Daily Gospel Reflection
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May 25, 2025
Jesus said to his disciples:
“Whoever loves me will keep my word,
and my Father will love him,
and we will come to him and make our dwelling with him.
Whoever does not love me does not keep my words;
yet the word you hear is not mine
but that of the Father who sent me.
“I have told you this while I am with you.
The Advocate, the Holy Spirit,
whom the Father will send in my name,
will teach you everything
and remind you of all that I told you.
Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you.
Not as the world gives do I give it to you.
Do not let your hearts be troubled or afraid.
You heard me tell you,
‘I am going away and I will come back to you.’
If you loved me,
you would rejoice that I am going to the Father;
for the Father is greater than I.
And now I have told you this before it happens,
so that when it happens you may believe.”
Today’s gospel, focusing on the Father, Son, and Spirit, reminds me of a beautiful poem entitled Vivre d’Amour, which translates to To Live of Love. Composed by Saint Thérèse of Lisieux, she was canonized a little over a century ago on May 17, 1925. The poem reads:
“On the evening of Love, Jesus spoke without metaphors:
‘If anyone wishes to love me throughout his life,
Let him hold on to my word.
Then my Father and I will pay him a visit,
And carving our dwelling out of his heart,
We will come to him and love him forever!
It is our desire that he may forever live—filled with peace—within our Love!’
To live a life of love is to hold on to you,
Uncreated Word, Utterance of my God.
Ah! You know well, Divine Jesus, that I love you,
Inflamed by the fire of the Spirit of Love.
It is in loving you that I attract the Father.
My feeble heart holds him—irretrievably.
Oh Trinity! You are imprisoned by my love!”
Jesus was preparing his disciples for the terror and confusion that would overwhelm them at his arrest and crucifixion, and for the opposition they would later encounter in their ministry. The world offers no peace, but peace of heart will come from the Spirit.
Saint Thérèse fought spiritual battles all her life. The source of her peace was God’s love, which she attracted by clinging to the incarnate Word of God. Thérèse knew that the fire of love that animated her heart was the work of the Spirit. This passionate love enabled her feeble heart to hold the Trinity captive and overflow into her words of poetry.
Jesus invites us to a loving obedience to God’s Word, in the face of active opposition from the world. And thus the Spirit will lead us into the Father’s home of love, deep within our hearts.
Prayer
Dear Jesus, you promise to be with us through the presence of your Spirit, our Advocate. Bless us with your presence and the gift of your guidance. May our efforts bring you glory. Amen!
Saint of the Day

St. Madeleine Sophie Barat is a brave saint who lived a heroic life of faith during the tumultuous years of the French Revolution. Madeleine Sophie, who went by Sophie with her family, was born in December 1779. Sophie was born two months early because a large fire at the home of their neighbors had caused Sophie's mother, in terror and stress, to go into labor. Because Sophie was born as a small, fragile child, she was baptized very early the next morning at the nearby church. Sophie's older brother, Louis, who would continue to be an important influence in her life, was her godfather, and a woman from their town who had dropped in for morning Mass was elected the godmother.
Sophie's father, Jaques, was a well-respected cooper and vintner. Sophie's parents were Jansenist Catholics. Jansenism was a Dutch theology, similar to Calvinism, that took hold in seventeenth and eighteenth-century France. Jansenism was harshly austere, emphasizing the total depravity of the soul and the utter sovereignty of God's grace—God's grace could be infused in the soul without the person's consent.
Sophie's brother and godfather, Louis, wanted to become a Catholic priest. He went through seminary education when he was a teenager, but was sent home until he was twenty-one, as he was too young to be ordained. In the intervening years, Louis taught Sophie what he had learned in seminary: he taught her Latin, Greek, history, science, and Spanish. Such an education was rare for a girl of Sophie's class and age, and she enjoyed her lessons with her brother until he was finally ordained.
In 1788, Louis took the oath of loyalty to the state that the new French government required for seminarians and clergy. Four years later, learning that the Pope had condemned the oath, Louis retracted. He was immediately sought out for arrest and execution. Louis hid in a family member's attic until he was imprisoned. Louis escaped the guillotine by the brave intervention of a friend. He and Sophie hid in Paris, where Louis was ordained secretly, and Sophie continued her education with him while attempting to become a Carmelite.
But, several years later, Sophie met a priest named Joseph Varin, who wanted to found a women's order dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, a popular devotion in French spirituality. In 1800, Sophie took her first vows as a member of the new religious congregation of the Society of the Sacred Heart. The sisters kept their name secret from the French government and quietly opened a school in the north of France. Within four years, they had opened schools all over France that provided much-needed Catholic education to impoverished children. Within twenty years, schools were spreading out over the European continent and even in America.
Sophie became Superior General of the Society and led her sisters through the rule of Napoleon and two more French revolutions. She died in Paris on May 25, 1865, the feast of the Ascension that year. She was canonized less than one hundred years later by Pope Pius XI in 1925.
St. Madeleine Sophie Barat, who spread the Catholic faith through education during the tumultuous French Revolution—pray for us!
Image Credit: Our featured image of St. Madeleine Sophie Barat is in the public domain. Last accessed March 11, 2025 on Wikimedia Commons.