By: Bobot Apit
Mar 15, 2011 - Tuesday Meditation (BE Forgiven so You can F
orgive!) 
Makapagpatawad tayo sa kapwa natin dahil ang Dios ay nasa atin. Mali yong paniwala na dapat patawarin muna ang kapwa natin para tayo ay patawarin ng Dios. It is an old heresy. God's love is unconditional! We dont have to earn God's favor.It's His nature to forgive and because of the grace we received when we are forgiven, this enables us to forgive kahit na yong mahirap patawarin. Amen? REPENT OF ALL YOUR SINS AND BE FORGIVEN BY GOD THIS TUESDAY AND RECEIVE THE GRACE TO FORGIVE. GOD BLESS! 
  
Tuesday in the First Week of Lent 
Isaiah 55:10-11 
Psalm 34:4-5, 6-7, 16-17, 18-19 
Matthew 6:7-15 "And in praying do not heap up empty phrases as the Gentiles do; for they think that they will be heard for their many words. 8 Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him. 9 Pray then like this: Our Father who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name. 10 Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done, On earth as it is in heaven. 11 Give us this day our daily bread; 12 And forgive us our debts, As we also have forgiven our debtors; 13 And lead us not into temptation, But deliver us from evil. 14 For if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father also will forgive you; 15 but if you do not forgive men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses. 
  
Meditation by Robert P. Heaney 
The Church gives us the Lord’s Prayer as a Gospel reading twice each year. It deserves much more prayerful reflection than the auto-pilot response we commonly give it. Apart from Jesus’ impassioned plea for unity among His followers (John 17:21), this is the only instruction that we have from Jesus about what we ought to pray for. He tells us to ask God to inaugurate God’s reign, God’s way of doing things, on earth (as in heaven). We too easily slip into thinking of God’s reign as something for the hereafter. But it’s this world that God wants to set right, the world that God found “good” at creation. We’re the ones who have perverted God’s plan for creation.  It’s not within our power, unaided, to repair the mess we’ve made of it.. So we have to ask God to impose God’s ways on our world – to do it through us and with our cooperation. 
  
There is material for a whole year of reflections in the petitions in the Lord’s Prayer, but let’s concentrate, for today, on just the last two. 
  
Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us. 
  
Why?  Two reasons: God has first forgiven us; and forgiveness and self-giving are precisely what the life of the kingdom is all about.  Forgiving is not a test to see if we’re worthy. We’re not worthy – never could be on our own.   There is ingrained in human nature the tendency to think that we have to earn God’s favor, that there are conditions we have to meet. It is expressed in the ancient heresy, Pelagianism – refuted by St. Augustine , but never completely extirpated from the Christian mindset. So, we approach this matter of forgiving others as a condition of entry into the kingdom. That’s not correct.  God’s reign is precisely one of forgiving – God of us, and we of one another – forever.  But is forgiving even possible for us? Emphatically, yes, through God’s life in us by virtue of our Baptisms.  It is God’s forgiving that we live on earth, as does God in heaven. 
  
And lead us not into temptation. 
  
[Or “do not put us to the test”, as in both Matthew and Luke.] Jesus is not speaking here of personal temptation. He is speaking of the wrenching disruption that will accompany the inauguration of God’s reign for our world. Children will be against parents, parents against children, brother against brother. All of our cherished human value systems and social structures will be turned upside down. The Gospels are emphatic about that. We ask God to help us through this time of trial, to help us choose God’s way over human ways. But this is not just at some remote, future time. It’s now. In every act of self-giving, of justice, God’s reign is coming now. When we pray the Lord’s Prayer, we ask God to act through us to bring about His kingdom. We lead into the Lord’s Prayer at Mass with the words: “We dare to say . . .”.   We dare – not because we address God as Father, but because God’s kingdom is dangerous and its coming will
surely test us if, in God’s view, our ways are the world’s ways. The old saying “Be careful what you ask for” certainly applies to the Lord’s Prayer.   

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(Disclamer)
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