Daily Gospel Reflection

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March 8, 2025

Saturday after Ash Wednesday
Lk 5:27-32
Listen to the Audio Version

Jesus saw a tax collector named Levi sitting at the customs post.
He said to him, “Follow me.”
And leaving everything behind, he got up and followed him.
Then Levi gave a great banquet for him in his house,
and a large crowd of tax collectors
and others were at table with them.
The Pharisees and their scribes complained to his disciples, saying,
“Why do you eat and drink with tax collectors and sinners?”
Jesus said to them in reply,
“Those who are healthy do not need a physician, but the sick do.
I have not come to call the righteous to repentance but sinners.”

Reflection

Kevin Petracek ’78
ND Parent
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A popular quote that has been peppered into books, television, and media is: “In this world, nothing can be said to be certain except death and taxes.” But perhaps some of us have forgotten about the certainty of sin in the world. As a cradle Catholic who attended parochial schools, I’m accustomed to hearing Bible stories, such as this one from Luke of Jesus mingling with tax collectors and sinners.

I also feel like I understand this gospel from a vocational experience. Given my career choice as a CPA with a JD and Master of Laws in Taxation, I’ve dealt with my fair share of IRS tax collectors, who are as detested nowadays as they were in the time of Jesus. As despised as tax collectors have been over the centuries, I have to admit that many of the clients I represented were no saints themselves, having often claimed some shady tax write-off that they definitely should have confessed!

As mere humans, the twists and turns of our lives here on earth can sometimes lead us into such darkness that we can’t see the light at the end of the tunnel. But overriding the certainty of sin and death is the love of God. God knew we could never earn salvation on our own, which is why God sent Jesus into the world to become one of us: a fully human creation born of a woman, raised in a family, then set about doing the work of the Father, eventually dying on the cross, then rising to redeem mankind.

No matter how much evil the devil casts at our soul, our God, the heavenly physician, is always willing to heal us, forgive us, and lead us home to our eternal reward.

Prayer

Rev. James Bracke, C.S.C.

Lord, you knew each of us before the foundation of the world and called us each by name. Free us from narrow, prejudicial thinking, attitudes, and actions. We are all sinners. Inspire us to humbly serve you and all your creation. We ask this through Christ our brother Amen.

Saint of the Day

St. John of God

There were three great Spanish saints named John who were all contemporaries during the 1500s: St. John of the Cross, St. John of Avila, and St. John of God. In fact, St. John of Avila rescued today’s saint—St. John of God—from anasylum!

John of God lived a life marked by impulse. He ran away from home as a boy when he heard of adventures waiting in the New World. He never made it across the ocean, however, and enlisted in a company of mercenaries and fought in Spain’s war against France.

He lived the life of a soldier with his comrades, who enjoyed drinking, gambling, and pillaging when they could. When the band of soldiers fell apart, he worked as a shepherd until he was about 40 years old, when he began to reflect upon his life and the many things he had done wrong. He resolved to dedicate the rest of his life to God’s service.

He heard of Christians being held as slaves in Africa, and he left to do what he could to ransom them. When that did not work out, he returned to Spain and worked odd jobs, including peddling books.

One day he heard a sermon from the holy man known as John of Avila, and his words struck John of God to the heart. When he heard the homily, he was devastated over his past sins and rent his clothes, gave away everything to the poor, and ran through the streets wailing and pulling his hair out. He was committed to an asylum, and not even the severe treatments of the time brought him out of his grief.

John of Avila heard of the man’s plight and visited him in the asylum. He told John of God that he had done enough penance and should give his life to action that would benefit his own soul and the lives of others. John of God was instantly calmed and began to help care for other people in the asylum.

He eventually spread his good works to anyone who was poor and sick. He sold wood in the public square to raise money for the poor, and he sought people out from where they were living under bridges and in abandoned buildings. He would beg for those who were too sick to beg and gave everything away in service to those who were living miserable lives due to disease and poverty. He raised enough money to rent a building, which became a hospital. News of his work spread through the town and soon people were bringing donations and offering their time and energy to support his work. After his death, two religious orders emerged and continue his work today.

He was often mocked and criticized for helping anyone who needed it—even prostitutes and people of bad character. He responded by stating, “I confess that I know of no bad person in my hospital except myself alone, who am indeed unworthy to eat the bread of the poor.”

When John heard the news that a fire broke out in his hospital, he rushed to the scene to find people standing around, watching the building, and the sick inside, go up in flames. He sprang to action, running into the burning building and carrying out the sick on his own back. He made a number of trips through the flames but was not injured. A cannon was brought to destroy the part of the building that was burning in order to save the rest of it, but John stopped them and climbed to the roof and used an ax to separate the burning wing. When the walls fell away, he fell through and everyone thought him lost until he walked out of the building, unhurt. For this reason, he is the patron saint of firefighters.

In another instance of his impulsive love, he caught pneumonia when he waded into a flood trying to save a person and other supplies. He died from that illness on this date in 1550 at the age of 55. His relics rest in the reliquary chapel in the Basilica.

St. John of God, impulsive lover of God, and patron saint of firefighters, hospitals, and the sick—pray for us!


Image Credit: Our featured image of St. John of God is in the public domain. Last accessed February 6, 2025 on Wikimedia Commons.