Monday 28 September 2015

Year B - Twenty-Seventh Sunday in Ordinary Time

27ème Dimanche du Temps Ordinaire – Année B

Genesis 2.18 - 24
Psalm 127
Hebrews 2.9-11
Mark 10.2-16



To go further

Details

-This Rabbit has cold feet for two reasons:
-He's afraid of getting hurt from falling, so he doesn't have much confidence in God ...
-He puts a quilt in front of him, as for protection from God.
It would have been better to put it behind him.

Questions

 -The Torpor, "the mysterious sleep" in the book of Genesis is used by God when he does something very important, as if he plunges a man into a trance so that he can stand it. There is another passage in which Abraham is plunged into this torpor (Gen 15:12) when God undertakes in alliance with him when God passes between the shared animals (why share animals between two people and then pass through the middle when an alliance is made with someone? It was a sign of the word given, and it was final. If I broke the alliance, if I retracted my word, the same could happen to me as these animals). To quickly summarize, it is man who broke the covenant with God, and God (Jesus) who sacrificed himself in the place of man)
-Do I trust the intervention of God to heal me, to save me? Or do I prefer to heal and save myself ?
-According to my answer, how do I experience this each day?

Monday 21 September 2015

Year B - Twenty-Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time

26th Sunday in Ordinary Time - Year B

Numbers 11.25-29
Psalm 18
James 5.1-6
Mark 9.38-43, 45, 47-49



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Details

-A grey rabbit, proud of his wallet, becayse he has not built this car, he has just acquired it.
-The other rabbit has only one tool in his hand, but without this tool the car is only good for placing in the garage.
-The specialists know how to play with words for the Lamborghini because there is a model called "Diablo", whereas this one is called "Divino"..
-I amused myself by placing an on/off switch under the rear door, close to the back wheel, to show the fragility of an object. Sometimes we hardly need anything for something to break down.

Questions

-Riches and gold ruin us unless they are shared.
-Such riches are poison when they distance us from God, when they make us believe that money removes all risk and we make it the number one goal
-Does money save us ? From who, from what ? To what point ?
-Which are my material riches ? Are they rusted or shared ?

Monday 14 September 2015

Year B -Twenty-Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time

25th Sunday in ordinary time - Year B

Wisdom 2.12,17-20
Psalm 53
James 3.16-4,3
Mark 9.30-37


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Details

-The grey rabbit tests the blue rabbit. He pretends to look the other way by turning the head, but he still keeps an eye on the reaction of the blue rabbit.
-He taps his left hand against the hammer, to make sure how hard it is.
-He whistles two notes at the same time (which is impossible - try it !)
This means he is two things (his innocent attitude and his action, which is less so).
-The other rabbit, the blue one, the one who is beating the world record for the high jump, he says nothing. His silence makes less noise than the two notes of the whistling rabbit. (Careful, don't think for a moment that I am trying to say that one must always suffer in silence and say "Amen" to everything. I am merely placing the spotlight on another point)

Questions

-This verse from the Bible is the thoughts of the villain who wants to test to find out if God will help.
-What tests have fallen upon me ? Provoked by people who wished to see my Christian reaction when pushed to the limit ?
-How do I react to the violence which is aimed at me ? What are the limits which one must not pass with me ? Do I ask God to help me in these moments is it my nature to take it all for myself ?
-Was my reaction a good example for others ? In what way was it a success

PS. We see that the blue rabbit ascends to the skies very quickly, looking at it that way...
:)

Tuesday 8 September 2015

Year B - Twenty-Fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time

24th  Sunday in Ordinary Time – Year B

Isaiah 50.5-9
Psalm 114
James 2.14-18 :
Mark 8.27-35



To go further

Details

-This rabbit has a remote controlled cross on a race car (convenient to transport it).
-The cross is not behind him, but in front. He wants to show it off. He wants us to see it.
-Also, he evaluates it by putting a digit (1) which means "I am the best, my cross is the heaviest, nanananana!!!"
-But he is not fooled by his little game, because looking at his expression, once  unmasked, he feels guilty.

Questions

-To take ones cross is not too choose one. It is, first of all, to accept the one that we have (to accept our defects, our old age, our dependence on others, our family or marital situation, unemployment, handicap, failures...)
-A cross made to measure, it is not a cross. We have many ideas to add to the cross, to make it aesthetically pleasing, to add effort and control the thing. A cross is not something to control.
-Did I choose my little crosses while doing all I could to forget the one that I should be carrying ?
-Do I await a call from the Lord to walk in his footsteps, or do I work away at my little personal comfort as long as no one says anything?

Tuesday 1 September 2015

Year B - Twenty-Third Sunday in Ordinary Time

Twenty-Third Sunday in Ordinary Time - Year B

Isaiah 35,4-7
Psalm 145
James 2,1-5
Mark 7,31-37


To go further
Details

-A little surprised this rabbit ... surprised at the promise of God that seems like science fiction ...
-The horizon is flat; he is calm, in the desert, on his camel. There is no relief in his life.
-Suddenly, the torrid country turns into a lake (I know someone who will surf a camel!)
-And here Giddyup galloping to escape the water, because Giddyup is a camel who has plenty of reserves in his hump. No need for more water.
And of course, the rabbit has to find a culprit for this unexpected situation. The first one that comes to him, the weather ...

Questions

-Jesus is the source. Source of life, source of the gift, source of love, source of freedom.
When I seek my source elsewhere, inevitably, I feel a great void after an intense moment of life, love, giving, freedom, since when apart from God, it only lasts for a fleeting moment.
And I will even flee from God, thinking that it is He who prevents me from living, loving, giving, to be free. Could God be so sadistic in harassing humans?
If that's what I think, then the God I imagine is not the true God.

As a complement from the Bible, this reading of Isaiah prophesies the return of Israel to its land, whilst having spent the last 50 years in exile in Babylon. And in order to return home, he has to cross the Arabian Desert. It is not only the purpose of the journey that is a joy, but the journey itself, where the desert will bloom again. How often do we wear ourselves out seeking a goal (for example to accumulate money or to go away on vacation). We then only see the goal, we forget the path to get there. The encounter with God does not happen only at the end of our lives, but throughout. This is the time it takes to get to know him.