Daily Gospel Reflection

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May 13, 2019

Monday of the Fourth Week of Easter
Jn 10:1-10
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Jesus said:
“Amen, amen, I say to you,
whoever does not enter a sheepfold through the gate
but climbs over elsewhere is a thief and a robber.
But whoever enters through the gate is the shepherd of the sheep.
The gatekeeper opens it for him, and the sheep hear his voice,
as he calls his own sheep by name and leads them out.
When he has driven out all his own,
he walks ahead of them, and the sheep follow him,
because they recognize his voice.
But they will not follow a stranger;
they will run away from him,
because they do not recognize the voice of strangers.”
Although Jesus used this figure of speech,
they did not realize what he was trying to tell them.

So Jesus said again, “Amen, amen, I say to you,
I am the gate for the sheep.
All who came before me are thieves and robbers,
but the sheep did not listen to them.
I am the gate.
Whoever enters through me will be saved,
and will come in and go out and find pasture.
A thief comes only to steal and slaughter and destroy;
I came so that they might have life and have it more abundantly.”

Reflection

Mary Forr ’11, ’13 M.Ed.
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During my time in Washington, D.C., one of the most life-giving things I have done is volunteer with Kids Enjoy Exercise Now—KEEN. It is awesome. Assisted by one-on-one volunteers, children, teens, and young adults with significant developmental and physical disabilities enjoy a Saturday afternoon in a gym complete with basketball hoops, scooters, cushions, and every type of bouncing ball you can imagine.

One week, I met a little boy I’ll call “David.” David is blind, has autism, and doesn’t speak. His dad, who dropped him off, encouraged him to have fun, and told him he’d be back shortly. With the aid of a volunteer, David slowly approached the happy chaos. As the joyful screams of other children filled the air and balls whizzed past, David shrank back. He began to cover his ears, shake, and cry. Clearly, David wasn’t having fun. He was terrified. Despite heroic efforts of volunteers throughout the morning, David remained distraught until his dad returned to the gym.

The second his father could be heard greeting volunteers, David stopped crying and broke into a smile from ear to ear. When his dad came into the gym, called his name, and began to walk towards him, David, who was previously too afraid to do anything, began to move confidently toward the sound of his father’s voice. When he reached his dad, he leapt into his arms, squealing with delight.

This is the relationship the Good Shepherd wants to have with each of us. “He walks ahead of them, and the sheep follow him, because they recognize his voice.” Jesus wants us to cling to him, fearless in the midst of pandemonium, because we know he is there. He wants us to “have life and have it more abundantly.” Let us be like David and run to Our Father when we recognize his voice.

Prayer

Rev. Herbert Yost, C.S.C.

Dear Lord, you know each of us by name, our inmost being, our true self. We have tried for a long time to recognize your voice. Once we hear and recognize it, we feel a sense of joy—we are uplifted. Of course you know us. You created us. You are with us. You are our Shepherd and how we love to hear your voice when you draw near. Then indeed we know that we are safe. We are in your care. What can be more comforting?

Saint of the Day

Our Lady of Fatima

In the middle of 1916 in Portugal, three children were tending sheep in a pasture near the poor village where they lived. The oldest, Lucia, 10, was in charge, and Francisco and Jacinta—brother and sister—helped. They were raised in faithful homes, and often would spend their time praying the rosary while they watched the sheep. Several times during that summer, they were visited by an angel while they were in the fields, and the angel taught them a prayer to the Trinity.

They added this prayer to their devotions, and the next year, on this date in 1917, a bolt of lightning caught their attention as they tended the sheep. When they looked in that direction, they saw a brilliant figure, a woman described by Lucia as “brighter than the sun, shedding rays of light clearer and stronger than a crystal ball filled with the most sparkling water and pierced by the burning rays of the sun.”

The lady, Mary, asked the children to pray for the conversion of sinners and for an end to the war (World War I) which was devastating Europe at the time. She asked the children to return to the site on the 13th of every month.

Mary visited the children on the 13th of June and July. By the end of the summer, their stories had drawn much attention. On August 13, authorities prevented the children from going to the fields, but Mary appeared to them on August 19 instead. On September 13, the Lady asked the children to pray the rosary, and to pray for an end to the war. In her last appearance, on October 13, she identified herself as Our Lady of the Rosary, and again asked for prayer and repentance.

On the day of that last appearance, a crowd nearing 70,000 gathered with the children to witness the appearance, though only the children could see Mary. In her first appearance, Mary told the children that they would witness a sign in the heavens during that last visit, and the whole crowd saw the phenomenon: the sun seemed to dance in the sky and fall towards the earth.

Mary also shared three “secrets” with the children that have been revealed over time. In the first secret, the children witnessed a vision of hell. In the second, Mary asked for the conversion of sinners, and especially communist Russia, and told of another phenomenon in the heavens that would precede a second great war. (In the month before Hitler seized Austria, an occurrence of the aurora borealis covered most of Europe—it was the widest display in 200 years; people in Paris called the fire department because they thought a huge fire had broken out in the city.)

The third secret was sealed until 1960 and was finally revealed by the Vatican in 2000. It told of a vision in which the children saw a figure like the pope killed by soldiers. They also saw many other of the faithful killed in persecution. Pope John Paul II interpreted the secret to refer to his survival of an assassination attempt (which happened on this date in 1981), and to the many persecutions and wars of the 20th century. Read more about the Fatima secrets at the Vatican website here.

Within two years of the apparitions, the two younger children, the brother and sister Francisco and Jacinta, died of the Spanish Influenza. Lucia died on February 13, 2005.

In the end, Mary’s message at Fatima is a call for Christians to convert and repent from their sins, and to pray. "I have come to exhort the faithful to change their lives, to avoid grieving our Lord by sin, to pray the rosary,” Mary told the children. She also asked for a special veneration to her Immaculate Heart, which was fulfilled by Pope John Paul II when he consecrated the world to Mary’s Immaculate Heart.

The apparition is portrayed in statues that stand at what used to be the Fatima Retreat House across the lake from campus. The retreat house is now a residence for Holy Cross religious. A part of the tree in which Mary appeared to the children rests in the reliquary chapel in the Basilica on campus.

Our Lady of Fatima, you call us to prayer and conversion—pray for us!


Image Credit: Our featured image for Our Lady of Fatima is in the public domain. Last accessed March 6, 2025 on Wikimedia Commons.