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Danielle Bean

Danielle Bean
Danielle Bean, a mother of eight, is editor-in-chief of Catholic Digest and Faith & Family. She is author of My Cup of Tea, Mom to Mom, Day to Day, and most recently Small Steps for Catholic Moms. Though she once struggled to separate her life and her …
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Rachel Balducci

Rachel Balducci
Rachel Balducci is married to Paul and they are the parents of five lively boys and one precious baby girl. She is the author of How Do You Tuck In A Superhero?, and is a newspaper columnist for the Diocese of Savannah, Georgia. For the past four years, she has …
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Lisa Hendey

Lisa Hendey
Lisa Hendey is the founder and editor of CatholicMom.com and the author of A Book of Saints for Catholic Moms and The Handbook for Catholic Moms. Lisa is also enjoys speaking around the country, is employed as webmaster for her parish web sites and spends time on various …
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Arwen Mosher

Arwen Mosher
Arwen Mosher lives in southeastern Michigan with her husband Bryan and their 4-year-old daughter, 2-year-old son, and twin boys born May 2011. She has a bachelor's degree in theology. She dreads laundry, craves sleep, loves to read novels and do logic puzzles, and can't live without tea. Her personal blog site …
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Rebecca Teti

Rebecca Teti
Rebecca Teti is married to Dennis and has four children (3 boys, 1 girl) who -- like yours no doubt -- are pious and kind, gorgeous, and can spin flax into gold. A Washington, DC, native, she converted to Catholicism while an undergrad at the U. Dallas, where she double-majored in …
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Robyn Lee

Robyn Lee
Robyn Lee is a 30-something, single lady, living in Connecticut in a small bungalow-style kit house built by her great uncle in the 1950s. She also conveniently lives next door to her sister, brother-in-law and six kids ... and two doors down are her parents. She received her undergraduate degree from …
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DariaSockey

DariaSockey
Daria Sockey is a freelance writer and veteran of the large family/homeschooling scene. She recently returned home from a three-year experiment in full time outside employment. (Hallelujah!) Daria authored several of the original Faith&Life Catechetical Series student texts (Ignatius Press), and is currently a Senior Writer for Faith&Family magazine. A latecomer …
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Guest Bloggers

Kate Lloyd

Kate Lloyd
Kate Lloyd is a rising senior, and a political science major at Thomas More College of Liberal Arts in New Hampshire. While not in school, she lives in Whitehall PA, with her mom, dad, five sisters and little brother. She needs someone to write a piece about how it's possible to …
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Lynn Wehner

Lynn Wehner
As a wife and mother, writer and speaker, Lynn Wehner challenges others to see the blessings that flow when we struggle to say "Yes" to God’s call. Control freak extraordinaire, she is adept at informing God of her brilliant plans and then wondering why the heck they never turn out that …
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How to Get to Heaven

User's Guide to Sunday

Sunday, Aug. 22, is the 21st Sunday in Ordinary Time (Year C, Cycle II).

Papal

On Aug. 22, Pope Benedict XVI prays the Sunday Angelus at his summer residence, Castel Gandolfo, at noon.

Pope Benedict XVI returns to Rome Aug. 25 to offer his Wednesday general audience in St. Peter’s Square.

Saints

There are two feasts of mothers this week.

Aug. 22 is the Coronation of the Blessed Mother. This is a highly ironic feast day. The last thing Mary wanted was to be a queen. On this day, we always think of the Our Lady of Mount Carmel side altar at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C. Inscribed on the altar are the words: “Mary is more mother than queen.” Indeed she is. But it is precisely because she was so thoroughly a mother to Jesus that she is a queen. A queen, after all, should be someone who looks out for others with love from a position of authority. That’s Mary.

Aug. 27 and Aug. 28 are great feasts to the fallibility and flexibility of mankind. St. Augustine was a great intellectual who made a great mistake. He gave his heart and mind to Manichaeism. His mother was probably smart too, but her faith was simpler. She didn’t complicate her belief by second-guessing the Church; she simply prayed intensely for her son. Her faith proved stronger than her son’s intellectual doubts, and he was won to Christianity.

Readings

Isaiah 66:18-21; Psalm 117:1, 2; Hebrews 12:5-7, 11-13; Luke 13:22-30

Our Take

Today’s readings stand as a sad response to the prevailing understanding of heaven. Too often people believe that that we live, we die, and then we smile on our loved ones from heaven. It’s a comforting thought — but it isn’t true.

In the first reading, the Lord tells us he has come to gather all nations to see his glory. The reading is a great preview of the New Testament. He says he will send “fugitives to the nations.” Fugitives are people who are rightfully prisoners but have been set free. That would be us. He compares the gathering process to a long, arduous journey.

What’s the lesson? Heaven is the natural resting place of all mankind, but because of sin, it’s a place you have to journey to, and the journey is long and hard.

The second reading compares this process to discipline. “At the time,” says the Letter to the Hebrews, “all discipline seems a cause not for joy but for pain, yet later it brings the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who are trained by it.”

Jesus has the last word in the Gospel when he is directly asked the question “Lord, will only a few people be saved?” He responds by describing the way to heaven as a narrow gate: “Many, I tell you, will attempt to enter, but will not be strong enough.”

He describes two attempts to enter heaven that will fail.

One will happen to those who come “after the master of the house has arisen and locked the door.” These people will stand outside and knock, saying, “Lord, open the door for us.”

These are people who have known who Jesus is — they call him “Lord” — and seem to know that he promised them “Knock and the door will be opened to you.”

They knew it, but they didn’t live it, apparently, because he tells them, “I do not know where you are from.”

Their next attempt shows that they knew even more about him: They believed in his presence among them. “We ate and drank in your company, and you taught in our streets,” they say. “We went to Mass and volunteered,” we might say today.

Even that’s not good enough. Jesus says, “Depart from me, all you evildoers!”

So, if that’s not good enough, what is? Do we need to make a superhuman effort to be part of heaven?

No. We need only do what Jesus says they didn’t do. They came too late. They didn’t know him. They did evil.

So we should make sure we know him, in daily prayer, at Mass — starting today.

And we should live our life in conformity with his will. Remember the “fugitives” in the first reading. At baptism, we are released from imprisonment to sin and are given the freedom to live according to our true nature. People who crawl back into the prison will find themselves locked in — and locked out.

—Tom and April Hoopes write from Atchison, Kansas. This article originally appeared in our sister publication, the National Catholic Register.


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