Thursday, October 17, 2019, St. Ignatius of Antioch
Romans 3:21-30, Psalm  130:1-6, Luke 11:47-54
Link to Readings --> http://www.usccb.org/bible/readings/101719.cfm
WAIT IN JOYFUL HOPE
"My soul trusts in His word. My soul waits for the  Lord." -Psalm 130:5-6
When I was younger, waiting used to be for me like  chalk squeaking on a chalkboard. My prayer often went like this: "Lord, I want  this so bad, this conversion, this vocation. It's not a selfish thing I'm  waiting for; You Yourself have put it on my heart, Lord. Hope deferred is  making my heart sick (Prv 13:12), and still it hasn't happened..." Gradually, I  Iearned that waiting for the Lord, if done in a spirit of "waiting with" the  Lord, grows into a time of daily trust in Him, for His ways are high above my  ways (Is 55:8-9). "My soul trusts in His word" (Ps 130:5).
The Israelites waited forty years in the desert.  During that waiting, they were transformed from a rebellious people into His  trusting people, ready to inherit what God had promised. The waiting itself  became their heritage. So it is to be with us disciples of Jesus. Just to be  with Him, to wait "with Him," is enough, regardless of the outcome of the  situation for which we pray. To wait one hour with Jesus, as at Gethsemane (Mt  26:40), becomes our heart's desire. Eventually, the "waiting for" becomes a  "waiting on," a desire to console His heart. Being with Jesus transforms our  heart from desiring what we want to desiring what He wants.  Somehow, it dawns  on us that He has been handling the situation our heart desired all along.
"Wait for the Lord with courage; be stouthearted,  and wait for the Lord" (Ps 27:14). Wait in joyful hope, for the waiting is your  heritage and your privilege.
Prayer: Lord Jesus Christ, I will wait in joyful  hope for the coming of Your kingdom.
Promise: "Through His blood, God made [Jesus] the  means of expiation for all who believe." -Rm 3:25
Praise: Emperor Trajan forced the Christians in  Antioch to choose between death and apostasy.  Bishop St. Ignatius would not  deny Christ and was condemned to death.
(This teaching was submitted by a member of our  editorial team.)
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Rescript: In accord with the "Code of Canon Law", I hereby grant the "Nihil Obstat" ("Permission to Publish") for "One Bread, One Body" covering the period from October 1, 2019 through November 30, 2019
?Most Reverend Joseph R. Binzer, Auxiliary Bishop, Vicar General of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati,  March 11, 2019
The "Nihil Obstat" ("Permission to Publish") is a declaration that a book or pamphlet is considered to be free of doctrinal or moral error. It is not implied that those who have granted the "Nihil Obstat" agree with the contents, opinions, or statements expressed.
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