Current Issue

Print Edition: May 19, 2013

Sign-up for our E-letter!



 

  • Donate
  • Archives
  • Blogs
  • Store
  • Resources
  • Advertise
  • Jobs
  • Radio
  • Subscribe
  • Make This
    My Homepage
  • Resources
  • Arts & Entertainment
  • Books
  • Commentary
  • Culture of Life
  • Education
  • In Person
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Sunday Guides
  • Travel
  • Vatican
  • Dan Burke
  • Jeanette DeMelo
  • Edward Pentin
  • Mark Shea
  • Matthew Warner
  • Jimmy Akin
  • Matt & Pat Archbold
  • Simcha Fisher
  • Tito Edwards
  • Jennifer Fulwiler
  • Steven D. Greydanus
  • Tom Wehner
  • Our Latest Show
  • About the Show
  • About the Register
  • Donate
  • Subscribe
  • Stations
  • Schedule
  • Other EWTN Shows
  • Advertising Overview
  • Editorial Calendar
  • Order Web Ad
  • Order Print Ad
Print Article | Email Article | Write To Us
Print Edition » Culture of Life

Pray Like Abraham and Jesus

User's Guide to Sunday

  • Tweet
by Tom and April Hoopes, Register Correspondent Friday, Jul 09, 2010 1:34 PM Comment

Sunday, July 25, is the 17th Sunday in Ordinary Time (Liturgical Year C, Cycle II).


Papal

Pope Benedict XVI decided not to take his typical vacation in the Italian Alps this summer. Instead, he is spending all of his vacation time at Castel Gandolfo, the summer papal residence. He’s nearly 83 and wants to spend his free time resting and reading.

This is the first time since 2005 that he has skipped the Alps before moving to Castel Gandolfo for the remainder of the summer — and sometimes until October.


Readings

Genesis 18:20-32; Psalm 138: 1-3, 6-8; Colossians 2:12-14; Luke 11:1-13


Our Take

We sometimes think of God in an almost bureaucratic way. When we request something from a government agency, we put our papers in order and wait to hear back. If it comes, it comes slowly. If it is denied, the appeals process is even slower.

When we pray, we can put in our requests to God in the same way. We figure an answer will come — eventually. When it does, it can sometimes seem mysterious, as if the providential process delivers it by a chain of causality.

Today’s readings remind us that God is a person, not a benign agent of causality.

In the first reading, Abraham faces God with a respectful concern about what will happen to Sodom. “Will you sweep away the innocent with the guilty?” he asks.

But God would spare the town for the sake of 50, 45, 40, 30, 20 … or even just 10 innocent people.

Surely, this is a lesson about God’s mercy — and the crucial importance of being innocent. But it’s also a lesson in prayer. Abraham may be respectful, but he’s also insistent and persistent. He doesn’t just demand — he cajoles and repeats.

In the Gospel, Jesus gives the apostles the same lesson about prayer. One of his disciples says, “Lord, teach us to pray.”

The first thing Christ does is teach them the Our Father, which asks for the gift of daily bread, forgiveness and an innocent life — in other words, addressing the same issues Abraham raised.

But Jesus’ lesson doesn’t stop with the Lord’s Prayer. He also teaches them to treat God like a person.

He compares prayer to trying to wake up a reluctant friend at night to get what you need. This is like Abraham: asking God over and over for the same thing.

The priest who married us gave us the same counsel on prayer. “When you are angry, make your prayer angry,” he said. “When you are disappointed, tell God you are disappointed.”

God isn’t a bureaucracy that may or may not give you what you want, eventually, in a way that’s not transparent. He’s a person who wants to be in a relationship with you. Interpersonal relationships require honesty.

Jesus realizes this might sound a little unrealistic. There are plenty of times we knock and the door seems to not be opened unto us, we ask and seem not to receive, we seek and don’t seem to find.

Jesus explains that too.

“What father among you would hand his son a snake when he asks for a fish?” he asks. “Or hand him a scorpion when he asks for an egg? If you then, who are wicked, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him?”

When we pray, “Lord, please give me this job, give my children that opportunity, give my brother that spiritual gift,” the Lord knows what we’re asking: “Give me the career I need. Give my children the lesson that will make them stronger. Lead my brother to you.”

God is not a literalist who will give us the job we wanted that would derail us, the opportunity we wanted that would be a disaster for our kids, or short-circuit the freedom and love which alone can save our brother.

Like a good father, he will hand us what we need.

Tom and April Hoopes write

from Atchison, Kansas.

Filed under

Comments

Post a Comment

Post a Comment

By submitting this form, you give The National Catholic Register permission to publish this comment. Comments will be published at our discretion, and may be edited for clarity and length. For best formatting, please limit your response to one paragraph and don't hit "enter" to force line breaks.

Name:

Email:

Write your comment:

     

Notify me of follow-up comments.

Also in this Issue

  • Arts & Culture

    DVD Picks 07.18.2010
  • TV Picks 07.18.2010
  • Supervillain Next Door
  • Commentary

    Angels, Demons and Us
  • God’s Imagination Is Ours to Emulate — Imagine That
  • Israel: Whose Land Is It?
  • Culture of Life

    Text Support 4 BXVI
  • Nag No More
  • Paws for Patients
  • Education

    College Merger Canceled
  • In Person

    Coffee Served With a Dollop of Hope
  • News

    Grace, Growth and Unemployment
  • Light Scatters Darkness: New Legislation Restricts Pornography
  • Witnesses Who Are Media Savvy
  • The Vatican’s Northern Light
  • Defending the Holy See
  • Economy Down, Catholic Giving Up
  • Preaching Purity on the Jersey Shore
  • Ultrasound on Wheels
  • Supreme Court Takes Up School-Choice Law
  • Opinion

    Letters 07.18.2010
  • Help Wanted: Disciples
  • Kids on the Tightrope
  • Vatican

    Primacy Problem
  • Vatican Protests Belgian Raid
  • Summa Theologiae
  • St. Joseph Cafasso: Model of Holiness for Priests

Most Popular Now

  • Most Read
  • Most Commented
  • Culture of Life

    Age-Old Prayer Gains More Pray-ers (7368)
  • Commentary

    ‘Gay Marriage’ or Religious Freedom: You Can’t Have Both (7253)
  • Arts & Entertainment

    ‘Verily’ Promotes True Femininity (4396)
  • Culture of Life

    Honor Our Lady of Fatima: Spend ‘A Day With Mary’ (3454)
  • Opinion

    Pentecost, Prudence and Immigration Reform (3324)
  • Opinion

    Hope Amid Horror (2108)
  • Culture of Life

    Moms, Imitate the Mother of God’s Virtues (2098)
  • Culture of Life

    Honor Mom (1583)
  • Sunday Guides

    Imagine There’s No Heaven? (1348)
  • Sunday Guides

    The Holy Spirit’s Two Comings (1159)
  • Commentary

    ‘Gay Marriage’ or Religious Freedom: You Can’t Have Both (126)
  • Opinion

    Pentecost, Prudence and Immigration Reform (53)
  • Culture of Life

    Honor Our Lady of Fatima: Spend ‘A Day With Mary’ (35)
  • Culture of Life

    Age-Old Prayer Gains More Pray-ers (20)
  • Opinion

    Hope Amid Horror (11)
  • Sunday Guides

    Imagine There’s No Heaven? (7)
  • Culture of Life

    Honor Mom (5)
  • Culture of Life

    Moms, Imitate the Mother of God’s Virtues (4)
  • Culture of Life

    Kansas for Life (1)
  • Culture of Life

    The Gift of the Holy Spirit (0)
 
Close

Free Newsletter Sign-Up

Enter your e-mail address below to receive the latest news and blog posts in your inbox each day.

As part of this free service you will receive occasional free offers from us. We won’t share your information, and you can unsubscribe at anytime.
Click here if you don't want this message to show again.

National Catholic Register

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Subscriptions
  • Donate
  • Advertise
  • Press Releases
  • RSS Daily Register
  • RSS Bloggers
  • RSS Print
  • Contact
  • Jobs

Copyright © 2013 EWTN News, Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction of material from this website without written permission is strictly prohibited.
Accessed from 50.17.109.248