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Friday of the 2nd Week of Lent: Daily Lenten Meditations

THE MIND OF JESUS

“Have this mind in you which was also in Christ Jesus.” This exhortation of the Great Apostle of the Gentiles is goodly counsel indeed.

The mind which was in Christ Jesus! What peerless perfection the words express! What depths of heavenly wisdom! What purity beyond all words to tell!

The mind which was in Christ Jesus—the thoughts of the growing Boy as He silently toiled in the carpenter shop or sat with Mary at night in their little village home.

The mind which was in Christ Jesus—the blessed dreams of the beautiful Youth on His lonely walks through the silent woods, or, as climbing the hills behind the town, He gazed far out on the distant plain where the caravans crawled their way to the sea.

The mind which was in Christ Jesus, the hopes and fears therein harbored, the plans therein formed as the Gentle Master toiled wearily on toward the blood-red goal of His great ambition, the Mount of the final Holocaust.

“Have this mind in you which was also in Christ Jesus.” Wise counsel indeed, and blessed are they who heed it. Am I of that happy number? Is there really much likeness between my mind and that of the Gentle Master? Are the myriad thoughts that find a welcome home in my mind such as Jesus would harbor? Are my views of life, my plans and ambitions, ever like His: grand and generous and noble? Would I be quite willing at any moment to lay bare my mind’s most hidden recesses to all who would view them and have no fear of embarrassment? Do the words that fall from my lips and my habitual conduct bespeak a mind that is one with the mind of Christ Jesus? Do they?

Jesus, Gentle Master, have mercy on us.

 EPISTLE AND GOSPEL: aken from the Angelus Press 1962 Roman Catholic Daily Missal

EPISTLE: Gen. 37:6-22

Joseph and his brethren.

In those days Joseph said to his brethren: Hear my dream which I dreamed: I thought we were binding sheaves in the field: and my sheaf arose as it were and stood, and your sheaves, standing about, bowed down before my sheaf. His brethren an-swered: Shalt thou be our king? or shall we be subject to thy dominion? Therefore the matter of his dreams and words ministered nourishment to their envy and hatred. He dreamed also another dream, which he told his brethren, saying: I saw in a dream, as it were the sun and the moon and eleven stars worshipping me. And when he had told this to his father and brethren, his father rebuked him, and said: What meaneth this dream that thou hast dreamed? shall I and thy mother and thy brethren worship thee upon the earth? His brethren therefore envied him: but his father considered the thing with himself. And when his brethren abode in Sichem, feeding their father’s flocks, Israel said to him: Thy brethren feed the sheep in Sichem: come, I will send thee to them. And when he answered: I am ready, he said to him: Go, and see if all things be well with thy brethren and the cattle: and bring me word again what is doing. So being sent from the vale of Hebron, he came to Sichem: and a man found him there wandering in the field, and asked what he sought. But he answered: I seek my brethren; tell me where they feed their flocks. And the man said to him: They are departed from this place; for I heard them say: Let us go to Dothain. And Joseph went forward after his brethren, and found them in Dothain. And when they saw him afar off, before he came nigh them, they thought to kill him, and said one to another: Behold the dreamer cometh: come, let us kill him, and cast him into some old pit, and we will say: Some evil beast hath devoured him: and then it shall appear what his dreams avail him. And Ru-ben hearing this, endeavored to deliver him out of their hands, and said: Do not take away his life, nor shed his blood: but cast him into this pit that is in the wilderness, and keep your hands harmless: now he said this, being desirous to deliver him out of their hands, and to restore him to his father.

GOSPEL: Mt. 21:33-46

Parable of Christ: the destiny of the heathen and that of the Jews.

At that time Jesus spoke this parable to the multitude of the Jews and the chief priests: There was a man, a householder who planted a vineyard, and made a hedge round about it, and dug in it a press, and built a tower, and let it out to husbandmen, and went into a strange country. And when the time of the fruits drew nigh, he sent his servants to the husband-men, that they might receive the fruits thereof. And the husbandmen laying hands on his servants, beat one, and killed another, and stoned another. Again he sent other servants, more than the former, and they did to them in like manner. And last of all he sent to them his son, saying: They will reverence my son. But the husband-men seeing the son, said among themselves: This is the heir, come, let us kill him, and we shall have his inheritance. And taking him, they cast him forth out of the vineyard, and killed him. When therefore the lord of the vineyard shall come, what will he do to those husbandmen? They say to him: He will bring those evil men to an evil end: and will let out his vineyard to other husband-men, that shall render him the fruit in due season. Jesus saith to them: Have you never read in the Scriptures: The stone which the builders rejected, the same is become the head of the corner? By the Lord this has been done, and it is wonderful in our eyes: therefore I say to you, that the kingdom of God shall be taken from you, and shall be given to a nation yielding the fruits thereof. And whosoever shall fall on this stone shall be broken: but on whomsoever it shall fall, it shall grind him to powder. And when the chief priests and Pharisees had heard His parables, they knew that He spoke of them. And seeking to lay hands on Him, they feared the multitudes: because they held Him as a prophet.

 

 

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