Friday, August 18, 2023

Friday of the Nineteenth Week in Ordinary Time

(Joshua 24:1-13; Matthew 19:3-12)

A man is experiencing severe memory loss.  He cannot do many things that most adults take for granted. Driving a car is out, and so is much reading.  But he is not depressed.  He cherishes the things that he can do.  Everyday he walks to look at the ducks in a large pond.  He sits on a bench where, he says, there is always a refreshing breeze.  At the end of the walk he thanks God for giving him these gifts of nature.

In today’s first reading Joshua expresses a similar gratitude to God.  In his discourse to all Israel he recalls the blessings God bestowed on their ancestors.  God made them abundant and rescued them from slavery in Egypt.  He cleared for them a land where they may prosper.  Joshua wants the people to thank God for his manifold kindness.

All of us have received many blessings from God.  But when things become difficult, we tend to forget His goodness and wonder whether He exists.  The wise, like my friend, will notice that God does not abandon them.  He bestows continued, simple blessings worthy of continued thanks.