Luke 21,34-36 – Saturday of the XXXIV Week of Ordinary Time – Odd Year
“Be careful of yourselves.” It seems like a threat but it’s protection. Because Jesus knows that our heart, if not supervised, becomes easy ground for what weighs us down and puts us to sleep. Jesus names three burdens: dissipation, drunkenness and worries of life. They are not just obvious vices, they are subtle ways of getting lost.
Sometimes we get lost in a thousand useless things so as not to look at what hurts inside. Other times we get “drunk” with emotions, successes and the search for approval. And then there are the worries, the most difficult to recognize: legitimate concerns, however they become chains when they occupy all the space of the heart. It’s strange, but often it’s not the biggest sins that make us lose God: it’s daily anxieties. This is why Jesus insists: “Watch and pray at all times.” It does not ask to live in tension, but in awareness. Prayer is not escape, it is breathing that restores order. It is the gaze that rises when life crushes us towards the ground.
It is a concrete way to remind us that we are not alone, and that history, even the complicated one we live in, is not out of control. The most beautiful thing is that Jesus he doesn’t ask us to be perfect, but to be awake. Watch over those who don’t give up searching, those who don’t let themselves be anesthetized by fear or routine. Those who choose to live present to themselves, without running away, keep watch. And it is precisely this vigilance that makes us free, capable of “appearing before the Son of Man” without shame, because we have guarded the truest part of us.
Today’s Gospel is an invitation not to live automatically. Not to let the heart fill with things that don’t nourish. To find a moment of silence, of truth, of encounter every day. Being vigilant means remembering that life is a fragile and magnificent gift, and that God always comes, even when we don’t realize it. You just need to have an awake heart to recognize it.


