Daily Gospel Reflection

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December 4, 2021

Saturday of the First Week of Advent
Mt 9:35–10:1;5a;6-8
Listen to the Audio Version

Jesus went around to all the towns and villages,
teaching in their synagogues,
proclaiming the Gospel of the Kingdom,
and curing every disease and illness.
At the sight of the crowds, his heart was moved with pity for them
because they were troubled and abandoned,
like sheep without a shepherd.
Then he said to his disciples,
“The harvest is abundant but the laborers are few;
so ask the master of the harvest
to send out laborers for his harvest.”

Then he summoned his Twelve disciples
and gave them authority over unclean spirits to drive them out
and to cure every disease and every illness.

Jesus sent out these Twelve after instructing them thus,
“Go to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.
As you go, make this proclamation: ‘The Kingdom of heaven is at hand.’
Cure the sick, raise the dead,
cleanse lepers, drive out demons.
Without cost you have received; without cost you are to give.”

Reflection

Brian Vetter, C.S.C. ’17, ’23 M.Div.
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As someone studying to become a priest in the Congregation of Holy Cross, many people talk with me about this gospel passage, reminding me that “the harvest is abundant, but the laborers are few.”

In my experience, many of us tend to focus only on the second part: the fact that the laborers are few. It is understandable as it appears our Church is fading amid scandals, heated controversies, and seeming irrelevance to the modern world. People are often surprised that despite it all, I would freely choose to dedicate my life to this Church through the vows of chastity, poverty, and obedience.

Acknowledging the problems of our time, it is still clear to me that “the harvest is abundant.” People all around us are hungry for the fulfillment of the deepest longing of the human heart, and our world is failing to provide a satisfying answer to this longing.

In the depths of our hearts, each one of us wants to be fully known and unconditionally loved, and we can only find this in God. As Christians, we encounter this unconditional love of God in prayer, the sacraments, creation, and our loved ones.

All Christians, by our baptism, go forth into the world as the hands and feet of Jesus Christ to labor for the kingdom of God. Having come to know the unconditional love of God, we joyfully share this love with all nations and peoples. God has given us all we need, kindling within us the fire of the Holy Spirit.

The harvest is indeed abundant. We, the laborers, have work to do.

Prayer

Members of the Holy Cross Novitiate

Eternal God, you reveal the mysteries of the kingdom to those who put their faith in your promise of salvation. As we await the coming of your Son in glory, raise up men and women to bring your message of hope to a waiting world. Instill in them an unshakable trust in your divine providence and a zeal for ministry that will inspire your people to a deeper confidence in your saving power. We ask this through Christ, our Lord. Amen.

Saint of the Day

St. John of Damascus

St. John of Damascus, also known as John Damascene, was a monk and theologian whose writings were crucially important in staunchly defending the value of visual art in communicating the Christian faith and in worship.

John was born into an Arabic Christian family around the year 676 in Damascus, in present-day Syria, in the period following the Muslim Caliphs conquering of the city. Most of the Christians who had lived in Damascus were either displaced or forced to convert. John's family, however, had worked with the Muslim rulers once they took over the city and John's father had a position in the court of the Caliphate, thus their family had been allowed to remain Christian. John's father ensured that his son received the best education possible. John's father provided his son with a Christian monk as a tutor, and the brilliant young John became a scholar of astronomy, mathematics, and classical Greek and Arabic texts.

Some sources claim that John himself became the Chief Administrator of the Caliph's court. Eventually, John gave up life at the court and made his way to Jerusalem, to become a priest and monk at the monastery of Mar Saba, outside Jerusalem.

When John was getting settled into his new vocation as monk and priest at the monastery of Mar Saba, a great debate, known as the Iconoclast Controversy, continued to divide the Church. Emperor Leo III issued an edict forbidding the use of images. John wrote vehemently in favor of the use of images and encouraged lay Christians to continue using them, in defiance of the emperor's edict. John's treatises are beautiful defenses of an incarnation theology and of the importance of the imagination in developing faith in Christ.

John wrote that art is appropriate for depicting a God who became human: “I do not draw an image of the immortal Godhead: I paint the visible flesh of God, for it is impossible to represent a spirit, how much more God who gives breath to the spirit. When the Invisible One becomes visible to the flesh, you may then draw a likeness of His form.” Indeed, “I do not worship matter,” wrote John, “I worship the God of matter, who became matter for my sake. Do not despise matter, for it is not despicable.”

John continues on to discuss the human imagination, “the mind, which is set upon getting beyond corporeal things, is incapable of doing it. For the invisible things of God since the creation of the world are made visible through images.” The imagination reaches towards God, but needs faith, needs grace, to receive the image of God’s own self which God brings to the human being. And images are important for igniting the imagination, for “Image speaks to the sight as words to the ear, it brings understanding.”

John's writings were essential arguments that were used when the Iconoclast Controversy was finally settled in favor of the iconophiles—those who advocated the use of images in Christian life—at the Second Council of Nicaea, in 787, forty years after his death in 749.

John wrote and adapted many biblical texts for musical use in the liturgy—these texts still survive and are used in some of the liturgies of Eastern Rite Christian Churches.

Known as the last of the Greek Fathers of the Church in the Roman Catholic Church, John of Damascus was proclaimed a Doctor of the Church in 1890 by Pope Leo XIII for his defense of art. This is a title given to thirty-seven saints who are honored for elucidating the faith through their prolific words, wisdom, and example. Some of John's relics rest in the reliquary chapel in the Basilica of the Sacred Heart on Notre Dame's campus. John's image shown above was created by a 2006 graduate of the school of architecture, Matthew Alderman.

St. John of Damascus, saint who defended art's power to move the heart and mind to God—pray for us!


Image Credit: Illustration by Notre Dame alumnus Matthew Alderman, who holds exclusive rights to the further distribution and publication of his art. Used here with permission.