Friday 31 July 2015

A JUBILEE YEAR

PRAYER MOMENT  


Saturday 1 August 2015, St Alphonsus


A JUBILEE YEAR


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “The fiftieth year is to be a jubilee year for you: you will not sow, you will not harvest the the ungathered corn, you will not gather from the untrimmed vine.” (Leviticus 23:8-17)


Reflection. We are familiar with jubilees as years years of celebrating 25, 50 or even 60 years of marriage and other significant events. The original idea was to give the land a rest and to give our quarrels a rest. The call was to get back into harmony with nature, with one another and with God. This is topical for it is the kernel of the of Pope Francis’ letter on the environment, Laudato Si. He writes, “There is a growing awareness that science and technological progress cannot be equated with the progress of humanity and history, a growing sense that the way to the future lies elsewhere.” #113


Prayer. Lord, help us all to shoulder the task of creating a more friendly earth – one that will sustain all of us not just some of us and not just for now but for generations to come. Amen
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  



















Thursday 30 July 2015

THE GLORY OF GOD

PRAYER MOMENT  


Friday 31 July 2015, St Ignatius of Loyola


THE GLORY OF GOD


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “Whatever you eat, then, or drink, and whatever ekse you do, do it all for the glory of God.” (1 Cor. 10:31-11:1)


Reflection. I remember a phrase of a fellow Jesuit about Ignatius, the founder of our Society of Jesus, that “he was so total.” He was talking about the Spiritual Exercises that Ignatius wrote to help people find their way through the whirl of experinces life presents to us, but he also meant it as a comment on the whole of Ignatius’ own life. Ignatius often spoke of “finding God in all things.” It is a constant attitude we take to life, nourished by prayer, which comes to view literaly everything – work, rest, sickness, health, wealth, poverty, relationships, solitude – in the light of God and seeing him present and calling to us in the midst of all these things.

Prayer. Lord, help us to pause and find you both in the beauty of what attracts us and also in the obstacle that repels us. Amen
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  



















Wednesday 29 July 2015

THE CLOUD

PRAYER MOMENT  


Thursday 30 July 2015


THE CLOUD


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “At every stage of their journey, whenever the cloud rose from the tabernacle the sons of Israel would resume their march. If the cloud did not rise, they waited...” (Exodus 40:34-38)


Reflection. Our exerpts from Exodus close with an elaborate description of the construction of the Ark of the Covenant and we are told that the “cloud rested on it and the glory of the Lord filled it.” As always, we reflect on the meaning of these “signs” which are themselves prophecies that there will be a “new covenant in my body” and “my Fatrher and I will dwell in you.” The cloud remains in that the mystery we live is often hidden from us. We are wise when we make no important decisions until the cloud lifts and we can see our way more clearly.  


Prayer. Lord, help us to be sensitive to your presence and wait for you. Amen
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Tuesday 28 July 2015

THE ONE WHO WAS TO COME

PRAYER MOMENT  


Wednesday 29 July 2015, St Martha


THE ONE WHO WAS TO COME


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “Yes, Lord,” Martha said, “I believe that you are the Christ, the Son of God. The one who was to come nto the world.” (John11:19-27)


Reflection. Martha lives in the shadow of her sister Mary for whom she is a foil, one whose choice shows up that Mary had chosen “the better part.” Yet Martha is the one who provokes the great response from Jesus which is often read at funerals: “I am the resurrection. Anyone who believes in me will never die.” Martha searches for consolation as she mourns her brother, Lazarus, and she draws these challenging words from Jesus who asks her if she believes. The Jews found it so hard to believe that he – the one who shared our sorrows and bore our sufferings - was the one who was to come, that he was the Messiah. But Martha did and so do we.


Prayer. Lord, help us to believe that you are the “one who has come” to fulfil all our longings. Help us to turn to you who raise our thoughts beyond what we see and experience.. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Monday 27 July 2015

FACE TO FACE

PRAYER MOMENT  


Tuesday 28 July 2015


FACE TO FACE


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “The Lord would speak with Moses face to face, as a man speaks with his friend. … A God of tenderness and compassion, slow to anger, rich in kindness and faithfulness.” (Exodus 33:7…34:9)


Reflection. The Lord formed his people in the desert to prepare them for their destiny as precursors of the intimate relationship to which he calls everyone. His relationship with Moses – speaking to him face to face - was unique at that time but it is now open to everyone though it is not to be treated lightly. The description of God as full of “tenderness and compassion” may have not meant much to most of the people but Jesus put flesh on these qualities. As we read the gospels we realise they are a revelation of the compassion of God’ shown to the poor, to sinners and outcasts. We recognise within ourselves this battle between reaching out to others and looking only at ourselves and our own problems and plans.


Prayer. Lord, help us to to know you, to love you and follow you in reaching out to others who suffer so much from the inequalities in out world. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Sunday 26 July 2015

A GOLDEN CALF

PRAYER MOMENT  


Monday 27 July 2015


A GOLDEN CALF


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “Make us a god to go at our head; this Moses, the man who brought us up from Egypt, we do not know what has become of him.” (Exodus 32:15…34)


Reflection. The complaints of the people in the desert grew to such a crescendo that they eventually rejected God and his servant Moses. It is a moment of high drama when the whole plan of God is thrown into jeopardy. With a burst of anger Moses steadies the situation and retrieves the relationship but it was a moment seared into the memory of Israel and stands for those countless moments of rejection, partial or complete, that have continued in our relationship with God through the ages.We know how easy it is to fashion “golden calves” as when we  put something else – career, money, status, - any turning away from having God at the centre of our lives. The news is full of choices  that fall short of the truth and we know the find the same struggle in our own hearts.


Prayer. Lord, help us to notice when we are making golden calves in our lives and give us the courage to react. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Saturday 25 July 2015

A LITTLE BREAD

A LITTLE BREAD
I live in Zambia and every day I pass a pile of garbage on my walk and every day I wonder what I can do about it. Children play close by and the road is littered with discarded plastic bottles flattened to the ground but resolutely refusing to decay. I am reminded of Pope Francis’ description of our precious planet becoming a “heap of filth” with all the industrial and domestic waste piled high on every continent. But what can I do?
Today’s readings are about the five barley loaves and two fish and Andrew’s question, “What are they between so many?” The estimate was five thousand people. Jesus was not bothered by the small contribution. So long as there was something he could work with it.
Reading the pope’s letter on the environment is an alarming exercise. The task seems so great and the danger of failure so real. The small efforts of individuals seem so ineffectual.
But I am struck by the picture of the 5000 sitting on the grass. It is all a bit solemn. We are told Jesus “climbed the hill,” which echoes Moses climbing Mount Sinai, and that it was the Passover, the most important festival of the Jews. Then we are told Jesus “looked up and saw the crowds approaching.” It is as formal a setting as you can get: the Messiah meeting God’s people. What will happen? What message will he have? What offering can they make?
Well, all they can come up with is a small boy with five loaves and two fish. A widow’s mite! A paltry effort! But it is enough. It is a majestic moment where the Lord accepts the offering and feeds a multitude. It is a sign that would be remembered. All four writers record it. They knew it had immense significance. The smallest efforts, the most insignificant of gestures, can open a new world. God is coming to meet his people.
But it is only the beginning. The rest of John chapter six will speak of other bread, something that has the power – not just to feed a crowd for a day – but to nourish humanity for eternity. Again it will require that small offering, this time just a corner of my heart; it requires some movement towards the Son of Man, the human one. The solemn setting suggests this is a meeting between God and men and women of every age: a God who beckons and invites us to make gestures of caring and love towards one another and towards “our common home,” the earth.   
As we progress through chapter six we see that most of them turn away. They cannot take what he is talking about. And that goes on happening today. But the invitation remains and so does the question, “Where can we buy some bread for these people to eat?” Jesus asks for our help.
26 July 2015                                       Sunday 17 B
2 Kings 4:42-44                                  Ephesians 4:1-6                      John 6:1-15


Friday 24 July 2015

EARTHENWARE JARS

PRAYER MOMENT  


Saturday 25 July 2015. St James


EARTHENWARE JARS


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: We are only earthenware jars that hold this treasure, to make it clear that such an overwhelming power comes from God and not from us. (2 Cor. 4:7-15)


Reflection. James makes brief appearances in  the gospel. He is called from his fishing and leaves his nets and his father Zebedee; he is present when Jesus raises the daughter of Jairos and on the mountain when his clothes shine like snow. He ambitions a place at Jesus’ right hand in his kingdom and sleeps with Peter and John when Jesus is in Gethsemene. But then he plays a key role in the early church in Jerusalem and is the first to die for the faith. His renown reaches Rome and Spain and eventually Chile where the capital is named after him. He is an early pillar of the church but a fragile human figure. He consoles us by his greatness and his earthenness. It is to people like James that we owe the existence of the church.


Prayer. Lord, we are only earthenware jars but we trust in your power to help us witness to your presence in our world, so that even in our small way your light may shine. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Thursday 23 July 2015

A SABBATH FOR THE LORD

PRAYER MOMENT  


Friday 24 July 2015


A SABBATH FOR THE LORD


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: The Lord said; “Remember the Sabbath and keep it holy. For six days you shall labour and do all your work, but the seventh day is a sabbath for the Lord your God.” (Exodus 20:1-17)


Reflection. Pope Francis uses the biblical teaching on the Sabbath to reinforce his message about our relationship with the earth. “The responsibility for God’s earth means that human beings, endowed with intelligence, must respect the laws of nature and the delicate equilibria existing  … (Laudato Si # 68). Cain got it wrong when he killed his brother Abel with the result that “when you till the earth it will no longer yield up its strength to you” (Gen 4:12). The ancient teaching on the Sabbath reminds us to treat the earth with restraint and respect and that our relationships with others extends to our relationship to nature. Everything is interconnected, Francis never tires of saying in his letter.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail. .com  


















A DENSE CLOUD

PRAYER MOMENT  (After and 8 hour power cut!)     


Thursday 23 July 2015


A DENSE CLOUD


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: The Lord said to Moses; “I am coming to you in a dense cloud so that the people may hear when I speak to you and may trust you always.” (Exodus 19:1…20)


Reflection. God longs to come to us. That is clear from every page of the New Testament. But if he did come fully “it would be too much for you to bear now” (John 16:12). So he comes in a cloud – on Sinai and on Tabor – or else in parables. Or he comes through the beauty of the earth and through the presence of other people in our lives. He comes in myriad ways but the over all effect may indeed be like a dense cloud. Despite all the signs and hints we still don’t grasp how close he is to us at every moment. We are more at home – it is easier – in the density! Yet, the mystics tell us, our glory is to pierce that “cloud of unknowing” through shafts of love, reaching out to him at each moment and in every situation. I tried it two days ago on an eleven hour bus journey.     
 

Prayer. Lord, help us to pierce the dense cloud that separates us. Dispose us to listen to your word. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail. .com  


















Wednesday 22 July 2015

HIM WHOM MY HEART LOVES

PRAYER MOMENT       


Wednesday 22 July  2015, Mary Magdalene


HIM WHOM MY HEART LOVES


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: The watchmen came upon me on my rounds in the city: “Have you seen him whom my heart loves?” Scarely had I passed them than I found him whom my heart loves. (Song of Songs 3:1-4)


Reflection. We have one picture of Mary of Magdala: a broken woman who met Jesus and was not just healed but became a passionate lover who seeks him, against all the odds, even in an empty tomb. Mary embodies the longing of the wonderful Song of Songs and calls us to love with that same longing and passion. Mention of passionate loving suggests the sexual embrace but, can we say, it is that - but goes beyond it to something even deeper in a human being: the desire for union which even sexual union does not satisfy. Mary’s love, if we are to follow the meagre hints scripture gives us, was for a union which goes beyond any words we can find but which is still human, because this is our human capacity for the divine, The fully human person is divine.   
 

Prayer. Lord, make us eager with longing and passion to reach out to your people in their suffering. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Sunday 19 July 2015

NO GRAVES IN EGYPT

PRAYER MOMENT       


Monday 20 July  2015


NO GRAVES IN EGYPT


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: The sons of Israel were terrified and said to Moses, “Were there no graves in Egypt that you must lead us out to die in the wilderness?” (Exodus 14:5-18)


Reflection. The defining moment for Israel was the deliverance from Egypt, the passage through the Red Sea and entry into the promised land. Huge risks and threats accompanied them and the first was Pharaoh’s pursuit. The Israelites immediately lost heart and grumbled, ‘would it not have been better for us to stay where we were? We were in slavery but at least we had food?’ How tempted we are to seek a quiet life! We put a sign on our door, “Don’t disturb!” Moses stiffened their resolve in the wilderness and we are called to hear our hiden Moses within, the voice of the Spirit of Jesus saying to us “Have courage! Do not be afraid!” And we know this message is for us in our personal and our national affairs.
  

Prayer. Lord, when we are tempted to lose heart, strengthen us and give us the courage to move ahead in the way your Spirit calls us. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Saturday 18 July 2015

LISTENING TO THE HEART

LISTENING TO THE HEART
Two major deals in one week! Surely that’s good news? Not everyone is happy but the agreements over the Iran nuclear issue and the Greek debt show that months, and even years, of talks can eventually lead to solutions of difficult problems. If, before the end of the year, there are two more major agreements – on the Colombian civil war and climate change – 2015 will have to be hailed as a good year.
What keeps people negotiating week after week deep into the night? There are mixed motives but there is an underlying attraction to “do what is right.” We can dress it up in political words about living in security and peace. That is true too. But this attraction to the good is like the pull of gravity which always exerts itself. The servant songs in Isaiah are about “leading the truth to victory.”
Human beings are drawn this way despite the evil forces that exert counter attractions. I met a group of people this week who are focused on a wonderful project but they are continually harassed by contrary influences. We are told in the gospel of Mark that Jesus wanted a break and invited his disciples to come away for a while to a lonely place where they could be on their own. But people guessed where they were going and hurried there so that when Jesus arrived at his holiday resort he found crowds of people waiting for him. Why? They were so drawn to him, so attracted to him, that they could not do otherwise than seek him out.
I think we have to allow this “attraction” to surface in us. It is like water always finding its level or a cork always floating to the surface. What these negotiators have done, in the face of many counter arguments, is to let the dynamic of achieving the common good emerge. They rose above partisan arguments; they broke down the barriers between divided people, and went for something higher which, in their heart of hearts, they knew was the right thing.
We need an atmosphere for this – a space where people of different opinions genuinely search for common ground. This space does not exist in Zimbabwe. There is no desire to listen to the deep urgings of the human heart in other people. Or if there is a twinge of this there is no will to let that desire surface. So we stay where we are. Those who could start talks for a common way forward are not interested. They are absorbed by their own agenda. Other people don’t matter.     
But God does not “put out the smouldering fire.” If those who make the decisions in our society were to set about poking the embers of that fire they would find a groundswell of good will to greet them.
19 July 2015                                       Sunday 16 B

Jeremiah 23:1-6                                  Ephesians 2:13-18                  Mark 6;30-34

Friday 17 July 2015

THE CRUSHED REED

PRAYER MOMENT       


Saturday 18 July  2015


THE CRUSHED REED


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: He will not brawl or shout, nor will anyone hear his voice in the streets. He will not break the crushed reed, nor quench the smouldering wick till he has led the truth to victory.” (Matthew 12:14-21)


Reflection. Matthew quotes  words from a servant song in Isaiah to develop the details of the mission of Jesus. He has not come to sweep away everything that has gone before. He has come to build on the insecure foundations of human genius. He respects all the efforts and broken promises of men and women. He does not condemn anything except sin. He has come to take the sinking Peter by the hand, to lift up the broken woman with five husbands and give  new life to the unscrupulous tax collectors who screw vast bonuses out of the meagre resources of the poor. No, there is no condemnation of people – only a luta continua, an ongoing struggle, to bring out the truth in every person and every situation.


Prayer. Lord, strengthen our wavering limbs as we continue to try to live by your truth. Bless all those who commit themselves to you – especially Courage Bakasa and Ignatius Munyoro who will be ordained for your service today. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Wednesday 15 July 2015

WHERE YOU STAND IS HOLY GROUND

PRAYER MOMENT       


Wednesday 15 July  2015, St. Bonaventure


WHERE YOU STAND IS HOLY GROUND


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: God called to Moses from the middle of the bush. “Moses, Moses!” he said. “Here I am,” he answered. “Come no nearer,” he said. “Take off your shoes for the place where you stand is holy ground.” (Exodus 32:1…12)


Reflection. We are into the Moses story and his adult life begins with an irruption of God into his life. There are so many “callings” of individuals in the Scriptures and each one is called, not just for their own benefit, but for the whole community. That is how God works – from Abraham to Mary and up to our own day. Just one person! And we quickly transpose that calling to each one of us now. We are standing on “holy ground” meaning we are in the midst of a planet bubbling with possibilities for reflecting the divine image in which we are made. And each of us has their part. The news of an Iran deal yesterday is thrilling. In the midst of so much mistrust and even hatred between between “the axis of evil” and the “the great Satan” they have risen to an agreement that both sides feel is in the best interests of everyone. That has to be holy ground.   


Prayer. Lord, help us to relish the progress your people make in small ways and big to create a world in conformity with your plan for the world. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Prayer Moment

Prayer Moment will not appear on Thursday and Friday s I will be travelling and way from internet. Thank you. David.

Monday 13 July 2015

PHARAOH’S DAUGHTER WENT DOWN TO BATHE

PRAYER MOMENT       


Tuesday 14 July  2015


PHARAOH’S DAUGHTER WENT DOWN TO BATHE


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: Now Pharaoh’s daughter went down to bathe and among the reeds she noticed the basket and she sent her maid to fetch it. She opened it and looked and saw a baby boy.” (Exodus 2:1-15)


Reflection. We often hear the infancy story of key figures in the bible – Isaac, Jacob, Samuel and Moses. They illustrate God’s care for these chosen people, who would be leaders of Israel, from their earliest years. This care, this work, this love, is not just for the few whose stories we have. It is for every person and for all of us. It is true, some children are born in misery and with no start in life. But that is not God’s plan. Poverty and injustice is the way we have twisted his creation. His plan is to care for us and He works constantly and “deep down things” to bring all things to the best for us. But he cannot force us. For example, we cannot see the Greek debt crisis simply as a matter of fixing something. There is a deeper meaning to that struggle and all struggles.  


Prayer. Lord, you are at work in your creation. Help us to know that you are with us in our struggles – be they ever so hard. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Sunday 12 July 2015

NOT PEACE BUT A SWORD

PRAYER MOMENT       


Monday 13 July  2015


NOT PEACE BUT A SWORD


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: Jesus instructed the twelve; “Do not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth; it is not peace I have come to bring but a sword.” (Matthew 10:34-11:1)


Reflection. We ended the story of the sons of Jacob in Egypt living happily in Goshen under Joseph’s protection, but soon there arose a ruler “who knew not Joseph” and then their troubles began. There are moments when we think, ‘now we will have peace.’ Zimbabwe’s Independence in 1980 was one such and the end of World War Two was another. But there is no real peace because the greater struggles for justice are still with us. The good news of Jesus always provokes resistance and we will not achieve that final peace until everyone everywhere attains the justice they long for. We do what we can but we will not live to see the final peace. It is still in the future. But every human struggle (sword) brings that day closer.


Prayer. Lord, make us instruments of your peace! Help us to do what we can in our time and so contribute to the great fabric of peace on earth that will come one day. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Saturday 11 July 2015

THE HIDDEN PLAN

THE HIDDEN PLAN
At least three big rounds of talks are going on at the moment: The Greeks are trying to reach an agreement with their European Union partners on a way of meeting their debts; the Iranians are trying to achieve a deal with “the big powers” over their nuclear programme and the Colombian insurgents are continuing to seek a peace agreement with their government that will end 50 years of civil war. All these talks are an impressive sign that the days of bullying people into submission seem to be passing. Force, in these cases, is no longer military but rational. Logic and wisdom is pushing the parties towards agreements.
Resolving issues by listening to the grievances of people and seeking a peaceful solution together is happening more and more, despite the many instances where brute force is still used. Closing one’s ears to others has a long history and when the prophet Amos tried to alert the Jews of Israel’s Northern Kingdom to their danger he was told, “Go away, seer. We want no more prophesying in Bethel; this is the royal sanctuary.” They wouldn’t listen. And Jesus warned his followers the same thing would happen to them, “if the people refuse to listen to you, shake the dust from your feet as a sign to them.”
I am reading of the early missionaries in Zambia and the incredible physical hardships they faced in travel, supplies, sickness, loneliness and colonial opposition. But the people welcomed them. They listened to the message whether it was about ploughing, health care or the actual message of the gospel. All the churches have grown. A map of the church centres a hundred years ago would have half a dozen dots in the whole country. A map today would be crowded with dots.
And the message is that, “before the world was made he chose us to live through love in his presence. … He has let us know the mystery of his purpose, the hidden plan he so kindly made in Christ.” This hidden plan is for our well-being in this life and the next. It is a spiritual message, yes, but it has a practical side too – whether we are Greeks, Iranians, Colombians or citizens of our own country. We look at South Sudan in dismay. Mrs Garang herself said yesterday, “we have failed. We have tried to drive a car without wheels.” We look at Burundi with foreboding. Surely they have “listened” to their past. The signs are not good that they have.
And then we come to our own country. When will we learn to listen? For how much longer are we going to say, “Go away, seer. You are not wanted here”? And when will our “young professionals” stop shaking the dust from their feet and boarding planes for distant places?      
12 July 2015                           Sunday 15 B

Amos 7:12-15                         Ephesians 1:3-14                                Mark 6:7-13

Friday 10 July 2015

BURY ME NEAR MY FATHERS

PRAYER MOMENT       


Saturday 11 July  2015, St Benedict


BURY ME NEAR MY FATHERS


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: Jacob gave his sons these instructions, “I am about to be gathered to my people. Bury me near my fathers, in the cave that is in the field of Ephron..” (Genesis 49:29…50:25)


Reflection. We bury our relatives with reverence and care. There are many customs connected with the procedures. Perhaps we do not fully know why we follow them but we sense that they are connected with the disceased continuing to be part of us and we wish to do everything that will insure that the ongoing relationship is good. Our passage from Genesis contains instructions from both Jacob and Joseph to their family about where they are to be burtied, reinforcing this continuation of relationship. In our Christian faith we celebrate this “communion” with those who have gone ahead of us. The difference is there is now no fear in the realionship, only hope and joy.  

Prayer. Lord, we commend our departed sisters and brothers to you and ask that together with you and them we may walk our road and come finally to that eternal communion which is the focus of our lives. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Thursday 9 July 2015

SHEEP AMONG WOLVES

PRAYER MOMENT       


Friday 10 July  2015


SHEEP AMONG WOLVES


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: Jesus instructed the twelve as follows, “Remember I am sending you out as sheep among wolves; so be as cunning as serpents and yet as harmless as doves.” (Matthew 10:16-23)


Reflection. One of the lessons we are learning in the Church today is the message of weakness. There have been times when the Church has been powerful and often in so doing has lost the cutting edge of her mission. Pope Francis rejoiced in his visit to Korea but he warned the bishops against “religious well-being,” against becoming comfortable in their faith. Paul knew the lesson of “strength in weakness” and searching to follow Jesus leads us into opposition and trials that prompt us to rely on the Lord, not on ourselves.  


Prayer. Lord, teach us to avoid being comfortable in our faith and lead us to explore how to be faithful to the gospel in the events of our day. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Wednesday 8 July 2015

I AM YOUR BROTHER

PRAYER MOMENT       


Thursday 9 July  2015


I AM YOUR BROTHER


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “I am your brother Joseph whom you sold into Egypt. But now, do not grieve, do no reproach yourselves for having sold me here, since God sent me before you to preserve your lives.” (Genesis 44, 45)


Reflection. It is a highly emotional scene when Joseph reveals himself to his brothers. We have his own feelings to imagine but also those of his brothers. Joseph soon rises above the emotion to see God’s purpose in the whole drama. It becomes part of the whole preparation story for the coming of the Messiah and when Jesus reveals himself to his brothers in the upper room after his resurrection they “stand there dumbfounded” (Luke 24). It does not end there. The revelation continues today in the poorest and most marginalised, in prisoners and in disabled people: Jesus reveals himself if we have eyes to see and hearts to hear. I once met a handicapped girl who could do nothing for herself but lay on a mat all day but if you spent time with her she would give you a smile which was a window onto the divine.   


Prayer. Lord, you reveal yourself to us in many different ways. Open our eyes to recognise your coming to us and your standing in out midst. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Tuesday 7 July 2015

FAMINE ALL OVER THE WORLD

PRAYER MOMENT       


Wednesday 8 July  2015


FAMINE ALL OVER THE WORLD


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “Go to Joseph and do what he tells you.” There was famine all over the world. Then Joseph opened all the grameries. (Genesis 41, 42)


Reflection. We hear only brief extracts from the Joseph story in the daily readings but they remind us of his prophetic life. There was indeed a “famine” over the earth for it was a world that did not know God. Joseph’s sufferings and “death and resurrection” would brings life to his brothers and “the whole world” but one of their number too would have to undergo a sort of “death” in Egypt before the joyful moment arrived – as it did in the upper room after the resurrection of Jesus - when they would all “stand there dumbfounded and astonished” (Luke 24). That joy is the joy of the follower of Jesus too.


Prayer. Lord, the story of the people of Israel is our story of exile too. Lead us to the joy of recognising you among our brothers and sisters. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Monday 6 July 2015

ONE THAT WRESTLED WITH HIM

PRAYER MOMENT       


Tuesday 7 July  2015


ONE THAT WRESTLED WITH HIM


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “And there was one who wrestled with him until daybreak who, seeing that he could not master him, struck him in the socket of his hip.” (Genesis 32:23-33)


Reflection. What are we to make of this story of Jacob wrestling with God and the dialogue between them? Jacob says, “I will not let you go unless you bless me.” We saw in yesterday’s reading that God had already blessed him. Yes, God has already blessed us in many ways but we still find ourselves “wrestling” with him. We have problems and questions that are not getting resolved. I always remember the account of Ignatius, truly blessed in his conversion at Loyola, but then struggling at Manreas for eleven months with himself and with God. At Loyola, for all his plans, he was still a Spanish noble in charge of his own life. At Manresa all that was peeled away and he became fully open and disposed to God’s plan. But this ‘letting go’ was a  painful business. And for top dressing he had a permanent limp, like Jacob!  


Prayer. Lord, may we not panic when we find ourselves wrestling with life and with you May we know that this is our way to salvation. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Sunday 5 July 2015

A LADDER REACHING HEAVEN

PRAYER MOMENT       


Monday 6 July  2015


A LADDER REACHING HEAVEN


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: A ladder was there standing on the ground with its top reaching to heaven; and there were angels of God going up it and coming down. (Genesis 28:10-22)


Reflection. Jacob’s dream of a ladder reaching heaven is referred to by Jesus (John 1:51). It is a confirmation to Jacob of God’s intention already announced to Abraham: He is going to tear the heavens apart and come down and dwell among us. He is going to break down the barrier that cuts us off. Bethel (House of God) is to be the new name for the place Jacob rested that night. The revelation would take time to sink into the mind and heart of the people just as it takes time for each of us to realise how close God is to us and how much he longs to dwell in us. Jacob saw angels going up and coming down the ladder and such is our relationship with Jesus. He comes to us and we are invited to meet him in the events of our day.


Prayer. Lord, teach us to know your coming today. You meet us on the way. Let us recognise you. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Saturday 4 July 2015

THEY WOULD NOT ACCEPT HIM

THEY WOULD NOT ACCEPT HIM
Ed Milliband tried to unseat David Cameron as Prime Minister of the UK recently but the voters rejected him. You could see how hard it was for him. Rejection for a political post or for a job or a place at school – these are tough experiences. The prophets were rejected. “Go somewhere else, seer, and there you can prophesy,” Amos was told (7:12). And the Lord told Ezekiel, “I am sending you to this set of rebels; whether they listen or not they shall know there is a prophet among them” (2:5).
The most painful rejection is when it comes from your own relatives. Then where do you go? The rejection may not be harsh. It may not amount to the door being slammed in your face. But even the most subtle and silent rejection is painful. For example, someone is struggling to pay the school fees of their siblings but the family just takes it for granted and demand more and more.
Jesus was rejected by his own people in Nazareth. They played the familiarity card; “We know him. He is the carpenter, the son of Mary and his brothers and sisters are here” (Mark 6:3). And then we are told, “He could work no miracle there. He was amazed at their lack of faith.”
But he did not give up even when he was finally and formally rejected by the leaders of the whole people of Israel. “What further need have we of witnesses? You have heard the blasphemy” (Mark 14:63). And he did not give up right at the end when he was being nailed to the cross. “Father, forgive them. They do not know what they are doing” (Luke 23:34).
So God shows us extraordinary patience. He loves us and never gives up on us. Sometimes parents of teenage children suffer when their children “reject” them at least for a while. It can be painful for parents to wait for their children to get over their “rebellion” and continue to offer a welcome to a child who is really behaving “badly.” It is not easy to say, “He/she does not know what they are doing.” Parents are more likely to feel, “they know perfectly well what they are doing!” 
There is much rejection today – of migrants and radicals and anyone who is different. But Jesus never rejects anyone and we who say we are his followers are called to act likewise. I always treasure the image of Jesus turning to Peter who had just denied him three times and we are told he “looked straight” at Peter (Luke 22:61). What kind of a look was that? Rejection? “You’ve failed!” Not at all. Was it a look of understanding? Much more likely. One of forgiveness and love? Definitely!
5 June 2015                                         Sunday 14 B

Ezekiel 2:2-5                                      2 Cor 12:7-10                                     Mark 6:1-6

Friday 3 July 2015

THE VOICE OF JACOB

PRAYER MOMENT       


Saturday 4 July  2015


THE VOICE OF JACOB


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: Jacob came close to his father Isaac who touched him and said,“The voice is Jacob’s voice but the arms are the arms of Esau!” (Genesis 27:1…29)


Reflection. It is a puzzle – how Jacob gets away with supplanting his elder brother Esau and Paul’s explanation, that it was God’s choice that prevailed (Rom 9:11), does not sound too convincing. Rebecca deliberately deceived her husband so as her younger son would inherit the blessings. It is one of those cases where we cannot get inside the mindset of our ancestors but they clearly saw nothing wrong with it and God goes along with the stratagem. So  we can simply take another text from Paul, “God turns everything to good for those who love him” (Rom 8:28) and say that God works through everything, even our devious iintentions, to bring about his will and our happiness.


Prayer. Lord, help us to understand how you work through everything for our good and let us not judge others when we see them doing what we do not approve of. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















MY LORD AND MY GOD

PRAYER MOMENT       


Friday 3 July  2015, St Thomas


MY LORD AND MY GOD


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “Doubt no longer but believe. “ Thomas replied, “My Lord and my God!” Jesus said to him, “You believe becaue you can see me. Happy are those who have not seen and yet believe.” (John 20:24-29)


Reflection. Poor old Thomas! We have been brought up to dub him ‘Doubting Thomas’ as though we are up a notch from him. We would have believed if we were there! Quite apart from the frivolity of such thoughts there is the condescension that those who doubt, those who ask questions and search for evidence, are somehow second class believers. Newman longed to see an educated church; a church of believers who had questions which they followed up. St Anselm said famously, “Faith searches to understand.” We have every opportunuity today to become informed. There are books and periodicals galore to help us and we know that one of the characteristics of our time is that there is disharmony between what the Church teaches and what people experience. We need to face this. Thomas is a good model for us.


Prayer. Lord, teach us to enquire and be curious. Teach us, as you taught Thomas, to go deeper to a faith that ends in adoration and says, “My Lord and my God!” Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com  


















Thursday 2 July 2015

GOD WILL PROVIDE

PRAYER MOMENT      (Note: Much load shedding at the moment. This may be late in appearing!) 


Thursday 2 July  2015


GOD WILL PROVIDE


Pause. Enter into the stillness of God within.


Reading: “Where is the lamb for the burnt offering?” Abraham answered, “My son, God himself will providethe lamb for the burnt offering.” Then the two of them went on together. (Genesis  221:1-19)


Reflection. Some days ago we had the appearance of the three mysterious visitors to Abraham at the Oak of Mamre when he learnt that his wife would bear a son. Now we have the even more mysterious projected sacrifice of that same son. Paul sees in these events evidence of the faith of Abraham which “justified” him, made him one whose responce to God disposed him to receive God’s blessings. These are “heavy” events breaking into meaning in the New Testament. They announce our calling and dignity as beings capable of receiving a life “beyond” the one we see and touch every day. They stretched Abrahama and we too are stretched by the challenges we face. Responding with a great heart disposes us too to receive God’s blessings.   


Prayer. Lord, open our hearts to see in the challenges we face your call to us to go beyond ourselves and dispose ourselves to receive the gifts you offer. Amen.
davidharoldbarry@hotmail.com