Daily Gospel Reflection

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December 16, 2023

Saturday of the Second Week of Advent
Mt 17:9-13
Listen to the Audio Version

As they were coming down from the mountain,
the disciples asked Jesus,
“Why do the scribes say that Elijah must come first?”
He said in reply, “Elijah will indeed come and restore all things;
but I tell you that Elijah has already come,
and they did not recognize him but did to him whatever they pleased.
So also will the Son of Man suffer at their hands.”
Then the disciples understood
that he was speaking to them of John the Baptist.

Reflection

Chris Harrington '17, M.Div.
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It is natural to assume that had we lived in first-century Judea, we would have been among the few to have recognized John the Baptist and the Son of Man, but I am constantly confronted with my inability to see the image of Christ in the people nearest to me.

Despite my best intentions, I find myself constantly preoccupied with the next task I must accomplish rather than remaining present to the people along the way. In the frantic tension between year-end obligations and our pre-Christmas to-do lists, the gospel calls us to reconnect with God through prayer and through service to our neighbor.

One of the most poignant lessons I received when I was a student was from a favorite theology professor. He observed that Notre Dame students have an exceptional ability to complete tasks but that the most essential elements of life often require a different disposition to appreciate. He reflected that many of his favorite memories with his family were when they were not trying to accomplish anything in particular but were “wasting time together.”

He encouraged each of us to cultivate a similar disposition, and should we be blessed with children of our own to be sure to waste time with them regularly. I can think of few ways to better prepare for the coming of Christ than by wasting time with joyful children. Be sure to add that task to your Advent to-do list.

Prayer

Rev. Herbert Yost, C.S.C.

Dear Lord, there is much to do this day. Give us wisdom when we are filled with questions. Grant us a grateful heart when we feel discouraged. Open our eyes to the opportunities that await us. Steady our pace so that we can see you in the people and challenges that will come our way today. Let us be pure of spirit, so your glory may guide our thinking and acting. Amen.

Saint of the Day

Blessed Mary of the Angels

Blessed Mary of the Angels was a mystic nun from the 18th century whose life was marked by a number of supernatural experiences.

She is a distant cousin of St. Aloysius Gonzaga, and was named Maria Fontanella when she was born in Turin in 1661. As a child, she was drawn to the religious life. At one point, she made a plan with a brother to run away and live in the desert. She began to receive visions in her dynamic prayer life.

At the age of 12, she entered a community of Cistercian nuns, but when her father died soon after, she returned home to help her mother. Still, she felt called to religious life, and at the age of 16 she joined a community of Carmelites in Turin and took the name Mary of the Angels.

She found life in a community of religious sisters to be difficult—she was very homesick and did not get along well with her novice-master—but she persevered. After seven years in the convent, she began to experience desolation in her prayer life—she was even attacked by demonic manifestations. She had a very capable spiritual director who helped her through this period, however, and after several years, she began to find peace and enter into even deeper levels of prayer.

Eventually, she was chosen to lead aspects of the community, and to become prioress of the convent. She established a new house for the community in another city, and wanted to move there, but the people of Turin would not hear of it. They valued her wisdom and would regularly consult her for advice.

She had a deep devotion to St. Joseph, and dedicated the city of Turin to him after his intercession helped save the city from being destroyed in a war with the French. She is depicted in this stained glass window asking St. Joseph for help.

One of the gifts of her faithfulness was a distinct odor that accompanied her in the last 20 years of her life. People described it as a scent of sanctity—it came from her body and spread to things she touched. The scent was a permanent condition after 1702, and was even difficult to remove from things that she had contacted. Her spiritual director, who later became archbishop, described it as a scent “neither natural nor artificial, nor like flowers or aromatic drugs or any mixture of perfumes, but only to be called an odor of sanctity.” Some of her relics still retain this scent today.

Blessed Mary of the Angels died on this date in 1717. Her relics rest in the reliquary chapel in the Basilica, and she is depicted there in these stained glass windows. The foundry that created the stained glass windows of the Basilica was located in a former Carmelite convent in Le Mans, France—in the window shown here, the artists who adorned the Basilica pay homage to the community that gave the world holy people such as Blessed Mary of the Angels.

Blessed Mary of the Angels, you literally smelled like holiness and spread that scent to things you touched, pray for us!