“May I
know you more clearly, love you more dearly,
and follow you more nearly, now and
forever.”
This famous prayer of St.
Richard Chicester expresses the ardent desire
of every disciple of Christ. Each day, we want
to grow in our knowledge and love of the Lord
and in our commitment to follow him. My Lord
and My God! A Scriptural Journey with the
Followers of Jesus was written with that
goal in mind. We can better follow Jesus when
we get to know the men and women who were his
first followers. By reflecting on Jesus’
encounters with his disciples, we will come to
a deeper understanding of our Lord. And, as
our knowledge of Jesus increases, so will our
love for him and our desire to give our lives
each day entirely to him.
My Lord
and My God! A Scriptural Journey with the
Followers of Jesus is designed to help
readers learn to carefully examine the
gospels. As we become more attentive and alert
to every word and detail written by the
evangelists, Jesus and his followers come into
sharper focus before our eyes. And as we
meditate upon the disciples featured in the
ten reflections in this book—among them Simon
Peter, Zacchaeus, Bartimaeus, Mary of Bethany,
Joseph of Arimathea, and Thomas—we’ll discover
just how diverse the face of discipleship is.
In fact, we’ll also find our own faces
reflected there.
Meeting
Jesus and His Followers
Much
about Jesus’ character is revealed to us in
the ways he responded to the people and events
in his life. There are so many clues: his
words as well as his silences; what he did as
well as what he refrained from doing; the
actions he praised as well as those he
criticized. He taught, healed, affirmed,
challenged, and convicted the people he met,
calling everyone to a deep transformation of
life. These men and women, whether they were
rich or poor, learned or simple, esteemed or
lowly, Jew or Gentile, related to Jesus in
ways that can help us to examine ourselves and
our own interactions with our Lord.
As
you reflect on each gospel scene, try to get
inside the characters yourself. Put yourself
in the shoes (or sandals!) of those who
encountered Jesus and imagine yourself in the
scene. Accompany the woman with the hemorrhage
as she pressed through the crowd to reach
Jesus and bring him your own needs. Join Mary
of Bethany at Jesus’ feet and listen to his
words to you. Play the role of Judas in your
own imagination and realize how close each of
us is to succumbing to temptation and
betrayal. Go with Mary Magdalene to the garden
tomb in her grief and rejoice with her as you,
too, encounter the risen Lord there. Like
Thomas, stretch out your hand to touch Jesus
and, with deepened faith, exclaim “My Lord and
my God!” Or ask yourself where you fit in a
particular scene, and which person you
identify with right now in your life. As St.
Josemaría Escrivá, the founder of Opus Dei,
advised:
Make it a habit to
mingle frequently with the characters who
appear in the New Testament. . . . My advice
is that, in your prayer, you actually take
part in the different scenes of the Gospel, as
one more among the people present. . . .
It is not a matter of
just thinking about Jesus, of recalling some
scenes of his life. We must be completely
involved and play a part in his life. We must
follow him as closely as Mary his Mother did,
as closely as the first twelve, the holy
women, the crowds that pressed about him. If
we do this without holding back, Christ's
words will enter deep into our soul and will
really change us.
The men and women who came
to Jesus with faith, hope, and love, with
needs, weaknesses, and sins, provide a mirror
for us. We can see ourselves in their devotion
and courage as well as in their anxieties and
cares. Look into this mirror and allow God’s
Spirit to transform you.
“My Lord and my God!” Since
Thomas first exclaimed these words twenty
centuries ago, millions of men and women have
come to meet the risen Lord and repeat this
profound profession of faith in him. I pray
that My
Lord and My God! A Scriptural Journey with
the Followers of Jesus will help each
of us make this proclamation our own.