Daily Gospel Reflection

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November 18, 2022

Friday of the Thirty-third Week in Ordinary Time
Lk 19:45-48
Listen to the Audio Version

Jesus entered the temple area and proceeded to drive out
those who were selling things, saying to them,
“It is written,
My house shall be a house of prayer,
but you have made it a den of thieves.”
And every day he was teaching in the temple area.
The chief priests, the scribes, and the leaders of the people, meanwhile,
were seeking to put him to death,
but they could find no way to accomplish their purpose
because all the people were hanging on his words.

Reflection

John Pratt ’15
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The zeal of Christ burned to preserve an atmosphere of prayer and authentic worship in the sacred space that had been reduced to support commercialized profit. Yet, the physical temple that Jesus cleared of the buyers and sellers would be destroyed only decades later.

Far from removing the relevance of this passage, it only further implies that Christ’s message had less to do with the historical temple in Jerusalem and more about his desire to find an authentic atmosphere of prayer and worship in the hearts of believers.

In the temple of our hearts, what is the atmosphere? Is it cluttered and busied with countless daily distractions, or do we make time for what is most important? Do we make time to sit at the feet of Jesus? Today’s gospel invites us to consider what we take in through our eyes and ears into the temple of our hearts.

God speaks to us every day whether we choose to listen or not, and we should seek to respond as did the crowds who “were hanging on his words.” To whose voice do we listen? What we let into our hearts forms who we are and how we react to the people and events around us.

When we interact with others, can they see the love of God in our words and actions or do we just pass along the wounded pride that afflicts us? Is it the joy of God we share or the hectic busyness that often seeps into our daily lives? Let us invite Jesus into our hearts to drive out all that distracts us from “hanging on to his words.”

Prayer

Br. Jimmy Henke, C.S.C.

Lord, you made us temples of the Holy Spirit, and yet so often, we make of our temples a den of thieves. Turn our hearts back to you. Inspire us by the gift of your Holy Spirit that we may be instruments of your justice and lasting peace. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Saint of the Day

St. Rose Philippine Duchesne

St. Rose Philippine Duchesne was a French nun who survived the French Revolution and was sent to America as a missionary at the age of 49. She was extraordinarily courageous in facing dangerous conditions on the frontier and was single-minded in her desire to serve the Native American population around her.

Rose was born in Grenoble, France, in 1769, to a wealthy family—her father was a successful businessman and city leader, and her mother was from a well-established family in the region. At the age of eight, Rose heard a Jesuit missionary priest give a lecture on his work on the American frontier, and the idea of serving as a missionary in America captured Rose's young imagination and became the greatest desire of her heart.

Rose was educated at home until she was twelve—after that, she was sent to a nearby convent for further schooling. When she turned nineteen, she secretly joined the community of nuns with whom she was studying, against the wishes of her family.

In 1792, at the height of the French Revolution, the convent Rose lived in was closed. For the next ten years, Rose lived as a laywoman but still ordered her life according to the vows she had professed as a religious sister. She even began a school for poor children, cared for the sick, and hid priests who were secretly leading Mass and encouraging the faithful.

When the Reign of Terror passed, Rose re-joined what was left of her community, and in 1804 the remaining members were grafted into a different community—the Society of the Sacred Heart. After a decade in this Society, Rose was asked to establish a new convent in Paris. Several years later, in 1818, at the age of 49, she and four other sisters traveled to the Louisiana Territory as missionaries to the American West.

She fell very ill on the trip to America and had to spend time recovering when they landed in New Orleans. She fell dangerously ill again on her trip up the Mississippi River to the area around St. Louis.

After arriving and recovering, she and her companions founded a school near St. Louis for the daughters of pioneers. They faced the bitter cold in the single log cabin in which they lived and worked. The community went on to open six other institutions, including orphanages and the first three schools west of the Mississippi River.

Rose had a loving concern for the Native Americans who lived by the European settlements on the American frontier, and she spent just as much of her energy educating them and caring for their sick as for the Europeans. When she retired from her administrative duties at the age of 71, she opened a school for Native Americans of the Potawatomi tribe, whose name for her meant “the woman who is always praying.”

Her work with the Potawatomi was short-lived, however—she failed to master their language, having struggled to learn English. After a year, she retired to a cabin near their original school around St. Louis and lived in prayer and solitude until she died in 1852. Before she died, she wrote:

“We cultivate a very small field for Christ but we love it, knowing that God does not require great achievements but a heart that holds back nothing for self.”

St. Rose was canonized by Pope John Paul II in 1988.

St. Rose Philippine Duchesne, the brave French nun who survived the Reign of Terror to bring education to the American frontier—pray for us!


Image Credit: Our featured image of St. Rose Philippine Duchesne is in the public domain. Last accessed October 18, 2024 on Wikimedia Commons.