The Fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time
On March 21, 2006, a Jack Dorsey did something no one had ever done before—and it had a profound impact on all of us.
He sent out
the first Tweet.
“Just
setting up my Twitter,” he wrote. The rest is history.
As of this
month, Twitter reports there are 500 million Tweets per day sent from around
the world.
There are
100 million daily active Twitter users.
On March
21, 2006, a Jack Dorsey did something no one had ever done before—and it had a
profound impact on all of us.
He sent out
the first Tweet.
“Just
setting up my Twitter,” he wrote. The rest is history.
As of this
month, Twitter reports there are 500 million Tweets per day sent from around
the world.
There are
100 million daily active Twitter users.
Twitter is
used by both by the famous and not so famous to communicate with the world in
just 280 characters – for better or for worse!
Even Pope Francis is on Twitter and he has 40
million followers in nine different languages.
We live in
an age when communication is instantaneous, when no thought goes unexpressed,
when more voices are being heard by more people—for better or worse. And a lot
of it is happening—again, for better or worse—on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram
and other kinds of social media.
But if you
want to know the true power of words, consider one word uttered by Jesus in
this Gospel we just heard—a word that changed a life and that actually made
history:
“Quiet.”
With that
one command, the man who would go on to calm a storm at sea calms the raging
storms inside one anonymous figure in the synagogue.
With that
one word, a miracle of healing will begin.
A few moments
ago we sung “If today you hear his voice, harden not your
hearts.”
Our lives
are inundated with literally billions of voices coming from twitter, Facebook,
movies and television. Some of it is
really good and some of it is really, really, bad.
Yet, out of all
the voices echoing around the world right now, the one that matters, truly
matters, is that one that quieted that troubled soul in the synagogue 2,000
years ago. The one who spoke with authority—and still speaks to us today…
Quiet!
How can we
make ourselves more open to truly hearing his word, and letting it change our
lives?
Pray to make
that happen, to tune out whatever is getting in the way, to lower the volume of
daily life and find times to be quiet with God.
As we gather
around this table of sacrifice and raise our voices together
in expectation and hope, may we do it with hearts that have heard that voice.
May we allow
the word of God to quiet our own fears or uncertainties, open the door to our
hearts, and let him in.
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