Daily Gospel Reflection

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October 9, 2025

Thursday of the Twenty-seventh Week in Ordinary Time
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Jesus said to his disciples:
“Suppose one of you has a friend
to whom he goes at midnight and says,
‘Friend, lend me three loaves of bread,
for a friend of mine has arrived at my house from a journey
and I have nothing to offer him,’
and he says in reply from within,
‘Do not bother me; the door has already been locked
and my children and I are already in bed.
I cannot get up to give you anything.’
I tell you, if he does not get up to give him the loaves
because of their friendship,
he will get up to give him whatever he needs
because of his persistence.

“And I tell you, ask and you will receive;
seek and you will find;
knock and the door will be opened to you.
For everyone who asks, receives;
and the one who seeks, finds;
and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened.
What father among you would hand his son a snake
when he asks for a fish?
Or hand him a scorpion when he asks for an egg?
If you then, who are wicked,
know how to give good gifts to your children,
how much more will the Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit
to those who ask him?”

Reflection

Olivia Anderson ’21, ’23 M.Ed.
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“Hello, could we please stay here tonight?” With my helmet in my hand, I asked this question night after night for two months. My brother and I were riding our bicycles across the country from Washington state to New Jersey. After growing up hearing our dad’s stories of this great adventure, we were finally old enough to embark on it ourselves. To sleep, we needed a safe place to camp each night and would knock on the doors of strangers. Night after night, the answer was yes.

We watched gratefully as a priest pushed his conference table to the wall to make space for our sleeping bags in his church rectory. A mother of two boys fed us spaghetti and made up beds for us in her RV. A kind elderly woman let us set up our tent in her backyard and offered us cold water to drink. An old farmer allowed us to eat at his picnic table and wash up with his hose. After being drenched in a downpour, the owner of a 24-hour diner poured us hot tea and let us sleep on the booths.

“Knock and the door will be opened to you.” Our God wants to give. God is eager to hear our cries. When we pray, the Lord is already standing there, awaiting us at the door, arms loaded with what we haven’t even asked for yet.

We are made in the image and likeness of God. In our essence, then, we also tend towards generosity, towards giving. Our default orientation is outward. Envy, temper, pride, greed, shame, fear, and conceit may turn us inward. These spiritual ailments produce noise that deafens us to the knocks at our own doorstep. When that reflexive twinge of reluctance hits at the sound of a knock at our door, the question to ask is why? What spiritual ailment is drawing us away from our inherent desire to answer the door?

Prayer

Rev. Herb Yost, C.S.C.

Father, sometimes we get discouraged and cynical. Deep down we know that despite our expectations, somehow and some way you must be answering our prayers. May the Spirit help us to look more closely at the Gospel and see how you really answer prayer. Amen.

Saint of the Day

St. John Henry Newman
St. John Henry Newman

St. John Henry Newman was a highly influential theologian of the nineteenth century and his writing continues to have great influence on Catholic thinkers today. His name may sound familiar, due to the presence of Newman Centers, which offer Catholic ministry and community on university campuses throughout the United States. Newman spent many years of his life as a tutor and priest-in-residence at Oxford; thus, his passion for and vision of good university life is invoked by Newman Centers across the country.

Newman was born in London on February 21, 1801. In his great spiritual classic, Apologia Pro Vita Sua, which Newman wrote after his controversial conversion to Catholicism, Newman recalled his earliest experiences with religion. Newman notes that his imagination first latched onto Christian belief. Young John took delight in reading the Bible and was enamored with the supernatural world depicted in fairy tales. In his grammar school and university education, Newman encountered the skeptic arguments against religion prevalent in eighteenth and nineteenth century Europe.

When Newman was fifteen, he had a religious experience that cemented his belief. In his own words, he "fell under the influences of a definite Creed, and received into my intellect impressions of dogma, which, through God's mercy, have never been effaced or obscured." Newman continued to write eloquent apologies for the importance of Tradition, dogma, and religious certainty throughout his career. These passionate defenses all had their origin in this single moment as a teenager.

In the nineteenth century, the emergence of modern science, the age of revolutions, and a rapidly changing technological world caused a great crisis of religious faith. It seemed to many of Europe's best and brightest thinkers that religious faith was something inherently irrational, could not be supported or approached through one's intellect—a Christian could "feel" her faith but could not be "certain of it." Newman also believed Christian faith to be ultimately something above our rational or mental operations, and certainly a felt experience of relationship with God and others. But Newman was adamant that Christianity was not simply a religious feeling, but a faith that necessarily involved dogmas, creeds. Furthermore, a believer's assent to the creeds of Christianity was not a private experience but rather informed and reformed her entire life: from her broad imaginative worldview to the smallest actions of her daily life. For Newman, faith was a matter of the mind and the heart—and occurred at the level of deepest union in both. His poetry, sermons, and scholarly writings show how deeply informed all of his work was by his own faith.

In 1825, Newman was ordained an Anglican priest in Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford, and in 1828, he was appointed vicar of St. Mary's University Church at Oxford. While at Oxford, Newman was a leader of the Oxford movement, which catalyzed renewal and reformation in the Church of England, and which ultimately led Newman to the Catholic Church. As Newman's scholarship dealt with the importance of Tradition and apostolic succession, it brought him to the conclusion that the Catholic Church is the one Christian Church that has maintained this unbroken Apostolic succession. In 1845, amid great uproar from his colleagues and countrymen, and causing great scandal in the Church of England, Newman left the Church of England and was received into the Catholic Church.

In 1847, Newman was ordained a Catholic priest in Rome, and Pope Pius IX sent him back to Oxford to found small communities of priests, in the model of St. Philip Neri. These communities of priests—known as Oratorians—live and study together and dedicate themselves to preaching and works of charity.

Newman has helped many modern believers grapple with the tensions between faith and reason. Newman keenly felt the hostility that science and technological advances cast on the worldview of faith, and the uncertainty that comes from pursuing faith with certainty in a secular society. In his spiritual autobiography and in theological works such as An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent and The Development of Doctrine, Newman confronted these forces and paved a path forward for believers to pursue a faith that can dialogue with contemporary intellectual movements and cultural mores, but is grounded in the rich apostolic Tradition of Christianity. Newman believed that the human person's conscience is the place within each person where God speaks to him or her. Conscience, Newman argued, arises from our deep-seated desire for God, and this desire is the foundation and wellspring of belief.

Portrait of John Henry Newman

One of Newman's most widely-read works is The Idea of a University, which was inspired in part by his work as the first rector of the newly-formed Catholic University in Dublin which eventually became University College Dublin. As rector, Newman oversaw construction of the beautiful University Church, which is now cared for by Notre Dame's Newman Centre for Faith and Reason. Persuaded by Newman's many English Catholic admirers, Pope Leo XIII appointed Newman to the College of Cardinals in 1879. Newman died eleven years later on August 11, 1890. Very shortly after, in 1893, the first Newman Club was established at the University of Pennsylvania in the United States. Hundreds have followed on college campuses the world over, and Newman’s efforts to unite the life of the mind with the life of faith continue to bear fruit in Catholic universities. Newman's vision continually challenges Catholic universities to pursue truth with a clear intellect and in dialogue with the world around them.

Cardinal Newman was beatified in 2010 and canonized by Pope Francis on October 13, 2019 in Rome. On July 31, 2025, Pope Leo XIV named him a Doctor of the Church, a title given to 38 saints in recognition of their extraordinary contributions to the faith.

Today's featured image is a statue of Cardinal Newman on the side of Dillon Hall. One of the poems he wrote on the eve of his conversion, "The Pillar of the Cloud," has become popularized in song form as the hymn "Lead Kindly Light," sung here by the Notre Dame Folk Choir.

St. John Henry Newman, whose great faith illuminated his intellect and brightened his imagination—pray for us!


Image Credit: The portrait of St. John Henry Newman is in the public domain. Last accessed September 27, 2024 on Wikimedia Commons.