Daily Gospel Reflection
Join the Notre Dame family of faith. Receive God’s Word and a unique reflection in your inbox each day.
October 13, 2020
While Jesus was speaking, a Pharisee invited him to dine with him; so he went in and took his place at the table. The Pharisee was amazed to see that he did not first wash before dinner.
Then the Lord said to him, “Now you Pharisees clean the outside of the cup and of the dish, but inside you are full of greed and wickedness. You fools! Did not the one who made the outside make the inside also? But as to what is within, give alms; and see, everything will be clean for you.”
This passage reminds me of the motto of the Congregation of the Holy Cross: Ave Crux Spes Unica, “Hail the Cross, our Only Hope.”
How can the cross be hope? How can fear and pain offer hope? How can anything be made clean and new? Can anything truly overcome dirtiness and insufficiency, fear and pain? Hope can.
Jesus brought that hope by his incarnation; he brought hope to all people, to the fabric of each person. He gives me hope.
He brought hope that I can go beyond washing what is outside, a washing that does not satisfy. Jesus gives me the chance to be clean inside. He gives me the chance to change that which is inside me. He gives me the chance to transform through his transformation. He gives me hope.
He gives me the chance to use that which is within me to bring others out of fear into hope. In the Sacraments, he gives me the chance to reconcile with him, he gives me the chance to commune with him. He gives me hope.
He takes my worst fear, my fear of showing the place inside me where my dirtiness and insufficiency hides, and transforms it into the meeting place with him, the source of abundant life. In meeting me, he reaches through me to others, bringing new life to us all.
In changing how we become clean, Jesus gives me the hope that “everything will be clean.” He makes my fear into my hope. He transforms the cross into hope: Ave Crux Spes Unica. Hail the cross, that we may never forget our God who changes fear into hope.
Prayer
Loving God, you instructed the Pharisee that you desire purity of the heart. Help us, your people, to truly serve you, not by appearance, but by opening our hearts and our lives to your loving will. Grant us a spirit of generosity, so that we may always grow in holiness and love. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Saint of the Day

St. Edward the Confessor was one of the great kings of England. Because he is the patron saint of University founder Father Edward Sorin, C.S.C., his feast day has traditionally been a day of celebration for Notre Dame.
Edward the Confessor’s name reflects less his own piety or status as a sacramental minister than the fact that he is a saint who did not suffer martyrdom. In ancient Christian tradition, saints were those who had been martyred for Christ. As Christianity grew, and local persecutions did not define sainthood as much, different titles were given to saints to designate their particular path to holiness. Confessors were those whose lives confessed the creed in a nonviolent manner.
Edward is a particularly prominent saint, as he was the last Anglo-Saxon king before the Norman conquest of England, which happened during the reign of his successor.
Edward was the seventh son of King Æthelred the Unready, and the first son of Æthelred’s second wife, Emma of Normandy. Edward was born between 1003 and 1005 in Oxfordshire, England.
When Edward was a child, England was plagued by Viking raids. A Viking chieftain, Sweyn, seized the English throne in 1013, causing several decades of turmoil and fighting. Sweyn’s son took over the throne and married Edward’s mother Emma, subsequently banishing Edward and his brothers. Edward was exiled most likely to Normandy but finally returned to England in 1042, invited back to take up the English throne. He was crowned king of England in 1043 in Winchester Cathedral. Winchester was the seat of the Saxon kings before Westminster Abbey, which, incidentally, Edward began the construction of. Westminster Abbey is a beautiful example of Norman Romanesque architecture, and it exhibits the Norman sensibilities of Edward, who spent large amounts of time in exile in Normandy.
Edward the Confessor was the first Anglo-Saxon and the only English king to be canonized by the Roman Catholic Church. There is considerable dispute over whether his canonization was politically motivated, or whether his cult grew from devoted Englishmen and women who truly loved King Edward. Edward has long been a patron saint of England, before finally being replaced by Saint George.
Edward died of an illness in 1066, and his relics rest in the reliquary chapel in the Basilica. St. Edward’s Hall, a men’s residence hall on campus, is named after this English king because he was the patron saint of Father Edward Sorin, C.S.C., founder of the University. The stained glass window above comes from the chapel in St. Edward's hall, and this statue of St. Edward stands in the courtyard in front; he holds a model of the Basilica of the Sacred Heart in his hand.

Today marks Founder’s Day for the University of Notre Dame, as it is the celebration of Edward Sorin's "name day," i.e., the feast of the saint after whom he is named. In Notre Dame's earlier years, classes were canceled and the day was marked by games, performances, and a large feast. Today the University commemorates Founder’s Day with a special Mass in the Basilica, celebrated by the university president.
Whether or not King Edward was “saintly,” as popular imagination defines it, does not diminish his extraordinary legacy in the building of Westminster Abbey. Westminster has been a home for countless English Catholics and Christians for nearly a millennium. It has been a home for pilgrims seeking a space to pray, beautiful liturgy, and heavenly music.
Much like his namesake Edward, Fr. Edward Sorin was also known for a rather prickly temperament—not a particularly “saintly” disposition. Fr. Edward Sorin, like Edward the Confessor, founded a place that became much larger than the cult of his own personality, which became a place for prayer, learning, and growth, that has been a source of grace for countless visitors and students for almost two hundred years.
St. Edward the Confessor, patron saint of Father Edward Sorin—pray for us!