Preview Mode Links will not work in preview mode

The BreadCast


Daily Exposition of the Readings for Catholic Mass...

as well as Prayers to the Saints on the General Roman Calendar (for the U.S.).  

From the books Our Daily Bread and Prayers to the Saints by James H. Kurt - both with imprimatur.

Sep 21, 2022

(Ec.1:2-11;   Ps.90:1,3-6,12-14,17;   Lk.9:7-9)

 

“See, this is new!”

 

Here is He who is “new under the sun.”  For it is not so that “John has been raised from the dead,” nor that “one of the prophets of old has arisen”: He has not “already existed in the ages that preceded us.”  He is the Christ! He is the Messiah!  He it is who has come to “fill us at daybreak with [His] kindness, that we may shout for joy and gladness all our days.”  In Him the dark of the night veiling our eyes is banished from our midst.

O Herod, drowning in your debauchery; O Qoheleth, pursuer of your passions in all their vanity, why do you race to catch up with the sun as if it should stand and wait for you?  What makes you think you could hold the wind in your hand?  Why would you see end of the rivers’ path to the sea?  Why do you toil so blindly, taking your refuge in created things and frustrated when you cannot control them to your own ends, when they betray the peace you seek?  “Back to dust” you shall indeed return, and the sun and the wind and the sea still stand; and above them all does reign our God, for whom “a thousand years… are as yesterday, now that it is past.”  In Him you should have taken refuge.

Herod, do you too now begin to see the ends of your debauchery; does its emptiness now overtake your soul?  Do you remember the words the prophet delivered to your ears?  What is the cause of your curiosity, and will you listen now to the voice echoing through your halls?  The kingdom of the world crumbles before our eyes and no “profit has man from all the labor which he toils at under the sun,” unless it is the Lord who “prosper[s] the work of our hands for us.”  Dead we are and alone will ever be in our profligacy, the emptiness upon us.

Qoheleth, your words are proven wrong: it is not so that “there is no remembrance of the man of old,” for we read your thoughts with diligence today; and three thousand years after your time you teach us still of the dark vision of life without the Christ.  And of Him who has come after thee there is great remembrance, and more than this, for His breath is now upon us.  In Him is “the ear filled with hearing” and the eye “satisfied with seeing,” for now truth and light do walk with us, even under the sun.  And though our body “by evening wilts and fades” as of old, our soul “at dawn springs up anew.” For “the gracious care of the Lord [is] ours” and He “teach[es] us to number our days aright, that we may gain wisdom of heart.”  And this wisdom is true; this wisdom is new: this wisdom bears us light to transcend the vanity of a worldly life and come to the kingdom of heaven. 

 

*******

O LORD, your Son is He who makes all things new –  

let us live and work in the light of His presence. 

YHWH, your Son is new under the sun; into our midst He has come.  May we be more than anxious to see Him: may we be made new in Him. 

In days past, LORD, the world and men toiled in futility for their sin against you, for their separation from you.  You were ever new and ever calling us to life in you, but we labored in vain, going our own way – the way of darkness that leads to death, the way that is indeed apart from you.  Return all souls to your light, your life, known to us now in your only Son. 

You reign over all, LORD our God, all of time is but a moment to you and all the world is as a speck of dust.  Have pity on us, LORD, for we are quick to wilt and fade.  At daybreak may we rise with Jesus and walk in the light of your new day, dwelling forever in your reign, living and working always in your presence.