Daily Gospel Reflection
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October 22, 2019
Jesus said to his disciples, “Be dressed for action and have your lamps lit; be like those who are waiting for their master to return from the wedding banquet, so that they may open the door for him as soon as he comes and knocks.
“Blessed are those servants whom the master finds alert when he comes; truly I tell you, he will fasten his belt and have them sit down to eat, and he will come and serve them. If he comes during the middle of the night, or near dawn, and finds them so, blessed are those servants.”
Today’s Gospel encourages us to look forward in hope to the fulfillment of the kingdom of God. Jesus tells us to “be dressed for action,” and so we must shed anything that hinders us from responding immediately to his call.
In lighting our lamps we do more than fulfill the duties of the Christian life; we must “become all flame,” as the Desert Fathers say. As we await Christ we should be filled with joy, not anxiety; with longing, not complacency. At the coming of Jesus, all creation will be perfected, and, as St. John says, “what we shall be hereafter has not been made known as yet. But we know that when he comes we shall be like him; we shall see him, then, as he is.”
And consider the reward for those who are watchful and await his coming – the master himself serves them, heedless of the hour. Although we ourselves may not see Christ’s second coming in our lifetime, at every Eucharist we experience the encounter today’s gospel describes. As each Mass begins, we prepare ourselves outwardly during the penitential rite. Then, we hear the Word, which illuminates our hearts and minds. At the Eucharistic banquet, we participate in the wondrous mystery of Christ giving himself to us.
Today’s reading encourages us to watch for the glorious second coming, and while we wait, to welcome Christ in the Sacrament of the Eucharist.
Prayer
Compared to what you have done for me, Abba, everything I can do for others is a mere pittance. Yet it means so much to you, and does so much in bringing about the fullness of your Kingdom. I ask of your Spirit this day the grace to “wait on someone.”
A smile, a kind word, yielding on the street or in the meeting room, making peace with someone whom I’ve been holding at arm’s length, forgiving someone who has hurt me – whatever you ask me to do, may I have the grace to do it.
Saint of the Day

Pope John Paul II helped define the Church’s engagement with the world after the Second Vatican Council. His abundant charisma was matched only by his immense intellectual gifts, which he put at the service of fighting for human dignity and freedom. As the turmoil of the twentieth century gave way to the twenty-first, John Paul II fought to keep Christ the center of the human race's yesterday, today, and tomorrow.
Karol Jozef Wojtyla was born in Wadowice, Poland to a faithful Catholic family. Tragically, the young Karol was an orphan by the time he was twenty-one, having lost his mother, father, and his older brother. During World War II, during oppressive Nazi occupation, Karol enrolled in an underground seminary in Krakow and ran a resistance movement of artists. After the war ended, Karol was ordained a priest in 1946. He was sent for further education in Rome, to study at the Angelicum under the tutelage of a famous French Dominican theologian Fr. Garrigou-Lagrange.
The Communist regime that occupied Poland after World War II kept an eye on the brilliant young priest but underestimated him as a harmless intellectual. Thus, they allowed his appointment as an auxiliary bishop of Krakow in 1958. Karol attended sessions of the Second Vatican Council and contributed significantly to the ecumenical discussion. The experience of the council changed him and deepened his commitment to renewing the Church. He was named archbishop of Krakow in 1964, elevated to a cardinal in 1967, and provided leadership to the faithful of Poland as they faced persecution under Communist rule.
When Pope Paul VI died on August 6, 1978, Wojtyla went to Rome to elect a new pope. The cardinals elected Cardinal Albino Luciani of Venice, who took the name John Paul to honor the two popes who preceded him and who had guided the Second Vatican Council (John XXIII and Paul VI) . When Pope John Paul died after 33 days in office, the cardinals gathered once again, and this time, they elected Wojtyla, who took the name John Paul II as a symbol of continuity. He was the first non-Italian elected as Supreme Pontiff in 455 years.
When he stepped out onto the balcony facing St. Peter’s Square, his first words were these:
"Be not afraid! Open up—no, swing wide the gates to Christ. Open up to his saving power the confines of the state, open up economic and political systems, the vast empires of culture, civilization and development... Be not afraid!"
In the midst of the trauma of the second half of the twentieth century, and in the wake of great changes in the Church in the Second Vatican Council, there was a deep need for a wise leader to guide the Church and the world through the chaotic decades of rapid change. John Paul II ministered to Catholics in Soviet Bloc countries and continued to expand the pastoral reach of the papacy into the global South and East. Aided by immense energy and unflagging evangelical enthusiasm, John Paul II traveled on apostolic journeys to 124 countries.

Like his predecessors, John Paul II worked to promote ecumenical and interfaith initiatives. In order to dialogue with the youngest members of the Church, John Paul II inaugurated the World Youth Day celebrations. A prolific writer and intellect, John Paul II wrote fourteen encyclicals and five books. Heeding Vatican II's call to highlight the universal call to holiness, John Paul II canonized 482 saints. The charismatic artist from Krakow became a world-famous evangelist, defender of human rights, a peacemaker, and a prophet reminding a world depressed by its own evil to rediscover the endless and indefatigable joy of Christ.
In his later years, John Paul II struggled with Parkinson’s disease. Even though Parkinson's made it difficult for him to celebrate Mass and eventually impacted his mobility, John Paul II did not shy from his public pastoral duties. Thus, John Paul II presented himself to the world as an image of the great humility and dignity of a suffering human being. When John Paul II died in the spring of 2005, the Notre Dame campus community gathered at the Grotto to pray for him and the Church—the image below captures that moment.

Pope John Paul II was beatified in 2011 and was canonized a saint on April 27, 2014, along with Pope John XXIII.
At the University of Notre Dame, John Paul II has been honored by several initiatives and monuments. The Center for Ethics and Culture honors leaders who promote the Gospel of Life with its Evangelium Vitae Medal, which they named after John Paul II’s landmark 1995 encyclical. The image of John Paul II shown above hangs in the Basilica of the Sacred Heart's museum on campus, which also displays several of his white papal zucchettos (the small caps worn by bishops), one of which is pictured below.
Saint Pope John Paul II, who taught us to be not afraid as we open wide the doors to Christ—pray for us!
To learn even more about Saint Pope John Paul II, watch this video lecture from the McGrath Institute for Church Life at the University of Notre Dame.