Ever heard of "Radical Honesty"? Today's Minute Meditations explores this concept! 🤔
logo-tag

February 22, 2024

Hello John,

 

Did you know...

St. Anthony of Padua was much more than the finder of lost items. He was a scholar and evangelist who wanted people to know God better. “The life of the body is the soul. The life of the soul is Christ,” he wrote.

 

We hope today's newsletter, through the intercession of St. Anthony, finds you well!

Peace, 

Chris sig

Christopher Heffron
Editorial Director 

SAINT OF THE DAY
empty-tomb-christ-2.22

Saint of the Day for February 22: Chair of Saint Peter

 

This feast commemorates Christ’s choosing Peter to sit in his place as the servant-authority of the whole Church.

 

After the “lost weekend” of pain, doubt, and self-torment, Peter hears the Good News. Angels at the tomb say to Magdalene, “The Lord has risen! Go, tell his disciples and Peter.” John relates that when he and Peter ran to the tomb, the younger outraced the older, then waited for him. Peter entered, saw the wrappings on the ground, the headpiece rolled up in a place by itself. John saw and believed.

 

But he adds a reminder: “…[T]hey did not yet understand the scripture that he had to rise from the dead” (Jn 20:9). They went home. There the slowly exploding, impossible idea became reality. Jesus appeared to them as they waited fearfully behind locked doors. “Peace be with you,” he said (Jn 20:21b), and they rejoiced.

The Pentecost event completed Peter’s experience of the risen Christ. “…[T]hey were all filled with the holy Spirit” (Acts 2:4a) and began to express themselves in foreign tongues and make bold proclamation as the Spirit prompted them.

 

Only then can Peter fulfill the task Jesus had given him: “… [O]nce you have turned back, you must strengthen your brothers” (Lk 22:32). He at once becomes the spokesman for the Twelve about their experience of the Holy Spirit—before the civil authorities who wished to quash their preaching, before the Council of Jerusalem, for the community in the problem of Ananias and Sapphira. He is the first to preach the Good News to the Gentiles. The healing power of Jesus in him is well attested: the raising of Tabitha from the dead, the cure of the crippled beggar. People carry the sick into the streets so that when Peter passed his shadow might fall on them.

Even a saint experiences difficulty in Christian living. When Peter stopped eating with Gentile converts because he did not want to wound the sensibilities of Jewish Christians, Paul says, “…I opposed him to his face because he clearly was wrong…. [T]hey were not on the right road in line with the truth of the gospel…” (Gal 2:11b, 14a).

 

At the end of John’s Gospel, Jesus says to Peter, “Amen, amen, I say to you, when you were younger, you used to dress yourself and go where you wanted; but when you grow old, you will stretch out your hands, and someone else will dress you and lead you where you do not want to go” (Jn 21:18). What Jesus said indicated the sort of death by which Peter was to glorify God. On Vatican Hill, in Rome, during the reign of Nero, Peter did glorify his Lord with a martyr’s death, probably in the company of many Christians.

 

Second-century Christians built a small memorial over his burial spot. In the fourth century, the Emperor Constantine built a basilica, which was replaced in the 16th century.

 

Reflection

Like the committee chair, this chair refers to the occupant, not the furniture. Its first occupant stumbled a bit, denying Jesus three times and hesitating to welcome gentiles into the new Church. Some of its later occupants have also stumbled a bit, sometimes even failed scandalously. As individuals, we may sometimes think a particular pope has let us down. Still, the office endures as a sign of the long tradition we cherish and as a focus for the universal Church.

 

Discover how this inspirational

American saint exemplified bravery and a total abandonment to God in the book Mission of Grace: The Story of Saint Marianne Cope.

Buy yours today!
cover Marianne Cope
MINUTE MEDITATIONS
man-tattoed-hands-2.22

Radical Honesty

Perhaps no part of the Bible provides a bigger help to prayer than the Psalms. They spring from every part of our emotional spectrum and lead us to the same point: gratitude for God’s generosity and a desire to imitate it as much as we can here and now. Francis knew the Psalms by heart, and those who followed him quickly did so too. They learned the Bible’s other most famous prayers and could pray them as they walked from place to place, reflecting on what God had accomplished through them in their previous location and preparing for what God might be asking from them in the next place.

 

Francis was as much subject to self-doubt as any of us. His motives were purified in prayer; his ego became right-sized there. His prayer was both private and public; one without the other tends to lead the person praying into some type of illusion. Instead, prayer leads us into deeper and more radical honesty while enabling us to deal with the consequences of any newfound honesty.

 

—from the book Peace and Good: Through the Year with Francis of Assisi by Pat McCloskey, OFM

 

Newly Released Version!

From Wild Man to Wise Man is a revised and updated edition of Richard Rohr's classic best-seller! Three new chapters discuss St. John the Baptist, St. Paul, and overcoming grief.

Click here to learn more!
9781632534101_3D
PAUSE+PRAY
leaf

Heed the Call

 

Reflect

Many in the United States prefer to pretend that “everything’s fine,” ignoring the world’s ecological crisis. The Netherlands Manifesto aims for a circular economy by 2050. This means a long-term, sustainable economy with no harmful emissions. Practically, it translates to government fines for use of non-recyclable waste, requirements on manufacturers for easy-to-repair products, a Repair Café in every neighborhood, fishing nets turned into carpets and plastic bottle caps becoming skateboards. 

 

Pray

Creator God,
Give us Your energy and creativity
For the challenges ahead. 

 

Act

The (African-American tradition) black people know the value of lamentation. (Find and listen to a recording of spirituals such as) like “Nobody Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen,” or “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child.” (If you wish, compose a lament of your own) Try singing along with a spiritual or composing a lament to voice and identify the danger of our current global predicament.

Today’s Pause+Pray was written by Kathy Coffey. Learn more here!

 May our resources renew your spirit as we share God’s love in the spirit of

St. Francis. Please consider making a donation to help us continue our efforts to share God's love in the spirit of St. Francis.

Please donate today!

Donate   |   Shop   |   About   |   St. Anthony Messenger Magazine

Franciscan Spirit   |   Saint of the Day   |   Minute Meditations   |   Pause and Pray

Facebook
X
Instagram
Pinterest

Franciscan Media, 28 W. Liberty St., Cincinnati, OH 45202, USA

Unsubscribe Manage preferences