Lord's Day Reflection: Fruits, Roots, and Lenten Boots -
Walking the Talk
As the Church celebrates the Eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time,
Jenny Kraska offers her thoughts on the day's liturgical readings, focusing on
humility and conversion
By Jenny Kraska
This week, as we approach the holy season of Lent, beginning
with Ash Wednesday, the words of Jesus in Luke’s Gospel provide us with a
timely and profound reflection. Jesus begins by sharing a parable with His
disciples, He speaks of the blind leading the blind, the importance of removing
the plank from our own eye before addressing the speck in our brother’s eye,
and the truth that a tree is known by its fruits. These teachings invite us
into the spirit of Lent: a season of repentance, self-examination, and
conversion.
Lent calls us to humility, urging us to recognize our own
need for healing and renewal before we seek to correct others. The ashes we
receive on Ash Wednesday are a stark reminder of our mortality and sinfulness,
but they are also an invitation to transformation through God’s grace. True
conversion is not merely an external practice but an interior renewal of the
heart. The ashes on our foreheads will wash away, but the inner transformation
they signify should endure. In the words of Pope Francis, "The joy of the
gospel is such that it cannot be taken away from us by anyone or anything"
(Evangelii Gaudium 84). May this Lent be a time when that joy takes
deeper root in our hearts, preparing us to celebrate Easter with renewed faith
and authentic witness.
In Evangelii Gaudium, Pope Francis challenges us
to embrace this renewal with joy and authenticity. He reminds us that
evangelization begins with a personal encounter with Christ that changes our
lives and makes us credible witnesses of the Gospel. He warns against spiritual
worldliness and complacency, calling us instead to be missionary disciples who
live out our faith with sincerity and love. This echoes Jesus’ words about
bearing good fruit—our lives must be a testimony to God’s mercy and truth.
Lent, then, is a time to examine what kind of fruit we are
producing. Are we truly bearing witness to Christ, or are we caught in
hypocrisy, focusing on the faults of others while ignoring our own need for
conversion? Evangelii Gaudium encourages us to move beyond a
faith of mere obligation and routine, into a faith that is alive and joyfully
shared. Our acts of prayer, fasting, and almsgiving this Lenten season should
not be mechanical but transformative, shaping us into more authentic disciples
of Christ.
As we journey through these forty days, may we continually
return to Christ's teachings in this week’s Gospel, allowing them to challenge
us, transform us, and ultimately lead us to become disciples whose words and
actions flow from hearts abundantly filled with God's love. Let us ask God for
the grace to see ourselves as He sees us, to remove the obstacles that keep us
from Him, and to bear fruit that reflects His love. May our Lenten journey lead
us to a deeper conversion, so that when we celebrate the Resurrection at
Easter, we may do so with hearts renewed and spirits aflame with the joy of the
Gospel.
Jenny Kraska is the Executive Director of the Maryland
Catholic Conference
https://www.vaticannews.va/en/church/news/2025-03/sunday-gospel-reflection-1-march-2025-kraska.html

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