Daily Gospel Reflection
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September 13, 2021
When Jesus had finished all his words to the people,
he entered Capernaum.
A centurion there had a slave who was ill and about to die,
and he was valuable to him.
When he heard about Jesus, he sent elders of the Jews to him,
asking him to come and save the life of his slave.
They approached Jesus and strongly urged him to come, saying,
“He deserves to have you do this for him,
for he loves our nation and he built the synagogue for us.”
And Jesus went with them,
but when he was only a short distance from the house,
the centurion sent friends to tell him,
“Lord, do not trouble yourself,
for I am not worthy to have you enter under my roof.
Therefore, I did not consider myself worthy to come to you;
but say the word and let my servant be healed.
For I too am a person subject to authority,
with soldiers subject to me.
And I say to one, Go, and he goes;
and to another, Come here, and he comes;
and to my slave, Do this, and he does it.”
When Jesus heard this he was amazed at him
and, turning, said to the crowd following him,
“I tell you, not even in Israel have I found such faith.”
When the messengers returned to the house,
they found the slave in good health.
Reflection
I struggle every day with my own worthiness. I am healthy, happily married, a father of four, a grandfather of three, a son of two living parents, a brother of three, and an uncle to twenty-three. My wife and I are owners of a beautiful home in a safe neighborhood. I love my work and colleagues and have a wide network of friends. The list is seemingly endless, and everything on it undeserved—all gifts. Why have I been so disproportionately blessed?
Luke’s passage regarding the centurion helps me with my worthiness issue and in two very different but connected ways. First, I try every day on my walk to the train to detail as best I can the gifts I have been given and to acknowledge them as that. The list is impossibly long to complete, and for everything on it, I remind myself that I am just like the centurion—not in any way deserving or worthy of any of them.
The second way concerns the aftermath of Luke’s passage. Surely, after the servant was healed, the centurion thanked Jesus in some way for that gift. I overcome my feeling of unworthiness by responding with gratitude to God during my morning walks.
Part of our difficulty with interpreting the gospel is that we have been culturally trained to think in economic terms and to think of relationships in the same way we do of financial transactions. In a financial transaction, I will give you this if and only if you give me that in return. But God does not work that way. God gives even though we are not worthy and unable to repay all that we have been offered. All we can do is respond with gratitude.
Gifts then gratitude—a holy transaction.
Prayer
Lord Jesus, we seek to honor you by building up your Kingdom, but we know that only by your will can anything enduring come to pass. Give us the courage to invite you into our homes, our lives; though they are humble and cluttered, you desire to enter in and save us. Only say the word and your servants shall be healed.
Saint of the Day

St. John Chrysostom is a doctor of the Church, a bishop from the fifth century whose fiery and powerful preaching earned him the name "Chrysostom," meaning “golden mouth.”
He was born in 347 in Antioch, Syria, the only son of the commander of imperial troops. His father died when he was still a child, thus John was raised by his mother, who modeled for young John a truly Christian life, devoting herself to a life of piety while upholding her family obligations.
John's mother provided the best education possible for her son, and John learned rhetoric from the master orator of Antioch, Libanius. Even as a young man, John outperformed the other students, and even surpassed his teacher in style and talent. In fact, as legend has it, Libanius was on his deathbed and asked who should follow him in leading the school. “John would have been my choice,” he said, “if the Christians had not stolen him from us.”
After completing his education, John poured his dynamic energy into pursuing a monastic life. He joined the community of hermits and monks living in the mountains near Antioch. John spent four years under close spiritual direction from a monk, and another two years living in solitude and prayer in a cave.
The harsh monastic diet of a hermit caused great harm to his stomach, forcing John to return to Antioch and plaguing him with ill health for the rest of his life. Upon his return to the city, he was ordained a deacon and assigned to assist the bishop with preaching at liturgy. For twelve years, he served the Christian community of Antioch through his preaching. Continually, he encouraged the Christians of Antioch to be a witness to their status-obsessed pagan neighbors and to provide radical love and hospitality to the poor. His homilies on Luke's parable of Lazarus and the Rich Man are particularly poignant examples. John Chrysostom was never afraid to venture into political territory during his homilies, and more than once he called out the imperial family on their lavish lifestyle and decadence. To John, Christianity was not simply a private affair in the hubbub of public urban life. In John's eyes, Christians were called to transform the metropolis.

In 398, John, against his wishes, was named bishop of Constantinople, the capital of the new Roman empire. As bishop, he scandalized the elite of the city through his Spartan lifestyle. Eschewing dinner parties and fine clothing, John provided for the poor and supported the relatively new invention of urban public hospitals. John particularly encouraged a Eucharistic devotion among his people, urging them to receive Communion as often as they could. John highlighted the Eucharist as the banquet of the heavenly city where rich and poor could meet as equals in Christ.
He was known for being able to speak to the hearts of people who felt stuck in sin—“If you have fallen a second time, or even a thousand times into sin,” he said, “come to me, and you shall be healed.” John converted many with his intuitive compassion for others, and his firm calls to repentance.
John spent his last years in exile for speaking out once too often against the sumptuous lifestyle of the Empress Eudoxia and the imperial capital. In revenge for his criticisms, the emperor and empress conspired with a faction of bishops who opposed John and had him removed from office and exiled deep into the region of Anatolia in present-day Turkey. Forced to march for three months to his exile, John suffered greatly on this journey, as the harsh elements and rough treatment taxed his already frail health. He kept up his correspondence until the end; his letters to his friend the deaconess Olympias are a precious record of his last days. He died on Sept. 14, 407.
John's storied last words to his congregation were: “Violent storms encompass me on all sides. Though the sea roar and the waves rise high, they cannot overwhelm the ship of Jesus Christ. I fear not death, which is my gain; nor banishment, for the whole earth is the Lord’s; nor the loss of things, for I came naked into this world, and I can carry nothing out of it.”

In 1204, crusaders looted his relics from Constantinople and bore them to Rome. In 2004, Pope John Paul II returned some of these relics to the Eastern Church. Other relics of his rest in the reliquary chapel in the Basilica, where he is also depicted in two stained glass windows. One of these windows shows him contemplating a vision of St. Paul, whose writings were a favorite subject of his preaching. Additionally, John Chrysostom is portrayed in a stained glass window in the library of Moreau Seminary, below a symbol for the Eucharist, which he encouraged devotion to among his flock.
An overwhelming number of John Chysostom’s homilies have been preserved throughout the millennia since his death. He is considered the greatest preacher in the history of Christianity. The liturgy most often celebrated by Eastern Rite Catholics and Christians comes from St. John Chrysostom's Eucharistic Prayer—his words have shaped liturgical worship for millions over many centuries. As a doctor of the Church, he joins the ranks of thirty-six other saints who are honored for how well they taught the faith in words and deed.
St. John Chrysostom, golden-mouthed doctor of the Church, who eloquently challenged your people to serve Christ in the outcast of society—pray for us!