Daily Gospel Reflection

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September 17, 2025

Wednesday of the Twenty-fourth Week in Ordinary Time
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Jesus said to the crowds:
“To what shall I compare the people of this generation?
What are they like?
They are like children who sit in the marketplace and call to one another,

‘We played the flute for you, but you did not dance.
We sang a dirge, but you did not weep.’

For John the Baptist came neither eating food nor drinking wine,
and you said, ‘He is possessed by a demon.’
The Son of Man came eating and drinking and you said,
‘Look, he is a glutton and a drunkard,
a friend of tax collectors and sinners.’
But wisdom is vindicated by all her children.”

Reflection

Katie (Arndorfer) Rich ’17
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How many of us can relate to Jesus’ frustration while searching for an accurate way to describe “this generation”? Jesus lands on an image of children whose expectations haven’t been met: “We played the flute for you, but you did not dance.”

Just before these verses, tax collectors and those John the Baptist had baptized “acknowledged the righteousness of God,” but the Pharisees and scholars of the law rejected Jesus’ identity as the Messiah. Jesus reproaches these people and others who are groaning and complaining because John and Jesus are not what they expected. How many of us find ourselves on the back foot when our expectations of what God could or should do in our lives are not what actually happens?

My dear friend Courtney is a young mother battling stage 4 cancer. Her expectations for how her life might unfold have been turned upside down. And yet God is acting in mysterious ways through her cancer journey, working small and big miracles in medical healing and in deepening faith. Our God is a God of surprises, acting in ways that are different from our expectations.

We, too, can surprise ourselves by God’s grace. Who would have thought many tax collectors and sinners would be more devoted disciples than most of the religious scholars of Jesus’ time?

A song Courtney and I sang many times at Mass with our high school community proclaims: “Change our hearts this time. Your Word says it can be. Change our minds this time. Your life could make us free. We are the people your call set apart; Lord, time, change our hearts.” May this be the prayer of our hearts today.

Lord, where we are being obstinate and refusing to accept your will, change our hearts. When we are blinded by our own expectations, open our eyes. When we cannot perceive you working in our lives, help us to trust in your wisdom and your loving care for us.

Prayer

Rev. Robert Loughery, C.S.C.

Almighty God, in your Son we are given new hope, that through him all divisions can be healed, all sins forgiven, and trust restored. Watch over us and those we love, that we may always be a sign of your reconciling love in a world full of hurt and betrayal. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Saint of the Day

St. Robert Bellarmine
St. Robert Bellarmine

St. Robert Bellarmine was so short and small that he had to stand on a stool behind the pulpit to speak, but his voice—in both his preaching and writing—defined the age for the Church.

He was born in 1542 in Tuscany to a poor family, and was always an excellent student. Even as a child, he could hold his own in public discourse and arguments. He was also very pious—in fact, the Jesuit principal of his school once described him as “the best of our school, and not far from the kingdom of heaven.”

Robert joined the Jesuits in 1560, and was immediately excused from the initial formation of the novitiate so that he could enter his studies.

He bounced around to a number of different posts in universities and schools; at one point he was asked to teach Greek and had to stay up late at night to study the lessons he would deliver the next day. Everywhere he went he preached, and crowds began to appear to hear him. He preached in Latin, and his small stature meant that he could give few physical embellishments or gestures to his message, but his face seemed to glow and his words were luminous.

He was ordained in 1570 and continued with his academic career at the University of Louvain, and, when his health began to fail, in Rome. He wrote a monumental work defending the Catholic faith from Protestantism that immediately and lastingly defined the controversy produced by the schism. It was so learned and comprehensive that opponents thought his name was an amalgam of a team of Jesuits who researched and wrote it. It was a hit even in England, where it was banned; a bookseller in London said that he made more money from Robert than he made from all other theology authors combined.

He advised popes and kings, was named president of the Roman College, and made a cardinal. He wrote catechisms to teach the faith, which were in use even until recently and were among the most-translated works of his time. He served as spiritual director for St. Aloysius Gonzaga, and sat at his bed as the young man died; he even asked to be buried next to the young saint.

Still, he remained connected to the poor and to the discipline of faith. Though he lived in an apartment in the Vatican, he continued to fast and pray, living on what a poor person would have: bread and garlic, and no fire to heat his home during the winter. He ransomed an imprisoned soldier who had deserted from his duty, and took down his curtains to clothe the poor. “The walls won’t catch cold,” he said.

Late in his life, he was drawn into controversy about the rights of popes and kings, and his response did not fully satisfy either side—he lost favor with the pope and his book was burned in Paris. He was on good terms with Galileo Galilei, who dedicated one of his books to Robert. In 1616, Robert was asked to condemn Galileo, and he simply stated that the astronomer should not proclaim conclusions if they were not yet proven theories.

Robert Bellarmine died on this date in 1621 at the age of 79, and was canonized in 1930. He was declared a doctor of the Church soon after his canonization, a title given to 38 saints who are known for teaching the faith by word or example. A number of his relics rest in the reliquary chapel in the Basilica.


Image Credit: Our featured image of St. Robert Bellarmine is available for use under the the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication. Last accessed April 3, 2025 on Wikimedia Commons.