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Compiled by J. Maurus
The Father willed to restore everything in Christ
The heavenly Father took pity on the erring humanity and willed to restore everything in Christ. This began in family and with work.
The mystery of Christ the worker seems to be more profound than the mystery of his passion and death. So many years spent at the carpenter's bench! "Isn't he the son of the carpenter?" "Isn't he the carpenter?"
The sweat of brow at Nazareth was not less redemptive than the sweat of blood at Gethsemane.
What Jesus did is a clearer teaching than what he preached.
From Saint and Thought For Every Day,
by Blessed James Alberione
In His passion Jesus pleased His heavenly Father. He immolated Himself to His Father's will: "Not my will, but yours be done." He bore all our iniquities, from the sin of Adam up to the end of the world. He made reparation for internal sins with the interior sufferings of His spirit and His heart; He made reparation for external sins with His physical sufferings. His passion was twofold: in His soul and in His body. "He loved us and died for us." Through His death He made us live; He granted us His grace, which reaches us especially through the sacraments.
What Strikes Me Most Today
What strikes me most today is the fact that salvation did begin in family and with work. Contemplating that makes me want to be a better husband and father and a better physician. These other aspects of our lives in no way take away from our relationship with God, they are the fulfillment of the gift of life God gave each one of us. Since it was important for Jesus to be part of a family and do work, it must be the same for us - whether we live with our family or alone or in a religious community, and regardless of our specific vocation - Blessed Alberione reminds us today that salvation did begin in family and with work.
What strikes you most today?
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