Online Retreat
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The Collaborative Ministry Office - Creighton University

Printer Friendly Version:  Week 10



Guide

The Invitation of Love - Please be with me.

Imagine someone we love has just returned from a week of retreat in the Dominican Republic.  Consider this invitation he or she might make to me. All week of this retreat, we will ponder the power of this imaginative invitation from someone we love.  What impact would it have on me?  If this is someone I love, would worry about the possible hardship of the service hold me back?

And, all week, we will compare this invitation to the one we receive from Jesus.

Just consider this invitation all week.  Feel it.  It is the call of our Baptism into Jesus.  It isn't imaginary.  It is very real.  How special we are to receive such an invitation of love!

As always, make use of the helps to the right to get started.  Click on the photo to see it full size and read the directions for making it the background wall paper for your monitor.  And consider sharing the graces you are receiving.



Some Practical Help for Getting Started This Week.

This week's consideration is about the Love's Invitation.  Over the past several weeks we have seen the transforming power of love.  As loved sinners we have experienced two powerful movements:  God's love for us, and our desire to respond to this love.  In these exercises we have grown in a sense that our relationship with God is truly a relationship.  Everything in our faith life changes as we grow more deeply into this relationship.  Whereas before I might have tried to do good and avoid evil out of a sense of obligation, I now am looking for a way to respond in gratitude to someone who has loved me at the very time I'd been an unfaithful, unreliable friend.

That's why the first part of this consideration is about an invitation of love as we might experience it with someone we love.  Each of us may add a consideration that is rooted in a concrete loving situation we are in now.  It doesn't have to be an imaginative one.  Perhaps my spouse and I are changing and have fallen into some ruts that haven't been good for our relationship.  We decide to make some major changes in the way we live our lives, for the sake of the relationship.  Whatever the invitation of love is, it will have the same components:  it won't be easy, but we will have each other.

Then when we consider the call of Jesus we can sense and feel the call in the context of the invitation of love in this relationship - my relationship with Jesus.  Several of the readings we had a few weeks ago contain elements of this kind of call.  When Jesus got into Peter's boat to preach (Luke 5:1-11), Jesus invited Peter into deeper water and showed Peter his power to net fish.  Peter is humbled and wants to run away.  Jesus can then make the invitation of love - he can use a humble Peter.  The woman at Simon the Pharisee's dinner party (Luke 7:36-50) shows us so much about love's power to transform us.  Jesus tells his host that the difference between loving little and loving a lot has to do with how much we've been forgiven.  This woman's awareness of her sinfulness has carved out in her a greater capacity to love.

Radically following Jesus can only be a response of the heart.  We can all admit that too often in the past we have been too busy to even hear the call, let alone respond to it.  Now that we have been touched by the forgiving and healing love of Jesus, now that our hearts are desiring of expressing our gratitude, we can hear the call as love's invitation.

Without jumping to our response yet, let's listen this week.  We want to be touched by the invitation, to experience what it does within our hearts.  Perhaps we will want to write out the invitation we are hearing from the Lord.  Perhaps we would be willing to share some grace we have received, so the whole group making this retreat can share in it.  Perhaps we want to use our bodies to pray this week. I can sit in my chair for a bit and just listen to the call deep in my heart.  I can rest my open hands, palms up, on my lap as a gesture of openness and gratitude.  This simple ritual gesture, or any other I might choose, then becomes an expression to give a lasting symbolic life to my prayer.

Finally, we can all be renewed in the sense that we are on a journey.   We are growing in our ability to find intimacy with God in our everyday lives - from the moment we put on our slippers to the moment we take them off at night.  In all the background moments of consciousness, we are journeying through our life with a richer imagination and a deeper affective relationship with the One who is always faithfully with us.



For the Journey

We have been praying these past weeks about God's creative and redemptive love.  We have also been discovering exactly who it is who has loved so much, so deeply and for so long.

When you receive a letter or note without a signature you are less likely to take it seriously.  If you were to receive a nice gift without any signature except for a set of initials, you might be more interested about who is this benefactor.  There is something deep inside us which wants to know more about anybody who might like us, send us cards and gifts, and who might actually love us.  Who are they and why are they so good to me?  What do they want in return?  These are the questions which end the first section of the Spiritual Exercises and which flow into the second.

We have received deeply the gifts of our having been created and then recreated in the salvific love of Jesus Christ.  Who is this God, who is this God-Made-Man come to us?  He comes, not anonymously, not jotting just a two-letter signature, but proclaims His name and Who He is.

We pray to study His signature and to know Him as gift and the gifts He offers.  Be very aware that each of us has resistances to His teachings, His ways, and the path of mystery to which He calls us.

As with the men and women with whom He entered into deep intimacy, their questions, their fears, their excuses, their other-plans and their natural reluctance to trust, all became part of their encounter and ultimate surrender to Him.  We ourselves want to know what we are going to be asked to do.  We are called to pray this week with these questions, these reluctances, these fears well in hand and heart.  They are the places where He met Peter, Nicodemus, the early Church and all the saints.  We pray within the truth of our truths.  He meets us the way He finds us, but we have to find our fears and distrustings in order to be intimately met.

Out of love we were called into life; out of love we were called from death through sin; out of love we are constantly being called into trusting what real life can be with and along side Jesus.  His call to us is a freedom from and a freedom for.  The "from" we know, the "for" is the cause of our fear and the platform of our prayer.  We pray for the desire to know Him and His personal love for us so deeply that with our fears before us, we can slowly let Him take them away one tremor and one tremble at a time.



In These or Similar Words

Dear Lord,

I am moved by so much in this week's retreat.  I see the stunning face of the little girl, standing next to a huge bed in that hospital.  It's a poor place, I can see that by the cracks on the wall.  But what can I do with the little girl?  I can't bring her home with me.

But as I continue to look at the photo, there is an invitation I feel from you.  I feel so moved when I read the imaginary conversation at the beginning of the Guide for the week.  What if my own loved one came home from an experience like that and asked me the same thing?  Would I go? Of course.  It would mean so much to us and to the way we would experience our love together, in that strange and wonder-filled place.

Is that what you are asking?  You want me to consider an invitation from you to go someplace I've never been? Maybe it's someplace new, but at the same time, someplace right here at home.  It's different.  I'm different. But you, my loving God, would be with me in it?  If I got frightened, you would be there?  I feel your promise that you will not only be with me but that the love between us would grow.  What a dizzying thought!

In the past weeks, I have been amazed at the depth of love I feel growing between us, Jesus.  I feel your presence in my prayers and I sometimes get self-conscious, wondering if I'm a little crazy for 'imagining' a deep feeling coming from you.  But in the quiet of my prayer, I know it's real.  There is a very real love that is deepening between us.  It makes me feel some deeper longing for you.

Let me sit quietly with this invitation, Jesus.  I feel your calling me to something, but I'm not sure what. I feel an emptiness inside that I know you can fill, a yearning for some way to draw closer to you.

Be with me, Lord, as I pray with the photo of the little girl.  Stay with me as I contemplate the invitation you hold out to me.  Be with me.  Fill me.  Let me feel your love.  Thank you for this call you are sending me.  Give me the patience to stay with it this week, to pray with it and to be patient with it.


Prayer to Begin Each Day: 

May all that I am today,
all that I try to do today,
may all my encounters, reflections,
even the frustrations and failings
all place my life in your hands.
 
Lord, my life is in your hands.
Please, let this day give you praise.


Scripture Readings:

Luke 4:14-20
Mark 1:16-20
Luke 5:27-31
Luke 9:57-62
Luke 12:32-34