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July 2, 2012

Monday in the Thirteenth week of the Church year.

Saint for the day: St. Oliver Plunkett (1629-1681)

Scripture readings for today's liturgy:

Amos 2:6 … 16

Psalm 50

Matthew 8:18-22

Most of us a familiar with the Gospel passage, “Martha, Martha, you are worried about many things. Only one thing is necessary…” (Luke 10:41).  Today’s Gospel presents us with choices around the theme, “Come, follow me!” And so we ask ourselves: “What does it mean to follow Jesus?”

Most of the time the answer is shifted to those who follow Jesus as religious or priests. But the Gospels are proclaimed to all people and everyone must come to that point of making a choice of whether to follow Jesus or go back home to do ... whatever. The irony, however, is that even those who decide not to follow Jesus today, will still have to make that decision somewhere along the way.

Not everybody is called to be a hermit, or a missionary, or enter religious life but all of us are called to follow Jesus. So what’s the bottom line here?

It all comes down to priorities and the reality that “this is the ‘day of the Lord’ and the only moment of salvation.” None of us knows when we will come to the ultimate moment of salvation. I can’t help but think of my own brother’s sudden death two years ago. He had called my sister to make plans how they would meet up with me to celebrate my “Jubilee” and he dropped dead the next day! So, just for today, we are all called to follow Jesus as best we can. The following prayer of St. Ignatius Loyola is a good prayer for us to say:

"Take, O Lord, and receive my entire liberty, my memory, my understanding, and my whole will. All that I am and all that I possess you have given me. I surrender it all to you to be disposed of according to your will.  Give me only your love and your grace – with these I will be rich enough and will desire nothing more.”

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You are here: Home Daily Reflections By Br. Daniel Thomas July 2, 2012

The General Curia

The church and convent of Santa Sabina on the Aventine hill in Rome have been home to the Order of Preachers (Dominicans) since the 13th century. At that time the church and associated buildings formed part of the holdings of the Savelli family. A Savelli Pope, Honorius III, approved the Order in 1216. Read more...

Province of St. Joseph

The Dominican friars of the Province of St. Joseph were founded in 1806 by Edward Dominic Fenwick, O.P., an American who had joined the English Province of the Order as a young man during its exile in Belgium. Fenwick eventually returned to the United States with the dream of establishing the Order in his native land. Read more...

 

The Third Order of St Dominic

The Third Order of Saint Dominic consists of men and women, singles and couples living a Christian life with a Dominican spirituality in a secular world. Read more...

 

Contact us

  • Dominican Friars, Nairobi P. O. Box: 24012 - 00502, Karen, Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya.
  • Dominican Friars, Kisumu  P.O. Box:  2566-40100, Kisumu .
  • Dominican Friars, St. Catherine of Siena Parish, Spring Valley - Village Market