Daily Gospel Reflection

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January 12, 2023

Thursday of the First Week in Ordinary Time
Mk 1:40-45
Listen to the Audio Version

A leper came to him and kneeling down begged him and said,
“If you wish, you can make me clean.”
Moved with pity, he stretched out his hand,
touched the leper, and said to him,
“I do will it. Be made clean.”
The leprosy left him immediately, and he was made clean.
Then, warning him sternly, he dismissed him at once.
Then he said to him, “See that you tell no one anything,
but go, show yourself to the priest
and offer for your cleansing what Moses prescribed;
that will be proof for them.”
The man went away and began to publicize the whole matter.
He spread the report abroad
so that it was impossible for Jesus to enter a town openly.
He remained outside in deserted places,
and people kept coming to him from everywhere.

Reflection

Bob Cogan ’80
Notre Dame Club of St. Louis
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The fact that Jesus healed the leper in today’s reading is no surprise. Jesus healed lots of people during his time on earth. What is strange is that Jesus told the man to say nothing about the healing.

Jesus was very busy during his brief time on earth. Remembering that he was both human and divine, I can’t help but think of all the work he did to heal many people. Christ must have been exhausted.

At times in the gospels, we read that Jesus went away to pray (and probably to recharge too). I suspect Jesus’ recognized his human limitations and the great need for God’s help. Jesus might have known that advertising his healing abilities would lead to an overwhelming number of people coming for help. (And, of course, that is what occurred.)

Jesus also understood that his primary mission while on earth was to save everyone by dying on the Cross—he probably wanted to stay focused. Or, could it be Jesus was just humble?

Jesus couldn’t turn away anyone in need. His divine compassion always helped those who came to him and still does today through answers to our prayers, though sometimes in ways we don’t immediately understand or appreciate.

It’s easier for me to understand why the healed man couldn’t keep quiet about Jesus. Jesus changed his life dramatically, and he wanted everyone to know how great God is and what amazing things God can do when we turn to him. I hope we remember this, too, and can be just as good as the healed man in proclaiming our great God to others.

Prayer

Rev. John Pearson, C.S.C.

Protect us, Lord, from thinking that our healing depends on the strength and frequency of our prayers. Help us remember and proclaim to the world by our lives that through your Son you will it now and always that we be made and remain clean of heart and spirit. We make this prayer in Jesus’ name. Amen.

Saint of the Day

St. Marguerite Bourgeoys

St. Marguerite Bourgeoys was a French missionary who educated native people and settlers in Montreal and Quebec—she is one of Canada’s first saints.

She was born in 1620 in France to a middle-class family. When she was twenty, Marguerite attended a procession on the feast of Our Lady of the Rosary. During the procession, she looked at a statue of Mary that seemed to be looking back at her with a living, loving gaze. Marguerite was profoundly touched by this event and dedicated her life to God by trying to emulate Mary in all she did.

A cloistered religious community of sisters, the Congregation of Notre Dame, lived in Marguerite's hometown. They had an educational mission and ran a boarding school to teach girls within the cloister. To reach girls from poor families who could not attend the boarding school, the cloistered nuns sent women associated with their community through a “confraternity” out to village and city schools to teach the poorer families. Marguerite joined this confraternity and, over time, became the leader of the confraternity.

The governor of a colony in New France had family in Marguerite’s hometown and returned for a time to recruit workers and educators. The rough life of a New World colony could not support a cloister, but the women of the confraternity would be able to travel and engage colonists and native peoples. Thus, in 1653, Marguerite decided to travel to New France as a missionary.

Marguerite landed in Quebec and traveled to the countryside around Montreal. She was disappointed to find few children living there, due to high rates of infant mortality, but Marguerite set about working alongside the French settlers. Marguerite arranged for the construction of a new church and was given a stone barn in which she began the first public school in Montreal.

Marguerite slowly began to gather other young women to help with her work, and they assembled into a community. Non-cloistered religious sisters were a rare thing in the seventeenth-century Church, but Marguerite fought for an active status for her community so that they could continue to live among settlers and reach out to people of all walks of life, rather than depend upon people coming to them. Marguerite had to contend with a bishop intent on regularizing her community into a cloister, and even went back to France to get a letter from the king in her defense. Marguerite's determination paid off and her Sisters of Notre Dame became known as “secular sisters."

As the colony of New France grew, so did the educational needs of its people, and Marguerite and her community responded by building schools for both settlers and native people. They struggled with many obstacles—poverty, tensions with the native Iroquois, and a fire that burned their convent and killed two sisters—but Marguerite led her community with courage and faith in God's providence.

In her old age, Marguerite turned to attention to a more contemplative life of prayer and writing of her autobiography. When a young sister in the community fell gravely ill, Marguerite prayed for God to exchange her own life for the sick sister’s. Within a few days, the young sister recovered, and Marguerite fell sick—she died soon afterward on January 12, 1700. The people of Montreal and New France had long recognized her holiness, but Marguerite was not formally canonized until 1982.

St. Marguerite Bourgeoys is represented in this stained glass window to the left that was installed in the chapel of the Stayer Center for Executive Education on Notre Dame's campus; some of Marguerite's relics are housed in the reliquary chapel in the Basilica.

St. Marguerite Bourgeoys, who brought education to the poor of New France—pray for us!