Testify to the Truth and Be Protected by God. If you are new to mental prayer, we invite you to visit our page on the ways of mental prayer, Don’t know how to Pray to God, to learn more.
We begin Day 28 of this Lenten prayer journey with this opening prayer :
Trust and Believe…
Lord,
I know you love me intimately. Please help me prepare my heart as I begin these 15 minutes of mental prayer with you. Lord, let me be present to you and aware of the movements of the Holy Spirit in my heart, receiving the grace you give with humility and contrition. Lord, help me visualize you in my presence right now as I strive to complete this Lenten reflection. Let me fully contemplate the readings as I ponder what it means to testify to the truth and be protected by God. I want to follow you all the way to Calvary, Jesus, and I want to do it with my whole heart.
AMEN.
Monday of the Fifth week of Lent (Liturgical Year I)
Testify to the Truth and Be Protected by God
A Reflection for Prayerful Meditation
Let’s begin Day 28 of our Lenten journey as we continue traveling with Jesus in our hearts and minds toward Calvary by meditating on the daily Mass readings for today: the First Reading, the Psalms, and the Gospel Reading. As you make your self-reflection, feel free to journal your responses to the Lord. This meditation is suited for prayer before the Blessed Sacrament, but you can also pray this meditation while looking at a Crucifix or an image of Jesus that you have.
Testify to the Truth and Be Protected by God
Prayer to the Holy Spirit
Start with Love…
Holy Spirit,
I believe you are truly here and present to me right now. I desire to be present to you. Guide my heart and mind and show me how I might pick up my cross and follow Jesus all the way to Calvary. Help me turn my heart more fully to God so that I might better understand God’s love for me.
Breathe on me as I spend these next 15 minutes fixated on today’s Mass readings. Holy Spirit, help me pray with humility, honesty, love and affection. I want to grow in virtue and holiness.
Thank you, Holy Spirit, for every consolation, desolation, time of silence, difficult trial, and temptation of the evil one. I understand that you love me and that everything in my life happens by God’s holy will, whether it be divine providence or God’s permissive will due to my sin and negligence.
Please humble me as I walk with Jesus toward Calvary.
AMEN.
Say Nothing Just Take Him In
Spend 1-3 minutes in silence gazing at Jesus with love and gratitude, in a prayer of silent contemplation.
Make a Movie in Your Mind…
Now we will contemplate the First Reading. We are going to ancient Babylon in Mesopotamia. This city is in what we now know as present-day Iraq, and is roughly 50 miles south of Baghdad in a place called Hillah. Imagine this in your mind as we contemplate our story.
We are traveling to the home of a wealthy Jewish man and his pious and physically beautiful wife, Susanna. This home is majestic and contains a beautiful and ornate garden. The owner is a prominent man who hosts occasions for judges and litigants to meet and do business. But Babylon is a pagan country full of sexual immorality, lust, pride, and avarice. We see the beautiful wife, Susanna, prays the morning Shema in a more secluded part of the palace. Afterward she attends to her maids and duties of the house. Around noon, she enters her husband’s beautiful tree-lined garden, as she is accustomed. But this day is unlike any other, because wicked evil schemers full of lust are waiting for her.
Imagine yourself physically there in the scene. What do you hear? See? Feel?
Testify to the Truth and Be Protected by God
The Lord Heard Her Prayer and Sent Daniel to Help Her
Daniel 13:1-9,15-17,19-30, 33-62
In Babylon there lived a man named Joakim, who married a very beautiful and God-fearing woman, Susanna, the daughter of Hilkiah; her pious parents had trained their daughter according to the law of Moses. Joakim was very rich; he had a garden near his house, and the Jews had recourse to him often because he was the most respected of them all.
That year, two elders of the people were appointed judges, of whom the Lord said, “Wickedness has come out of Babylon: from the elders who were to govern the people as judges.”
These men, to whom all brought their cases, frequented the house of Joakim. When the people left at noon, Susanna used to enter her husband’s garden for a walk. When the old men saw her enter every day for her walk, they began to lust for her. They suppressed their consciences; they would not allow their eyes to look to heaven, and did not keep in mind just judgments.
One day, while they were waiting for the right moment, she entered the garden as usual, with two maids only. She decided to bathe, for the weather was warm. Nobody else was there except the two elders, who had hidden themselves and were watching her. “Bring me oil and soap,” she said to the maids, “and shut the garden doors while I bathe.”
As soon as the maids had left, the two old men got up and hurried to her. “Look,” they said, “the garden doors are shut, and no one can see us; give in to our desire, and lie with us. If you refuse, we will testify against you that you dismissed your maids because a young man was here with you.”
“I am completely trapped,” Susanna groaned. “If I yield, it will be my death; if I refuse, I cannot escape your power. Yet it is better for me to fall into your power without guilt than to sin before the Lord.”
Then Susanna shrieked, and the old men also shouted at her, as one of them ran to open the garden doors. When the people in the house heard the cries from the garden, they rushed in by the side gate to see what had happened to her. At the accusations by the old men, the servants felt very much ashamed, for never had any such thing been said about Susanna.
When the people came to her husband Joakim the next day, the two wicked elders also came, fully determined to put Susanna to death. Before all the people they ordered: “Send for Susanna, the daughter of Hilkiah, the wife of Joakim.”
When she was sent for, she came with her parents, children and all her relatives. All her relatives and the onlookers were weeping. In the midst of the people the two elders rose up and laid their hands on her head. Through her tears she looked up to heaven, for she trusted in the Lord wholeheartedly.
The elders made this accusation: “As we were walking in the garden alone, this woman entered with two girls and shut the doors of the garden, dismissing the girls. A young man, who was hidden there, came and lay with her. When we, in a corner of the garden, saw this crime, we ran toward them. We saw them lying together, but the man we could not hold, because he was stronger than we; he opened the doors and ran off. Then we seized this one and asked who the young man was, but she refused to tell us. We testify to this.”
The assembly believed them, since they were elders and judges of the people, and they condemned her to death. But Susanna cried aloud: “O eternal God, you know what is hidden and are aware of all things before they come to be: you know that they have testified falsely against me. Here I am about to die, though I have done none of the things with which these wicked men have charged me.”
The Lord heard her prayer. As she was being led to execution, God stirred up the holy spirit of a young boy named Daniel, and he cried aloud: “I will have no part in the death of this woman.”
All the people turned and asked him, “What is this you are saying?”
He stood in their midst and continued, “Are you such fools, O Israelites! To condemn a woman of Israel without examination and without clear evidence? Return to court, for they have testified falsely against her.”
Then all the people returned in haste. To Daniel the elders said, “Come, sit with us and inform us, since God has given you the prestige of old age.”
But he replied, “Separate these two far from one another that I may examine them.”
After they were separated one from the other, he called one of them and said: “How you have grown evil with age! Now have your past sins come to term: passing unjust sentences, condemning the innocent, and freeing the guilty, although the Lord says, ‘The innocent and the just you shall not put to death.’ Now, then, if you were a witness, tell me under what tree you saw them together.”
“Under a mastic tree,” he answered.
“Your fine lie has cost you your head,” said Daniel; “for the angel of God shall receive the sentence from him and split you in two.”
Putting him to one side, he ordered the other one to be brought. “Offspring of Canaan, not of Judah,” Daniel said to him, “beauty has seduced you, lust has subverted your conscience. This is how you acted with the daughters of Israel, and in their fear they yielded to you; but a daughter of Judah did not tolerate your wickedness. Now, then, tell me under what tree you surprised them together.”
“Under an oak,” he said.
“Your fine lie has cost you also your head,” said Daniel; “for the angel of God waits with a sword to cut you in two so as to make an end of you both.”
The whole assembly cried aloud, blessing God who saves those that hope in him. They rose up against the two elders, for by their own words Daniel had convicted them of perjury. According to the law of Moses, they inflicted on them the penalty they had plotted to impose on their neighbor: they put them to death. Thus was innocent blood spared that day.
Reflection:
Let us take a moment to reflect on the message in the First Reading.
Susanna was faithful to God, even when tested, and she never waivered. She trusted in God’s mercy and believed that as long as she would testify to the truth, she would be protected by God. We can see how Daniel, who was also holy and righteous, heard the voice of God and came to Susanna’s aid. He came as an answer to her prayer, and his wisdom, which came from God, revealed the deception of the two lustful elders who plotted and schemed against Susanna with evil intention.
Now let’s personalize this passage from our First Reading…
Be Completely Real…
Next, we will apply this message to our own lives. Open your heart and allow the Lord to search it. When in your life were you put to the test? Is there a time in your past when you were tested and you failed? Was there also a time when you were tested and you put your faith in God and he delivered you from evil? There were many things Susanna could have done in the story, but she chose to put her trust in the divine providence of God, and he was faithful to her. Consider your own life. Can you see God’s faithfulness when you pray to him with faith to deliver you from wicked schemers and evil people with malice?
Give the Holy Spirit time to respond. You may want to journal about these thoughts.
In the next part we will read a prayer of thanksgiving from Psalms. Pray this with a pure heart of love and gratitude to God for his faithfulness and his mercy.
Let us continue our mental prayer with today’s Responsorial Psalm:
Testify to the Truth and Be Protected by God
I Fear No Evil Because God is With Me
Psalms 23: 1-6
The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want.
In verdant pastures he gives me repose;
beside restful waters he leads me;
he refreshes my soul.
He guides me in right paths
for His names’s sake.
Even though I walk in the dark valley
I fear no evil; for you are at my side
with your rod and your staff
that give me courage.
You spread the table before me
in the sight of my foes;
You anoint my head with oil;
my cup overflows.
Only goodness and kindness follow me
all the days of my life;
and I shall dwell in the house of the LORD
for years to come.
Visualize Christ…
Next, we are going to spend the night with Jesus at the peak of the Mount of Olives. We leave through the city walls, get across the ravine, and cross the Brook Kidron. Now we will walk with Jesus up the steep incline to the peak. This takes us about 30 minutes. This is a favorite place for solitude and prayer, and it offers a view of the entire ridge running along the eastern side of Jerusalem for miles.
Take a moment to close your eyes and picture Jesus praying as you fall asleep, and then in the morning when you wake you see him still praying. He tells you to come, you are returning again to the temple, so you accompany Jesus down from the mountain and back into the city of Jerusalem and to the temple court. You see a crowd forming, and then there becomes a ruckus as the scribes and Pharisees haul in an adulterous woman to be stoned. You watch the Lord respond with mercy and grace, drawing a line in the sand, and causing the scribes and Pharisees to leave, one by one. He forgives the shocked woman, tells her to sin no more. But the proud angry Pharisees will not be silenced. Some more come to object to the words of mercy. Jesus sees them coming toward him with malice in their hearts, and so turns to the crowd.
Now we are ready to take our image of Jesus and visualize today’s Gospel Reading. Put yourself in this scene much like you did in the First Reading. Prayerfully speak to Jesus about what stirred your heart. What do you want to tell him?
Testify to the Truth and Be Protected by God
If You Knew Me you Would Know My Father Also
John 8:12-20
Jesus spoke to them again, saying, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.”
So the Pharisees said to him, “You testify on your own behalf, so your testimony cannot be verified.”
Jesus answered and said to them, “Even if I do testify on my own behalf, my testimony can be verified, because I know where I came from and where I am going. But you do not know where I come from or where I am going. You judge by appearances, but I do not judge anyone. And even if I should judge, my judgment is valid, because I am not alone, but it is I and the Father who sent me. Even in your law it is written that the testimony of two men can be verified. I testify on my behalf and so does the Father who sent me.”
So they said to him, “Where is your father?”
Jesus answered, “You know neither me nor my Father. If you knew me, you would know my Father also.” He spoke these words while teaching in the treasury in the temple area. But no one arrested him, because his hour had not yet come.
Are You Listening?
Is your heart whispering to you: “Jesus IS God. His judgment IS valid. He IS one with the Father, and he doesn’t judge by appearances like people do. Jesus IS the truth. His life testifies to the truth.”
Now let’s reflect with the help of the Holy Spirit. Have you ever judged someone wrongly by the appearance of guilt?
Have you ever thought someone was evil and deserving of punishment, but later found out they were innocent? Or has someone been guilty and sought your forgiveness, but you refused to forgive the offense?
What is Jesus saying to you? Can you hear what the Holy Spirit is whispering in your heart? Yes, Jesus, only God knows what is in a man’s heart, and whether he is guilty of sin or innocent, whether he has truly converted his heart from evil or is secretly evil and feigning righteousness. In this way, we have to forgive all offenses because we cannot know the heart of a man. We trust in God to deliver mercy and justice according to his will. This is how God testifies to the truth and protects the ones who are faithful to him.
Take a moment now to speak from your heart to the Lord. You may want to journal about something that the Holy Spirit has revealed to you.
Pray the next Lenten Meditation
Day 29 Lenten Meditation
Those Attached to this World Will Die in Their Sin
“Those Attached to this World Will Die in Their Sin” – join us in our 29th Lenten reflection for Liturgical Year I