Daily Gospel Reflection

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February 24, 2026

Tuesday of the First Week of Lent
Listen to the Audio Version

Jesus said to his disciples:
“In praying, do not babble like the pagans,
who think that they will be heard because of their many words.
Do not be like them.
Your Father knows what you need before you ask him.

“This is how you are to pray:

Our Father who art in heaven,
hallowed be thy name,
thy Kingdom come,
thy will be done,
on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread;
and forgive us our trespasses,
as we forgive those who trespass against us;
and lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil.

“If you forgive men their transgressions,
your heavenly Father will forgive you.
But if you do not forgive men,
neither will your Father forgive your transgressions.”

Reflection

Dr. Sarah (Carroll) Smith ’97
ND Parent
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When my father died, I returned to my hometown parish in Sandusky, Ohio for his funeral mass. My parents had moved several years before, so I had not been home for quite some time.

Upon entering Saints Peter and Paul Church through the heavy wood doors that I struggled to open as a child, I was immediately greeted by the comforting scents of incense mixed with limestone brick. Teared up, I walked past the statue of Mary that I had the honor of crowning forty years ago, and then I saw the gleaming white altar where I got married twenty years ago. I sat in the drafty pew and remembered praying with my classmates every Wednesday at school Mass and my family every Sunday morning. I realized that some of the most meaningful milestones of my life all happened in this special, holy place.

As I read today’s gospel where Jesus teaches his disciples to pray, I return to this place of familiarity. Our Father, one of the first prayers we learn as children and know by heart, serves as a guide for how we should pray. We are taught how to ask for God’s guidance, forgiveness, and provision. It emphasizes trust and God’s love for us, and it holds great meaning, serving as a cornerstone of our faith. In many ways, the Our Father inspires that same sense of belonging and comfort of coming home.

Prayer

Rev. Adam Booth, C.S.C.

Our Father in heaven, you are infinitely forgiving and merciful. Help us to live lives of forgiveness that your name may be hallowed throughout all the earth. Grant this through your son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, forever and ever. Amen.

Saint of the Day

Blessed Tommaso Maria Fusco
Blessed Tommaso Maria Fusco

Blessed Tommaso Maria Fusco was everything you could want in a priest. Though his vocation was born in suffering, it produced new life in imitation of the resurrection.

He was born 1831 in Italy to a pharmacist and an aristocratic woman. His parents were known for their faithfulness, but by the time he was 10, he had lost both of them to disease. An uncle took care of him and provided for his education.

In 1839, St. Alphonsus Liguori was canonized, and his story captivated the young Tommaso. The boy fostered a keen desire to give his life to God in service of the Church as a priest. He entered the seminary in 1847, following an older brother who would be ordained two years later.

By the time Tommaso was ordained in 1855, he had lost several other loved ones—his uncle who had taken care of him when his parents died, as well as a younger brother. In all of this suffering, death, and grief, he gravitated to a spirituality rooted in the image of Christ crucified, which fed him through the rest of his life.

Tommaso was skilled at encouraging people in their lives of prayer, and he opened his home to start a day school for wayward boys who needed an education. He also began gathering adults at a parish for evening prayer together.

Soon, he felt called to preach the good news to a wider population. In 1857, he entered a religious community—the Missionaries of Nocera—and spent several years wandering the region, preaching and ministering. He was an effective and motivating speaker, and gathered people around him to grow in the faith. He even brought priests together to study moral theology to improve their skills in the confessional.

He established several communities of prayer and pastoral action among the laity, and founded a religious community of nuns to care for poor girls and to open an orphanage.

Towards the end of his life, his work was envied by others, even fellow priests, and he suffered attacks on his character and false accusations. He bore these accusations by emulating the patience Jesus displayed in his passion.

Tommaso died in 1891 of liver disease—he had not yet reached the age of 60. The people of Pagani, his hometown, honored him as a true missionary and founder, an “exemplary priest” who worked tirelessly for the salvation of souls. The decree they published noted that “in life he loved the poor and in death forgave his enemies.”

Above all, he clung to the suffering of Jesus, and found there a source of hope, and an example to share his love with equal measure. People who knew him recognized him as a holy man. He was beatified by Pope John Paul II in 2001.

Blessed Tommaso Maria Fusco, you saw hope in suffering and helped others find it there, too—pray for us!


Image Credit: Our featured image of Bl. Tommaso Maria Fusco is available for use under the Free Art License. Last accessed December 6, 2024 on Wikimedia Commons.