+ RWS 768
August 13,
2017, 19th Sunday in Ordinary Time
Gospel:
Matthew 14:22-33
Immediately Jesus stretched out his hand and caught Peter, and said to him, “O you of little faith, why did you doubt?”
Immediately Jesus stretched out his hand and caught Peter, and said to him, “O you of little faith, why did you doubt?”
Having
doubts
By Bishop Precioso D. Cantillas, SDB, DD
Having doubts is one of the common
experiences we humans go through, which we try to drive out of our life. We
feel we are not standing on solid ground when we are in doubt. We feel
paralyzed not knowing what to do when our mind and reason seem clouded with
uncertainties. Such human situation could put our life in danger, and our work
unclear. We, therefore, need to diminish, or remove completely any tinge of
doubt also in our daily life and work.
Jesus told Peter, who entertained
some doubt about his safety even when the Lord “stretched his hand and caught
Peter” to have faith—faith in Him! Jesus would tell each human being to believe
in Him and be saved from all kinds of evil. Believing in Jesus does not happen
and should not be done only once in our lifetime. Having faith in the Lord
involves every moment of our existence when we consciously accept that all of
what we are depends on His power, and that we do every act, like our daily
tasks and works, for Him and because of Him. We work as if our Boss is the
Lord, doing our task with everything we’ve got, in order to please Him.
Believing in Jesus is like seeing Him in our home, in the workplace, in every
person we live and work with, and in every event in our daily life. This
attitude of believing and the virtue and habit of faith displaces any doubt
which disturbs us in the performance of our work and in maintaining a good
relationship with others. After all, Jesus is always ready to save you and me.
Ditch
your doubts
By Teresa R. Tunay, OCDS
Today’s gospel is particularly empowering. It teaches us the value of believing like
children. My mother (deceased) loved to
tell and retell an incident that happened when I was not quite two years
old. She was in the garden when she saw
me clambering on the window sill on the second floor. Nearing panic mode, she cried to me,
“Jump! Jump!”, stretching her arms up to
catch me. She said I managed to sit on
the sill and hold on to the post (our ancestral house was of Spanish
architecture, with “barandillas” and a central post for the very wide windows),
and was getting ready to jump into her arms when an older brother grabbed me
from behind in time.
I think this little story best illustrates
a child’s doubt-free state of mind. A
child simply obeys what the voice of authority commands for she is too innocent
to worry. An adult reasons and tends to
have doubts—What if I can’t? What if it
hurts? What if I look like a fool?—and so
hesitates in spite of prodding from the divine.
It would be a pity to live a life of
doubt, always haunted by fears, bitterness, failures, and painful memories that
have steadily robbed us of the ability to trust in ourselves. Like Peter who started to sink the moment he
feared the winds, we, too, can sink into negativity if we do not learn to live
in the presence of God, to believe in His love, to ditch our doubts, to forgive
and move on.
No comments:
Post a Comment