Daily Gospel Reflection

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May 30, 2025

Friday of the Sixth Week of Easter
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Jesus said to his disciples:
“Amen, amen, I say to you, you will weep and mourn,
while the world rejoices;
you will grieve, but your grief will become joy.
When a woman is in labor, she is in anguish because her hour has arrived;
but when she has given birth to a child,
she no longer remembers the pain because of her joy
that a child has been born into the world.
So you also are now in anguish.
But I will see you again, and your hearts will rejoice,
and no one will take your joy away from you.
On that day you will not question me about anything.
Amen, amen, I say to you,
whatever you ask the Father in my name he will give you.”

Reflection

Anastasia Tejeda ’26
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When you fall deeply in love, there is no length you won’t go to for the other person in order to support them and to be close to them. A mother in labor goes through the anguish of giving birth without resentment or regret because of the endless love that she has for her child. The King of the universe died on a cross for us because that is how much he yearned to be with us. And Jesus wouldn’t have it any other way.

As I grow in my love for Jesus, I’m beginning to understand what it means to find joy even in suffering. It’s not always easy, and I don’t always get it right, but I’m learning in tangible ways that even in the pain and difficulty, God is so close. And somehow, God’s presence is totally sufficient to offer lasting joy. When I’m sick, Christ gives me peace that lifts me out of discouragement. When I’m overwhelmed by school, Christ gently reminds me that I don’t have to carry everything on my own. When I’m hurt by others, Christ teaches me to forgive and to love without any resentment. I still have a long way to go, but I’m beginning to see that our God truly can bring beauty and purpose even out of ashes.

This, I believe, is joy: to have a companion that you delight in and who eternally delights in you.

And I am convinced that no weeping, no grief, no pain, no anguish, no life or death, no height or depth—not anything—can take away the joy that I have in my Father.

Prayer

Rev. Thomas C. Bertone, C.S.C.

Gracious God, you remind us that sometimes we must bear the pain of trials and tribulations before we come to the new life you promise us. Give us patience we need to bear the suffering that may come our way, hope in the joy that awaits us at the end of our trials, and trust in knowing you are present with us through it all. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Saint of the Day

St. Joan of Arc

St. Joan of Arc is a heroine of France and revered as a holy person for her faithfulness and courage, which she displayed in battle, but even more acutely in her trial and execution.

She was born Jeanne in 1412 on the feast of the Epiphany. Her parents were peasant farmers who lived in a small village in the Champagne region of France. She never learned to read or write, but was full of faith.

“She was so good that all the village loved her,” her neighbors said of her. As a girl, she loved to pray and receive the sacraments, and she cared for the sick and the indigent, often giving them her own bed.

At the age of 14, she began hearing voices telling her she had a mission to save France. She began to recognize these voices as those of saints—Michael the Archangel, St. Catherine of Alexandria, and St. Margaret of Antioch.

It was a time of civil war and political turmoil in France. The English had invaded and allied with an army from the region of Burgundy. Together, this force had displaced the French king and threatened to conquer the whole nation.

When the voices would not go away, Joan presented herself as a resource to the local commander of the French army, but he laughed and sent her away. She returned when the voices became even more insistent. The commander softened his skepticism when a defeat that she had foretold actually came about.

He sent her to King Charles VII with an escort. The king received her in a large audience room, but disguised himself. She immediately identified him and convinced him of her revelations. He had her examined by theologians, who found nothing objectionable, and she was sent to the head of the army in Orleans, a town under siege by the English.

She marched into battle with a banner that proclaimed the names of Jesus and Mary. Within 10 days, the siege was broken. Even though she was wounded by an arrow, she pressed on with the army to other regions and routed her opponents. Her victory regained a bulk of the kingdom of France from the intruders, and concluded the mission that was entrusted to her by the voices she heard. She predicted all of these events before any of them happened.

She went on to lead a bold attack on Paris, but from then on, she found no success in her military quests. She was wounded again in battle and was captured by soldiers from Burgundy and sold to England. The French court did nothing to come to her aid, and she was tried as a witch. She was questioned and examined tirelessly about the voices she heard, her faith, and the fact that she wore armor in battle to appear as a man. She had no one to counsel her, yet faced her inquisitors and accusers with courage and simple cleverness.

They exploited her lack of education by trapping her with theological terms, and she was condemned and denounced. The authorities handed her over for punishment as a heretic if she refused to retract her statements. She stood her ground, even though she was threatened with torture, and was burned at the stake, still a teenager.

Two decades later, her family asked the pope to reopen the case, and her verdict was thrown out. Joan’s case was vindicated, and she was eventually canonized in 1920. She is venerated as a saint, but not as a martyr.

Joan of Arc is the patron saint of France and of soldiers. A bronze sculpture of her stands in the Raclin Murphy Museum of Art. She is also depicted in a statue that stands above the east door of the Basilica—the War Memorial Door that bears the “God, Country, Notre Dame” inscription. This door is dedicated to soldiers from Notre Dame who died during World War I.

St. Joan of Arc, you were an illiterate, peasant, teenage Saint who listened to the will of God and led an army—pray for us!


Image credit: (1) Emmanuel Frémiet (French, 1824-1910), Joan of Arc, after 1874, bronze. Raclin Murphy Museum of Art: Fred and Delores Geissel Memorial Fund, 1979.049.