Daily Gospel Reflection

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February 9, 2026

Monday of the Fifth Week in Ordinary Time
Listen to the Audio Version

After making the crossing to the other side of the sea,
Jesus and his disciples came to land at Gennesaret
and tied up there.
As they were leaving the boat, people immediately recognized him.
They scurried about the surrounding country
and began to bring in the sick on mats
to wherever they heard he was.
Whatever villages or towns or countryside he entered,
they laid the sick in the marketplaces
and begged him that they might touch only the tassel on his cloak;
and as many as touched it were healed.

Reflection

Aurelia (Vaiana) Wishart ’19, ’21 M.A.
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It is worth paying attention to the actions of the crowd in today’s gospel. The “people immediately recognized” Jesus. We must know someone to recognize them, and we must know them well to recognize them immediately. What about us? Do we truly know Jesus? Do we make time to talk to him every day? Do we make time to listen to his Word in the Scriptures or spend time with him in the blessed sacrament? Would we immediately recognize him in our midst?

Next, the people “scurried” to “wherever he was,” carrying the sick with them. They must have left everything behind to follow Jesus, bringing only the most essential—the people they loved most. Do we make haste to follow where God calls us to go? What are we willing to leave behind to follow him? What do we consider to be the most essential in our own lives?

The people then “laid the sick” before him. Do we vulnerably lay our wounds before Jesus? Do we trust him enough to open ourselves to him in our weakest places? In their need, the people even “begged.” Are our hearts truly in our prayers? Do we ask insistently and persistently for our needs, confident that God has the power to heal all the broken places in our lives?

Finally, they “touched” and “were healed.” Do we receive the sacraments often? When we touch the Eucharist, are we aware that we touch something even greater than the hem of his cloak? Do we trust that Jesus heals us every time we encounter him, even if it is in places we can’t see, like our pride or selfishness? Are our hearts open to receiving the ways God wants to heal us, even if they don’t match our own agendas?

May we find a quiet moment in prayer today to ponder these questions honestly before God’s loving gaze.

Prayer

Rev. Andrew Fritz, C.S.C.

God our Father, grant what you command, and command what you will. Keep us from making our faith an idol. You are what our hearts long for. Rid us of our sinfulness and self-centeredness. Through Christ our Lord. 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.