Reflection for Wednesday, November 26, 2003: 34th week in Ordinary Time.
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Author
Rodriguez, Luis, S.J.
Date
2003-11-26Creighton University Medical Center; Chaplain; Jesuit Community
Reading 1
Daniel 5:1-6, 13-14, 16-17, 23-28
Daniel 5:1-6, 13-14, 16-17, 23-28
Psalm
Daniel 3:62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67
Daniel 3:62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67
Gospel
Luke 21:12-19
Luke 21:12-19
Lectionary Number
505. Year I, Ordinary Time.
505. Year I, Ordinary Time.
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Reflection:
To see the original html page, click the file link on the left.In Jesuit circles talk about patron Saints of youth evokes three familiar names: Stanislaus Kostka, Aloysius Gonzaga and John Berchmans. While Stanislaus and Aloysius are better known names in the liturgical calendar, John Berchmans is found only in the Jesuit supplement to that calendar. Who was John? Born of a poor Belgian family that could not afford paying for his education, John engaged in what today we would call a work-study program to cover board and pre-seminary tuition. His decision to join the almost brand new Society of Jesus was a deep disappointment to his father, who had counted on his joining the diocesan clergy and providing some financial support for the family. But he did not oppose John's plan. Three months after John entered the novitiate in 1616, his mother died. After that his father closed his shoemaker shop and entered the diocesan seminary to be ordained in April 1618, just six months before his unexpected death. This briefly sketched background renders the choice of gospel reading for today [Lk. 9:57-62] most appropriate to commemorate John Berchmans. Once he recognized where God was calling him, he did not ask the Lord to let him "first go and bury his father." At the same time he did not just "up and leave." The letter he wrote to his parents explaining his decision is both firm and full of understanding and loving respect for them. As mentioned earlier, his mother died shortly after his joining the Jesuits and his father a couple of years later. But John never "looked back after putting his hand on the plow." John died very young at age 22, just as he had concluded brilliantly his philosophy studies. That was August 13, 1621. But this is November 26, 2003 and the USA is not Belgium. Clearly our lives' setting is very different from his. Can we learn anything from his life so briefly sketched here? Perhaps the most important lesson could be one of wholeheartedness, because that is conditioned from within, not by external life settings. The call to love God "with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your strength" [Dt. 6:4-5] is addressed to all of us in every location and time period. The difference in concrete individual vocations comes from the side of the caller (God), not from the side of the responder (us). As my life unfolds in a given setting with given gifts and with the desire to respond wholeheartedly to Gods' calling, I am led in faith to recognize where concretely God may be leading me in that given setting. Belgium and 1616 resulted in St. John Berchmans. The USA and 2003 will result in you and me in our specific vocations. But the response is always expected to be whole-hearted, regardless of setting. God never calls to a half-hearted response.
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