Saying ‘My Lord and My God’
This is the word we ask Jesus to speak over our lives, to rescue us from our unbelief.
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This is the word we ask Jesus to speak over our lives, to rescue us from our unbelief.
Let us try to imagine the scene of the disciples who are walking with Jesus at their side for about seven miles
“Tell my brothers to go to Galilee; there they will see me” (Matthew 28:10). But why Galilee in particular?
The resurrection, life that is no longer subject to death, gives a fullness of meaning and beauty to the day-to-day nature of our existence
The moment in which we lose connection with Jesus and with the Church, we are no longer ourselves and we do not have any understanding of who we will be. For Peter at that moment, the cock crows and his crowing becomes an echo of Jesus’s words during the Last Supper. Peter, now smitten and dejected, is brought back to self-awareness. The Lord, turning his head, looks at Peter. Once more it is the gaze of Jesus that conquers a person, that moves him to compassion.
The Gospel says Jesus arrives at Gethsemane with his disciples but then distances himself a bit. This is a battle that Jesus needs to face by himself. He asks his companions to keep watch with him and to pray not to enter into temptation, but he needs to face this hour in solitude. The disciples do not hold up; they are not capable of keeping vigil and they fall asleep. But this sleep is certainly not a sign of weariness. So what kind of sleep is this? It is a way of escape. Sleep is the thing in life that most resembles death; it can be a way of escape.
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