Humbly submit your will to God (Thy Will be done) and consecrate yourself to the Sacred Heart of Jesus through Mary.

Today, the Sermon on the Mount comes to a conclusion.  Jesus closes with the challenge of stepping out of our comfort zone.  He knew that His followers would be persecuted if they lived out true discipleship.  Jesus teaches us to “love our enemies and pray for those who persecute you”.  This is absurd to anyone who does not have faith.  It just doesn’t make sense.  The important lesson is in the next verse, “that you may be children of your heavenly Father”.  If we are to be children of God and enter heaven this is a requirement and then he teaches us that God made all people.  Whether a person is black or white, our religion, another religion, or no religion, our enemy or our friend, our family or a complete stranger, God made them all and He is calling us to love them.  We are often quick to judge and short on love.  Padre Pio says, “Who can criticize, we all have faults and limits.”  There is one guarantee for every human being, we will sin and we will suffer.  God’s grace heals sinners, not human efforts or accomplishments (except God working through us).  As Paul says in the 1st reading today, Jesus became poor so we could become rich through His suffering.  Since we will all suffer, we must learn how to turn the pain and suffering into joy.  We must offer it up to Jesus as a small token for what He went through for our many sins.  The saints wanted to suffer so they could offer it up to Jesus to love Him more and in return brought them great joy.  
Most importantly, Jesus ends with, “so be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect.”  Are we called to be perfect?  This is impossible, only the sinless Jesus and Mary are perfect.  Jesus is not asking us to be perfect in the sense of making no mistakes.  He is teaching us today that His grace falls upon all who are open to receiving it and allowing His grace to work through us and bring love to others.  The way to perfection is humility, loving God and others, not judging, and suffering for Jesus.  We will make many mistakes, we will sin often, we will suffer and complain because our body and mind tell us to, we will judge, we will be prideful and stubborn, and we will not love God and others.  So, the task Jesus has given to us seems impossible, but “with God all things are possible” Mt 19:26  How?  God’s grace.  Where do we receive it after we have fallen, brush ourselves off and get back up to fight, in the sacraments.  The Catholic ER (Eucharist and Reconciliation).  We receive it in prayer, in doing good deeds for others, praying for others, in loving and forgiving.  

Be a servant, become a saint!
#Christian YOLO