This I command you: Love one another
John.
15:17
Choose
a hymn to settle the community into the service. The
service is in four traditional parts of a Jewish
service: the taking, the blessing, the breaking, and
the giving.
The
Taking:
Having gotten up late on a
Friday morning, I find that a freight train is blocking the
highway, so I miss my commuter train into the city. At such
times I try to work on a scriptural reflection, but this
day the command of Jesus to love one another seems too hard
to hear. I put the scripture aside and count freight cars
instead.
When I finally get on board the next train, someone gets up
to give me a seat. A woman sits down next to me and smiles
hello. Then I feel encouraged to do the same.
I am reminded of a short story I taught in English class
about a beautiful apple that no one ate. The author
received it as a gift from a doorman. It was so red and
shiny that he gave it to his secretary to brighten her
desk. At lunch she passed it on. All day the apple brought
a lift to everyone who received it.
Perhaps that is one small way I can begin to keep the
command to love. I can try to be kind in a small matter.
And maybe someone will pass on the kindness too.
Marguerite Zralek, OP
Cast
your mind over the past few days.
Take
one event that you think or feel made you more aware of the
Presence of Love.
The
Blessing:
Offer
a Blessing in your heart for the gift you have received.
Let us say aloud the blessing we have received and for
those in our lives whom we wish to bless.
The
Breaking: John 12:23-28, 31-32
The
hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified. I
solemnly assure you, unless a grain of wheat falls to the
earth and dies, it remains just a grain of wheat.
But if it dies, it produces much fruit. The person who
loves his life loses it, while the person who hates his
life in this world preserves it to life eternal.
If anyone would serve me, let them follow me; where I am
there will my servant be. If anyone serves me, my Father
will honour them.
My soul is troubled now, yet what should I say-Father, save
me from this hour? But it was for this that I came to this
hour. Father, glorify your name!
I have glorified it, and will glorify it again.
Now has judgment come upon this world, now will this
world’s prince be driven out, and I – once I am
lifted up from earth — will draw all people to
myself.
Pause
now to consider how we as a group are being called to
follow Jesus in "being lifted up today." How is that we are
being broken? What is our Cross in union with His today?
How and where are we being broken open and are we in union
with Him in that particular breaking.
The
Giving:
‘Bread
and all the memories that go with
it.’
As the bread
is passed, please take a piece and consume it. Pray quietly
for the grace of union with Jesus. Bread of Life.
‘Wine
and all the memories that go with it.’
As the wine is passed pleas take a sip and consume it.
Pray quietly for the grace of union with Jesus. Water and
Wine are One.
Let us pray for the grace to be able to give in the way
Jesus did.
John of the Cross put it this way:
My beloved, the mountains,
lonely wooded valleys,
thundering rivers,
the whisper of love, carried by the breeze.
The tranquil night
at one with the rising dawn,
the silence of music,
the mighty sound of solitude
the feast where love makes all new.
Canticle
A 13-14
Closing
Hymn:
Ubi Caritas et amor
Ubi caritas deus ibi est.
(Sing three times)
Br. Jack
Mostyn (Rome)