

DWBC
Divine Word Biblical Center
Lectio Divina
Luke 10.9a: Welcoming those excluded
The disciples must look after the sick, cure lepers and drive out evil spirits (cf Mt 10.8). This means that they must welcome into the community those who had been excluded from it. The practice of solidarity is a criticism of a society that excluded a person from the rest of the community. And thus is recovered the ancient prophetic tradition of goêl. From earliest times, the strength of the clan or the community was revealed in its defence of the value of a person, a family and the possession of land, and was concretely practised every “seven times seven years” in the celebration of the jubilee year (Lv 25.8-55; Dt 15.1-18).
Luke 10.9b: The coming of the Kingdom
Hospitality, sharing, communion around the table, welcoming the excluded (goêl) were four pillars for sustaining community life. But because of the difficult situation of poverty, unemployment, persecution and oppression from the Romans, these pillars were broken. Jesus wants to rebuild them and affirms that, if they go back to these four values, the disciples can proclaim to the four winds: The Kingdom of God is very near to you! Proclaiming the Kingdom does not mean teaching truth and doctrine, but bringing people to a new way of living and sharing, a new way of acting and thinking, based on the Good News that Jesus proclaims: God is Father and therefore we are all together brothers and sisters.
Luke 10.10-12: Wiping the dust from their feet
How can we understand such a hard threat? Jesus came to bring an entirely new thing. He came to recover the communitarian values of the past: hospitality, sharing, communion around the table and welcoming the excluded. This explains the severity of the words used against those who refuse to accept the message. They are not refusing something new, but their own past, their own culture and wisdom! Jesus’ plan for the 72 disciples was aimed at digging up the memory, recovering the communitarian values of the oldest tradition, to rebuild the community and renew the Covenant, to renew life and thus to make God the new great Good News in the life of people.
Luke 10.17-20: The names written in heaven
The disciples come back from the mission and get together with Jesus to evaluate what they had done. They begin by telling their stories. With great joy, they inform him that, in the name of Jesus, they were able to drive out evil spirits! Jesus helps them in their discernment. If they were able to drive out evil spirits, it was because Jesus had given them that power. While they stay with Jesus, no evil can come to them. And Jesus says that the most important thing was not driving out evil spirits, but that their names are written in heaven. To have one’s name written in heaven means to be certain of being known and loved by the Father. Some time before this, James and John had asked to bring down fire from heaven to destroy the Samaritans (Lk 9.54). Now, through the proclamation of the Good News, Satan falls from heaven (Lk 10.18) and the names of the Samaritan disciples are entered in heaven! In those days, many thought that whatever was Samaritan was of the devil, of Satan (Jn 8.48). Jesus changes everything!
II. MEDITATIO
How does God’s Word apply to our situation now? The following questions may help.
1. Name each of the things that Jesus tells the disciples to do and the
things to avoid.
2. What does Jesus wish to clarify through each of these suggestions
so different from those common in everyday life?
3. How can we put into practice what the Lord asks: “take no purse
with you”, “do not move from house to house”, “salute no one on the
road”, “wipe off the very dust from your feet”?
4. Jesus tells us to be attentive to the most important thing when he says:
“your names are written in heaven!” What does this mean for us?
III. ORATIO AND CONTEMPLATIO
We spend some time in silent prayer to meet the risen Lord who works in us through the power of the holy Spirit. We can repeat and keep repeating each of the following “mantras” or others from the text until we reach a still point where we can pray without words, where the Lord takes hold of us and transform us through his power.
Praise the LORD, my soul;
I will praise the LORD all my life,
sing praise to my God while I live.
Psalm 146.2
ACTIO
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Pray that everyone may understand the appeal of Jesus: “The harvest is great, but the laborers are few. Pray the Lord of the harvest to send good laborers into his harvest."
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Pray also that in every person a deep vocational consciousness may be formed: all Catholics with all the means, for all vocations and apostolates.
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By your acts of charity and solidarity, by your preferential concern for the weak and vulnerable, allow yourselves to be instruments of God’s mercy and peace for them.
CLOSING PRAYER
Lord Jesus, we thank you for your Word that has clarified for us the will of the Father. Grant that your Spirit may enlighten our actions and give us the strength to put into practice that which your Word has revealed to us. Grant that we, like Mary, your Mother, may not only listen to your Word but also put it into practice. Who lives and reigns with the Father and the Holy Spirit for ever and ever. Amen.
