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Liturgical day
: Saturday 26th in Ordinary Time |
Today's Gospel (Lk 10:17-24): The seventy-two disciples returned
full of joy. They said, «Lord, even the demons obeyed us when
we called on your name». Then Jesus replied, «I saw Satan
fall like lightning from heaven. You see, I have given you authority
to trample on snakes and scorpions and to overcome all the power of
the Enemy, so that nothing will harm you. Nevertheless, don't rejoice
because the evil spirits submit to you; rejoice rather that your
names are written in heaven».
At
that time Jesus was filled with the joy of the Holy Spirit and said,
«I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, for you have
hidden these things from the wise and learned, and made them known to
the little ones. Yes, Father, such has been your gracious will. I
have been given all things by my Father, so that no one knows the Son
except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and he
to whom the Son chooses to reveal him».
Then
Jesus turned to his disciples and said to them privately, «Fortunate
are you to see what you see, for I tell you that many prophets and
kings would have liked to see what you see but did not, and to hear
what you hear but did not hear it».
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Commentary: Fr. Josep Vall i Mundó (Barcelona,
Catalonia)
«At
that time Jesus was filled with the joy of the Holy Spirit and said,
‘I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth’»
Today,
evangelist Luke tells us what brings Jesus to praise his Father for
the benefits granted to Mankind. He rejoices for the revelation made
to the very simple at heart, to the smaller ones of the Kingdom.
Jesus shows his joy when realizing how they accept, understand and
practice what, through Him, God tells them. On other occasions, when
in intimate dialogue with his Father, Jesus will also praise him for
always listening to Him. He praises that leper Samaritan who, having
been healed —along with other nine—, is the only one that
returned, and with a loud voice glorified and thanked Jesus for the
benefit received.
St. Augustine writes:
«What can we better carry in our heart, or say with our mouth,
or write with the pen, than these words ‘Thanks to God’?
There is nothing that can be said so briefly, nor listened to with
more joy, nor make you feel with more elation, nor done with more
profit». This is what we are to do always with God and our
neighbor, even for those gifts we are not aware of, as St. Josemaria
Escriva used to write. Gratitude towards our parents, our friends,
our teachers, our pals. Towards everybody that may help us, may spur
us, may serve us. And logically, gratitude also, for our Mother the
Church.
Gratitude
is not a very “common” or practiced virtue, and,
nevertheless, is one of the most pleasant to experiment. We must
admit, though, that it is not an easy virtue to live with. St.
Theresa asserted: «I have such a grateful heart that I could be
bribed with a sardine». This has always been the saints'
demeanor. And they have done it in three different ways, as St.
Thomas Aquinas pointed out: first, trough the own awareness of the
benefits received; secondly, by praising God externally with words;
and, thirdly, by trying to pay back our benefactor with deeds,
depending upon our own capabilities.
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