Daily Gospel Reflection

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November 3, 2023

Friday of the Thirtieth Week in Ordinary Time
Lk 14:1-6
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On a sabbath Jesus went to dine
at the home of one of the leading Pharisees,
and the people there were observing him carefully.
In front of him there was a man suffering from dropsy.
Jesus spoke to the scholars of the law and Pharisees in reply, asking,
“Is it lawful to cure on the sabbath or not?”
But they kept silent; so he took the man and,
after he had healed him, dismissed him.
Then he said to them
“Who among you, if your son or ox falls into a cistern,
would not immediately pull him out on the sabbath day?”
But they were unable to answer his question.

Reflection

Dave Tracy '86
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To me, today’s Gospel calls all of us to get our priorities straight. It reminds us that rules, commandments, prayers, and devotions are there to fuel us to do God’s work. This passage is quite similar to Luke 6:6-11. In that passage, Luke, a physician, describes Jesus restoring a man’s withered hand on the Sabbath. Jesus’ actions make the Pharisees furious.

In today’s gospel, it’s the Sabbath, and Jesus heals a man again. Jesus repeatedly ignores the conventions against working on the Sabbath in favor of kindness and healing. If our hand was withered or our face was disfigured, we would be delighted that Jesus chose healing over convention. Jesus points this out to the scholars and Pharisees when he notes that all of them would choose to work on the Sabbath to save their own son or even their ox if needed.

My young co-worker recently tore his ACL. His recovery was all-consuming for a while. He quoted Confucius to me, saying, “A healthy man wants a thousand things; a sick man only wants one.” Following his surgery, his dad dropped everything in his own life and came to attend to his son’s recovery. That’s a natural and loving instinct, and it’s one that all of us should foster and follow.

Mass on Sunday, like Sabbath devotion, is there to refuel me to do the works I instinctively know I’m called to do. It’s great to attend Mass and to seek refueling through prayer. Yet, I often fail to get my priorities straight. I fail to act with kindness, compassion, and love and fall into a faith without works that is dead.

Let us all slow down today to see those around us who need our love.

Prayer

Rev. Steven Gibson, C.S.C.

Dear Lord, how would we speak and behave if we really believed you stood next to us? If we felt your eyes upon us and your confidence resting on us, would we change our opinions? To whom would we lend our voices and support? We never want to let you down, nor those who need us to defend them. Help us to bring your good news to the people we meet this day. Amen.

Saint of the Day

St. Martin de Porres

St. Martin de Porres was born into great disadvantage yet, with his great perseverance, and even greater faith became a beloved wonder-worker of Peru.

He was born in 1579 in Lima—his father, Don Juan de Porres, was a Spanish knight who took Martin’s mother, Ana Velazquez a freed slave from Panama, as a mistress. Ana had two children by Don Juan—Martin, and his sister, Juana, who were looked down upon and mocked for inheriting their mother’s dark features.

When Don Juan abandoned the family, Ana was left to raise their children on her own. She struggled to support the family by doing laundry, and they experienced great poverty. She had to commit Martin to the care of a school for a few years and then placed him in an apprenticeship with a barber to learn medicine and surgery.

Martin spent hours in prayer during nights and heard a call to dedicate his life to God in religious life. By Peruvian law, people of African or indigenous heritage were not allowed to become full members of religious orders. Because his mother was a freed slave, Martin was unjustly barred from entering religious life. When he was fifteen, Martin approached the Dominican monastery in Lima to become a donado—a volunteer who took on menial labor and lived with the community. He was, essentially, the community's servant boy.

Martin worked with a willing heart and took upon himself the work of several servants, tending the laundry and doing kitchen work. Increasingly, Martin was given more and more responsibility. The community entrusted him with distributing food and money to the poor, and he was allowed to use his medical training to assist the sick. At times, the food he gave out seemed to increase miraculously—he fed 160 people every day—and his medical care would sometimes lead to surprising cures and healings: miraculous cures were attributed to him, even when he only offered a simple drink of water.

Eventually, Martin was allowed to become a fully-professed Dominican brother. Out of humility, Martin declined to seek ordination to the priesthood. Once, when the monastery faced serious debts, he offered to be sold as a slave to raise money, saying, “I am only a poor mulatto. I am the property of the order—sell me.” To their credit, the order did not take him up on his offer.

Martin wanted to become a foreign missionary but was not allowed to leave the monastery, so he became a missionary in his own city of Lima. He established an orphanage and hospital for abandoned children and reached out to care for slaves who were taken from Africa and being unloaded in Peru after a miserable journey. Martin often went into the city to care for the sick.

One day, as Martin passed through the city, he came upon an old man, nearly naked, begging and covered with sores. When the man stretched his hand out, Martin took it and led the man back to the monastery, offering to the homeless beggar his very own bed. Martin did not fear for his own health—when a dangerous epidemic struck Peru, Martin cared for those who were afflicted, putting his own life at risk. On several occasions, observers saw Martin pass through locked doors to serve those in quarantine.

Martin was a close friend of St. Rose of Lima. Both of them were great healers and Peruvian saints. Martin particularly loved animals—he began a veterinary hospital for dogs and cats and tended to the mice and rats who scampered about the monastery.

Strange miracles accompanied Martin wherever he went—one time, the kneeler he was praying upon burst into flames. Sometimes, during prayer, he was observed levitating, or light would fill the room as he prayed.

St. Martin de Porres is the patron saint of people of mixed race, of hair stylists, public schools, and those who work for public health. Because of his work caring for the poor and oppressed, Martin is honored in this stained glass window from the chapel of Geddes Hall, which houses the Institute for Social Concerns on Notre Dame's campus (an image of that window is featured here). The institute helps more than 1,000 students each year pursue justice education and partners with 550 community organizations to serve in 36 U.S. states and 26 countries. One small relic, a piece of St. Martin de Porres' bone, is part of the reliquary chapel in the Basilica.

St. Martin de Porres, the poor outcast who worked with mercy among the suffering of Peru—pray for us!