J. Burke, Jr. about the life and witness of John the Baptist.