Justice Reflections From Fr. Claude Mostowik
First Sunday in Lent
Pope Francis continually calls us to be an open and welcoming Church. Those in leadership should not be a ‘a closed caste’ but lead in going to the uncomfortable edges to be in solidarity with all who are rejected and forgotten. Our response needs to involve reach out where people’s wounds are healed and restored to the whole community without studying the situation and its consequence. He condemns the ‘narrow and prejudiced mentality’ where people cling to religious laws out of fear and reject those who should be ministered to - people ‘who encounter discrimination.
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Sixth Sunday of the Year
The gospels portray Jesus encountering people who have their backs against the wall. We hear today of a leper who is alienated and isolated from mainstream life and community. In The Colony: The Harrowing True Story of the Exiles of Molokai (2006), John Tayman, writes that ‘Leprosy is quite possibly the most powerful metaphor for 'otherness.' Though leprosy itself has lost much of its stigma, other forms of ‘leprosy’ appear where new groups can be identified as the least, the last and the lost.
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Reflections for Fifth Sunday
Stephen Fry, in an interview, said, if he met God, would ‘call God an evil, capricious, monstrous maniac - a bastard for having invented cancer and insects that burrow into children’s eyes. Because God is the creator of everything and all-powerful, God should/could do something to change the situation’. It also seems that this God is more aligned with those who are in power, abuse power, make war on the innocent and are judgemental rather than the God who is close to the broken-hearted (responsorial psalm).
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