Daily Gospel Reflection

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May 19, 2022

Thursday of the Fifth Week of Easter
Jn 15:9-11
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Jesus said to his disciples:
“As the Father loves me, so I also love you.
Remain in my love.
If you keep my commandments, you will remain in my love,
just as I have kept my Father’s commandments
and remain in his love.

“I have told you this so that
my joy might be in you and
your joy might be complete.”

Reflection

Jim Koepke
ND Parent
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We all desire, more than anything, to be loved. This innate need is present in all human souls. God fulfills this need by offering unconditional love and profoundly desires we accept it, ever-present for the taking.

God, the source of all love, has made it so easy. All we need do is as Jesus instructs—keep the commandments, love our neighbor, and our joy will be complete. We have to give love to truly receive it and feel it in our lives. This condition is fundamental in all human relationships. We have to do our part to participate in this holy partnership.

We remember the gentle but firm hand of those that cared for us. They reassured us of their love, yet they had guidelines for us to grow and develop. God, the ultimate Father, similarly has guidelines or commandments to ensure that we develop spiritually the way God knows is best for us. God wants us to freely share the love freely given to us.

It is easy to love those we know. Our family and dear friends are on our minds daily, and we wish for their good, but how can we increase the depth of our love by caring for those we don’t know. How many strangers did we interact with today?

All interactions are opportunities to share our love. Small things such as a cheerful greeting or thank you to a cashier at a store using their name, holding a door open for a stranger, or a sincere compliment to someone delivering a package are all subtle ways to show we walk in the path of Christ’s love.

Prayer

Rev. Michael Belinsky, C.S.C.

Lord Jesus, may everything we do this day honor the profound depth of your love for us. May our gratitude show itself in fruits of justice, love, and peace for each person we meet and for those throughout the world who continue to suffer. Thank you for your love. Amen!

Saint of the Day

St. Dunstan

St. Dunstan is one of the foundational saints for the English Church; many of England's oldest churches are named after him and, throughout the centuries, the British people have written many stories about his holiness.

St. Dunstan was born sometime between 910 and 924, most historians think it was around the year 910. Dunstan's mother was a Saxon noblewoman. An early legend of Dunstan's life indicates that his spiritual status in the Church was foretold from the very beginning.

When his mother was pregnant with Dunstan she was in the church of St. Mary on Candleday (the feast of "Candlemas," the Presentation of the Lord), and all the lights were suddenly extinguished in the church. But the candle held by Dunstan's mother, Cynethryth, was just as suddenly relighted. Everyone in the church approached her and lit their own candles from the miraculous flame of Cynethryth, thus foreshadowing that the boy "would be the minister of eternal light" to the Church of England

After Dunstan was born, he was sent to Glastonbury Abbey, an ancient, revered English abbey, where Dunstan was educated in the liberal arts. He was sent to the court of the king, but his stint at court was far from blissful. The other courtiers were wildly jealous of Dunstan, and they attacked him and tortured him, even throwing him into a cesspool. But Dunstan escaped to Winchester, where his uncle, who was a powerful bishop, convinced him to become a monk.

After some initial reluctance, Dunstan joined the monastery of Glastonbury. Eventually, he was asked to become abbot of the community. Dunstan used this powerful position to institute a series of reforms in Glastonbury. He instituted the Benedictine rule in Glastonbury, rebuilt the cloister, and preserved the monastic enclosure, keeping the monks devoted on the work of the community rather than too much involvement with the town outside. But Dunstan did not ignore the needs of the community. He opened a school for local children, which became a famous monastic school throughout England.

Falling out with the new king, Dunstan fled to Cluny, the center of monastic reform in France. As kings came and went with more rapidity in 10th century England, Dunstan was recalled from exile and received a boost in status as he was appointed the Bishop of London. In 960, Dunstan received the pallium of the episcopacy for his new diocese. Several churches in London still bear his name.

After serving England's capital city for almost twenty years, Dunstan retired to Canterbury, where he lived for the remainder of his life until he died on May 19, 988. He was canonized in 1029, and is the patron saint of silversmiths, goldsmiths, bellringers, and Canada.

St. Dunstan, abbot, bishop, and cornerstone of the Church in England—pray for us!


Image Credit: Stained Glass of Dunstan located in Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, New York (circa 1920) Photo by Randy OHC via Flickr (CC BY 2.0)