Tuesday of the Twelfth Week in Ordinary Time

These holy words can stir the soul. They can fill us with reverential fear. Some of us may ignore or rationalize them, but we do so at our own serious risk. For the person who has fallen into the slavery of addiction, Jesus’ words about the “narrow path” give us the holy fear with the power to change and save our lives. His words bring freedom and hope. When we asked God in prayer to show us the way, He answered us and pointed out “the road that leads to life.”

Yet, this is not the wide, broad, and easy road that the world invites us to travel. Lost to our addiction and unhealthy attachments, we were on that path but Jesus tells us where this leads: destruction. Our path is the narrow path of sobriety, faithfulness, and right living. To walk that path well, we can study the best the Church has to offer—the lives of the holy saints who traveled the narrow way to heaven. In recovery terms, we can “stick with the winners” of our holy Catholic saints.

As we embrace this hard truth with a spirit of trust in God, our childish fears will fade away and we will be grateful that we have been called to the narrow way of holiness and recovery. And as we make progress on that path, we can call others to join us so that we all may do as today’s Responsorial Psalm invites us to do—live forever “in the presence of the Lord.”

 

Reflection Questions

  • What was life like when you followed the wide and broad path of addiction that leads to destruction?
  • Do Jesus’ words that few find the path leading to life cause you to fear? How can you reconcile this with the loving mercy and generosity of God?

 

Daily Mass Readings

First Reading: 2 Kings 19:9B-11, 14-21, 31-35A, 36
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 48:2-3AB, 3CD-4, 10-11
Gospel: Matthew 7:6, 12-14

Reflection by Bill B.