Monday, 25 March 2024

25 MARCH – MONDAY IN HOLY WEEK

Lesson – Isaias l. 510
In those days, Isaias said: “The Lord has opened my ear, making known His will to me, and I do not resist: I have not gone back. I have given my body to the strikers, and my cheeks to them that plucked them: I have not turned away my face from them that rebuked me, and spit on me. The Lord God is my helper, therefore am I not confounded. He is near that justifies me, who will contend with me? Let us stand together. Who is my adversary? Let him come near to me. Behold the Lord God is my helper: who is he that will condemn me? Lo, they will all be destroyed as a garment, the moth will eat them up. Who is there among you that fears the Lord, that hears the voice of His servant? He that has walked in darkness, and has no light, let him hope in the name of the Lord, and lean upon his God.”
Thanks be to God. 

Dom Prosper Guéranger:
The sufferings of our Redeemer, and the patience with which He is to bear them, are thus prophesied by Isaias, who is always so explicit on the Passion. Jesus has accepted the office of victim for the worlds salvation. He shrinks from no pain or humiliation: He turns not His Face from them that strike Him and spit on Him. What reparation can we make to this Infinite Majesty, who, that He might save us, submitted to such outrages as these? Observe these vile and cruel enemies of our Divine Lord: now that they have Him in their power, they fear Him not. When they came to seize Him in the Garden, He had but to speak, and they fell back on the ground. But He has now permitted them to bind His hands and lead him to the High Priest. They accuse Him. They cry out against Him. And He answers but a few words. Jesus of Nazareth, the great Teacher, the wonder-worker, has seemingly lost all His influence. They can do what they will with Him. It is thus with the sinner. When the thunderstorm is over, and the lightning has not struck him, he regains his courage. The holy Angels look on with amazement at the treatment shown by the Jews to Jesus, and falling down, they adore the Holy Face, which they see thus bruised and defiled: let us, also, prostrate and ask pardon, for our sins have outraged that same Face.
But let us hearken to the last words of our Epistle: “He that has walked in darkness, and has no light, let him hope in the name of the Lord and lean upon his God.” Who is this but the Gentile, abandoned to sin and idolatry? He knows not what is happening at this very hour in Jerusalem. He knows not that the earth possesses its Saviour, and that this Saviour is being trampled beneath the feet of His own chosen people: but, in a very short time, the light of the Gospel will shine on this poor Gentile: he will believe. He will obey. He will love his Redeemer, even to the laying down his life for Him. Then will be fulfilled the prophecy of the unworthy Pontiff, who prophesied against his will that the death of Jesus would bring salvation to the Gentiles, by gathering into one family the children of God that hitherto had been dispersed (John xi. 52).
Gospel – John xii. 1‒9
Six days before the Pasch Jesus came to Bethany where Lazarus had been dead, whom Jesus raised to life. And they made Him a supper there; and Martha served, but Lazarus was one of them that were at table with Him. Mary therefore took a pound of ointment of right spikenard, of great price, and anointed the feet of Jesus, and wiped His feet with her hair: and the house was filled with the odour of the ointment. Then one of His disciples, Judas Iscariot, he that was about to betray him, said: “Why was not this ointment sold for three hundred pence, and given to the poor?” Now he said this, not because he cared for the poor, but because he was a thief, and, having the purse, carried the things that were put therein. Jesus therefore said: “Leave her alone, that she may keep it against the day of my burial. For the poor you will have always with you, but me you will have not always.” A great multitude therefore of the Jews knew He was there. And they came not for Jesus sake only, but that they might see Lazarus whom He had raised from the dead.
Praise be to you, O Christ. 

Dom Prosper Guéranger:
The event related in this passage of the Gospel took place on Saturday, the eve of Palm Sunday, but as formerly there was no Station for that day, the reading of this Gospel was deferred till the following Monday. The Church brings this episode of the last days of our Saviour before us, because it enables us to have a clearer understanding of the history of the Passion.
Mary Magdalene, whose conversion was the subject of our meditation a few days back, is a prominent figure in the Passion and Resurrection of her Divine Master. She is the type of a soul that has been purified by grace, and then admitted to the enjoyment of Gods choicest favours. It is of importance that we study her in each of the several phases, through which divine grace led her. We have already seen how she keeps close to her Saviour and supplies His sacred wants. Elsewhere we will find Jesus giving the preference to her over her sister Martha, and this because Mary chose a better part than Martha; but now, during these days of Passiontide, it is her tender love for Jesus that makes her dear to us. She knows that the Jews are plotting Jesus death. The Holy Spirit who guides her through the different degrees of perfection inspires her, on the occasion mentioned in todays Gospel, to the performance of an action which prophesied what she most dreaded.
One of the three gifts offered by the Magi to the Divine Infant, was myrrh. It is an emblem of death, and the Gospel tells us that it was used at the burial of our Lord. Magdalene, on the day of her conversion, testified the earnestness of her change of heart by pouring on the feet of Jesus the most precious of her perfumes. She gives Him today the same proof of her love. Her divine Master is invited by Simon the Leper to a feast: His Blessed Mother and His disciples are among the guests: Martha is busy looking after the service. Outwardly there is no disturbance, but inwardly there are sad forebodings. During the repast, Magdalene is seen entering the room, holding in her hand a vase of precious spikenard. She advances towards Jesus, kneels at His feet, anoints them with the perfume, and wipes them with her hair, as on the previous occasion. Jesus lay on one of those couches which were used by the Eastern people during their repasts. Magdalene, therefore, could easily take her favourite place at His feet, and give Him the same proof of her love as she had already done in the Pharisees house. The Evangelist does not say that this time she shed tears. Saint Matthew and Saint Mark add that she poured the ointment on his head also. Whether or not Magdalene herself understood the full import of what the Holy Spirit inspired her to do, the Gospel does not say, but Jesus Himself revealed the mystery to His disciples, and we gather from His words that this action of Magdalene was, in a certain manner, the commencement of His Passion: “She, in pouring this ointment on my body, has done it for my burial.”
The fragrance of the ointment fills the whole house. One of the disciples, Judas Iscariot, dares to protest against this waste, as he calls it. His base avarice deprives him of feeling and respect for his Divine Master. His opinion was shared in by several of the other disciples, for they were still carnal-minded. For several reasons Jesus permits Magdalenes generosity to be thus blamed. And firstly, He wishes to announce His approaching death which is mystically expressed by the pouring of this ointment on His body. Then, too, he would glorify Magdalene. And He therefore tells them that are present that her tender and ardent love will be rewarded, and that her name will be celebrated in every country, wherever the Gospel will be preached. And lastly, He would console those whose generous love prompts them to be liberal in their gifts to His altars, for what He here says of Magdalene is in reality a defence for them, when they are accused of spending too much over the beauty of Gods House.
Let us prize each of these divine teachings. Let us love to honour Jesus, both in His own person, and in His poor. Let us honour Magdalene, and imitate her devotion to the Passion and Death of our Lord. In fine, let us prepare our perfumes for our Divine Master: there must be the Myrrh of the Magi, which signifies penance, and the precious Spikenard of Magdalene, which is the emblem of generous and compassionating love.