Daily Gospel Reflection
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October 4, 2020
Jesus said to the chief priests and the elders of the people: “Listen to another parable. There was a landowner who planted a vineyard, put a fence around it, dug a wine press in it, and built a watchtower. Then he leased it to tenants and went to another country.
“When the harvest time had come, he sent his servants to the tenants to collect his produce. But the tenants seized his servants and beat one, killed another, and stoned another. Again he sent other servants, more than the first; and they treated them in the same way.
“Finally he sent his son to them, saying, ‘They will respect my son.’ But when the tenants saw the son, they said to themselves, ‘This is the heir; come, let us kill him and get his inheritance.’ So they seized him, threw him out of the vineyard, and killed him.
“Now when the owner of the vineyard comes, what will he do to those tenants?” They said to him, “He will put those wretches to a miserable death, and lease the vineyard to other tenants who will give him the produce at the harvest time.”
Jesus said to them, “Have you never read in the Scriptures: ‘The stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone; this was the Lord’s doing, and it is amazing in our eyes’? Therefore I tell you, the kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a people that produces the fruits of the kingdom.”
God has tried to speak with people ever since there have been people. The Bible can perhaps be summed up as a series of stories about God’s attempts at communication and the various responses people have made.
Today, Jesus takes a focused look at that history, and his interpretation is less than glowing. Through a parable, Jesus calls to mind the stories of the prophets. God sent many prophets to His people over the ages to preach about our response to God’s love. Nearly every time, these prophets were dismissed or killed by their leaders for speaking unwelcome words. God then sent his very own son, as the landowner in the story did, in the hopes that maybe, just maybe, this time people would listen.
God has sent countless messengers to each of us, too, to call us to greater relationship with him. Sometimes it is not easy to hear this message, either because God is sending a difficult message or because we do not know how to truly listen. Such listening requires great patience and practice, and we must set aside time in our lives to better hear that voice. Hearing God’s voice is not an easy task, but it is one we must all strive to do.
The good news is, as we learn from this parable today, God is immensely patient with us. God continues to speak to us each day, no matter how far we have drifted or how long it has been since we tried to listen. No matter what we do, God will continue to try to speak to us and will always give us a chance to return.
While God will always welcome us back, we must accept that welcome and act upon it by responding to God’s call. God speaks to us incessantly. Each day, God tries to speak to us. Today, we try to listen to that word and act upon it.
Prayer
Dear Lord, we so much want to live in the comfort of your faithfulness. Yet help us never to become complacent in our journey with you. Guide us to be more giving, to be better listeners, slower to judge, and champions of others. Amen.
Saint of the Day

There are few saints who have such widespread popularity as Francis. His simple, absolute devotion to the Gospel and to poverty has indelibly shaped Christian spirituality and his work to renew the church has borne fruit far beyond the limits of his life on earth.
Francis was born in Assisi, Italy in 1181, and was baptized Giovanni di Bernardone. His father, Pietro di Bernadone was a successful silk merchant, and the Bernadone family was very wealthy. Pietro's trade often brought him to France, indeed, he was in France when his son was born. Thus, Pietro took to calling his son Francesco, “the Frenchman.”
Twelfth-century Italy was populated with troubadours, poets who would travel around, reciting popular courtly poetry and love songs. As a young man, Francis was captivated by these troubadours and enamored with the romantic, chivalric ideals that were enshrined in these courtly love poems. Francis spent his parents’ money lavishly on friends and parties—creating his own ersatz court. Francis' love of munificence and luxury was not selfish but rather stemmed from a natural disposition of generosity. One famous anecdote from his youth is when a beggar appeared at, according to some accounts, his father's stall in the marketplace or, according to others, at a gathering of Francis and his friends, begging for alms. Francis followed after him and gave him everything he had in his pockets.

Around 1202, Francis was part of a military campaign against the neighboring city-state of Perugia and was taken captive. In captivity, Francis suffered from illness, and it seems that in the crucible of this year of suffering Francis' focus shifted radically. He began to reconcile his ideals of winning honor and glory in battle with a deeply-felt call to give away everything he had in order to follow Christ. When Francis took up with his friends again, he was noticeably distracted and distant. People would remark that Francis must be very deeply in love. “Yes,” he would reply, “I am going to take a wife more beautiful and worthy than any you know.”
As he was riding near Assisi one day, Francis met a leper covered in sores. Despite his initial repulsion, Francis dismounted his horse and approached the disease-ridden man. When the leper reached out his hand to receive alms, Francis not only filled his hands with money but also leaned in to embrace him. This encounter inspired Francis to tend to the sick, and he began to visit nearby hospitals to provide money and clothing for the indigent patients there and to minister to their spiritual needs.
While praying at a church outside of Assisi called San Damiano, Francis heard a voice coming from the crucifix, saying, “Francis, go and repair my house, which you see is falling down.” Francis thought Christ was ordering him to repair the dilapidated church building around him. Obediently, Francis began to collect funds to repair the church building, took a horse and cart and loaded it with rich cloth from his father’s warehouse. He sold the entire cartful of cloth, as well as the cart and horse that carried them, and gave the money to the poor priest who was living at San Damiano.
Pietro di Bernadone was outraged and forcefully retrieved Francis from the dilapidated church. Pietro beat Francis and put him in chains, demanding that Francis either stay at home or renounce his inheritance and pay back what he had taken. Francis was quite ready to forfeit his own inheritance, but he insisted that the money he had gathered from selling the cloth belonged to God and the poor. Frustrated with his stubborn son, Pietro brought Francis to an audience with the bishop of Assisi in the piazza of the town, and the bishop agreed that Francis must return the money to his father.

Francis obeyed, and, in typical Francis-fashion, went the extra mile. He insisted that he would return everything to his father, and, in front of the crowd gathered in the piazza, Francis stripped off all his clothing. Standing naked in front of the crowd, Francis turned to Pietro: “Up until now I have called you father here on earth, but now I say, ‘Our Father, who art in heaven.’”
Pietro was both furious and full of sorrow—he turned and left the square with a heavy heart. A man who worked for the bishop gave Francis a simple frock, Francis marked it with the sign of the cross in chalk and this became his first habit. Francis began to travel around the countryside, like a troubadour. Possessing nothing Francis relied solely on the generosity of others for food, clothing, and shelter.
Eventually, Francis returned to Assisi and began to rebuild the church of San Damiano himself. He begged for money in the streets of Assisi and hauled stones from a nearby quarry by himself. He went about repairing several other churches in the region until he heard one day a reading from the Gospel of Matthew, in which Jesus sends the disciples to preach the kingdom of God without shoes or staff.
Following the commands of the Gospel wholeheartedly, Francis took off his shoes, gave away the few clothes he wore, and started preaching repentance. Very quickly, his passionate words and remarkable example touched the hearts of people he encountered, and soon other young men started to join his way of life. As their small society began to grow, Francis made simplicity the foundational rule of his order. In 1209, when Francis drew up the first simple rule, he enjoined the friars to, in their every action, display their love for poverty—from what they wore to the food they ate. One year later, after Francis convinced Pope Innocent III to grant their eclectic band of mendicants the church's approval, the Franciscan Order was officially born.
And, of course, Francis' love of and gentle command over animals is legendary. Once, when preaching, Francis commanded the birds to be quiet and they flocked around him to listen. Various stories have circulated of his befriending a rabbit and his taming of a wolf that plagued the city of Gubbio.

Francis and the first men who became the Franciscans worked for their daily bread by laboring in the field. When this supply of food was not enough to provide what they needed, they begged door-to-door for food, but never accepted money. The Franciscan community always received others with hospitality, especially the poor and the sick, including lepers.
Francis continued to shape the community of followers that had gathered around him, which now numbered in the thousands and had grown to include an order of women under the leadership of the daughter of another prominent Assisi family, Clare Offreduccio. Franciscan communities had begun to extend into Europe, as orders of Franciscans were founded in Spain and France. Today, the Franciscans are comprised of three branches of women, men, and lay Franciscans, and all together they form the largest religious community in the world.
St. Bonaventure's life of Francis includes fantastic accounts of Francis' travels in the Middle East. Francis purportedly traveled to Morocco, Egypt, and finally to Jerusalem. The dates of Francis' journey to the Holy Land are somewhat in dispute, but he left Franciscan friars behind him to care for the Christians of Palestine. These friars became the Custodia Terrae Sanctae, and, for over 700 years, have served as guardians both of the holy places of Galilee and Jerusalem, and have also cared for the local Christian congregations.

Towards the end of his life, Francis gave himself over increasingly to prayer. On several occasions, he was observed levitating while in contemplation. Francis spent a month in intense solitude and prayer in September of 1224 on the mountain of Verna. On the feast of the Exaltation of the Cross, Francis received the signs of Christ's stigmata, which are the physical wounds of Christ on his hands, feet, and side.
After receiving the stigmata, Francis lived two more years, but the immense suffering from the stigmata hastened the failure of his already weak health. Francis welcomed death warmly, calling her "Sister Bodily Death," and died peacefully on the evening of October 3, 1226.
Some of Francis' relics rest in the reliquary chapel in the Basilica of the Sacred Heart on Notre Dame's campus, and an image of Francis in ecstasy, shown above, makes up a part of the ceiling murals in the Basilica. His image decorates several other chapels on campus, including the chapel in Breen Phillips Hall, which is dedicated to him, and a stained glass window in the Dillon Hall chapel. Ivan Mestrovic, former artist-in-residence at Notre Dame, painted an image of Francis receiving the stigmata, which hangs in Moreau Seminary. Francis is the patron saint of the environment and environmental activism, families, and those who work in trade and finance. To join in St. Francis' prayer for creation, visit our prayercard site.
To learn even more about Saint Francis of Assisi, watch this video lecture from the McGrath Institute for Church Life at the University of Notre Dame. Or, to learn especially about St. Francis' commitment to creation, watch this one, and to learn about the stigmata, watch this one.
St. Francis, whose love for God in Creation and in the poor continues to renew the church today—pray for us!