Daily Gospel Reflection

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February 9, 2019

Saturday of the Fourth Week in Ordinary Time
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The Apostles gathered together with Jesus
and reported all they had done and taught.
He said to them,
“Come away by yourselves to a deserted place and rest a while.”
People were coming and going in great numbers,
and they had no opportunity even to eat.
So they went off in the boat by themselves to a deserted place.
People saw them leaving and many came to know about it.
They hastened there on foot from all the towns
and arrived at the place before them.

When Jesus disembarked and saw the vast crowd,
his heart was moved with pity for them,
for they were like sheep without a shepherd;
and he began to teach them many things.

Reflection

Chrissy (Pohlen) Spittell ‘95
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Jesus instructs his apostles: “rest a while.” These words leapt off the page at me as I reflected on my various roles, including single mom of a high school senior, full-time middle school math teacher, church sacristan, and basketball coach of two teams. Although Our Lord asks us to use our gifts to serve our community, it appears that he also sees the value in taking some time to replenish our souls. What a comforting thought!

Sometimes life gets so busy that we forget to take care of ourselves. Our own mental, physical, and spiritual well-being can easily take a backseat to life’s demands. The season of Lent begins in less than a month. Lent is an ideal time to reexamine our priorities and routines, while incorporating healthier choices for one’s body, mind, and spirit.

Two years ago, during Lent, I committed to spending the first ten to fifteen minutes of my commute simply talking to God and praying a decade of the rosary. What started as a Lenten discipline has become an integral part of my daily routine. This peaceful start to my day puts me in a grateful state of mind. Praying for the needs of others keeps me mindful of my own blessings and gives me renewed motivation to use my gifts and talents to make the day better for others.

Today’s Gospel passage preludes the well-known account of Jesus feeding the five thousand, so the apostles’ rest time is short-lived. How often is this the case for us today? The needs of others are always around us, and whenever possible, we should tend to them as our Good Shepherd has instructed us. Yet if we can find those small moments to tend to our own spiritual needs, we will have the energy and compassion to tend to the needs of others. Perhaps Jesus is calling all of us today to “rest a while.”

Prayer

​​Rev. Herbert Yost, C.S.C.

Dear Lord, as we go about our homes and work, let us bring your presence with us. Let us speak your peace, your grace, your mercy, and your perfect order to all we meet. Give us a fresh supply of strength to do our work. Let even our smallest accomplishments bring you glory. When we are confused, guide us. When we are burned out, infuse us with the light of the Holy Spirit. Thank you for being our source of life! Amen.

Saint of the Day

St. Miguel Febres Cordero
St. Miguel Febres Cordero

St. Miguel was born in November 1854 as Francisco Luis Febres-Cordero y Muñoz in a small village high up in the Andes Mountains of Ecuador. His father was a professor who was deeply involved in the politics of the newly independent Ecuador. Francisco was born crippled, but at age five, he was cured of his deformity miraculously through a vision of the Virgin Mary.

Francisco attended a Christian Brothers high school, and was a bright and studious pupil. As soon as he entered, he said, he felt a great longing to also become a Christian Brother (also known as the La Salle Brothers). Since the La Salle Brothers were a relatively newer order, his family objected—they wanted him to join a more prestigious, more established religious order.

His family enrolled him in the diocesan seminary, but Francisco fell quite ill and had to leave the seminary before completing his first year. As his health was deteriorating, his family allowed him to return to school with the Christians Brothers. Reluctantly, his father finally gave Francisco permission to join the order as a brother. Francisco's relationship with his father was tense for most of his years as a brother in the La Salle Institute, but the two men were eventually reconciled before his father's death in 1882.

At the age of fourteen, Francisco joined the order on March 24, 1868. He took the name Brother Miguel. After his novitiate year, although he was only fifteen, Brother Miguel was sent to teach in Quito, Ecuador's capital. He would teach for nearly forty years. He became an internationally recognized scholar of the Spanish language, publishing his first book before he was twenty.

As novice-master, Miguel cared for the young men who joined the order in the tumultuous political environment of Ecuador's shifting regimes. His talents both in the formation of the younger brothers and in academic work caught the attention of the Institute's leaders in Rome. They sent Miguel to various houses around Europe. Miguel was homesick for Ecuador and his life there. In the summer of 1909, Miguel was in Barcelona, during a week of upheaval known as la semana trágica, "the tragic week." During this week of protests and strikes, churches were burned throughout the city. Although the house of the Brothers survived (a miracle many credit to the statue of the Blessed Virgin that Brother Miguel left in the window), and the Brothers returned safely to the city, the incident took a great toll on Brother Miguel's health.

In the winter of 1910, his health began to fail and on February 9, 1910, Brother Miguel passed away. When news reached the Catholics in Ecuador, they mourned the loss of their beloved hero. He was buried in Barcelona, but, in 1937, his remains were returned to his native country, to great rejoicing.

Brother Miguel was canonized by Pope John Paul II in 1984. His great-grandnephew, the president of Ecuador, León Febres Cordero, was present at his canonization.

St. Miguel Febres Cordero, who dedicated his entire life to humble service of God—pray for us!


Image Credit: Our featured image of St. Miguel Febres Cordero is used with permission from Catholic Online. Last accessed January 23, 2025.