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Liturgical day
: Monday 1st of Advent |
Today's Gospel (Mt 8:5-11): When Jesus entered Capernaum, an army
captain approached him to ask his help, «Sir, my servant lies
sick at home. He is paralyzed and suffers terribly». Jesus said
to him, «I will come and heal him». The captain answered,
«I am not worthy to have you under my roof. Just give an order
and my boy will be healed. For I myself, a junior officer, give
orders to my soldiers. And if I say to one: ‘Go’, he
goes, and if I say to another: ‘Come’, he comes, and to
my servant: ‘Do this’, he does it».
When
Jesus heard this he was astonished and said to those who were
following him, «I tell you, I have not found such faith in
Israel. I say to you, many will come from east and west and sit down
with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob at the feast in the kingdom of heaven».
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Commentary: Fr. Joaquim Meseguer i García (Sant Quirze del
Vallès-Barcelona, Catalonia)
«I
tell you, I have not found such faith in Israel»
Today,
Capernaum
is our city and our village, where there are sick people, some we
know, others anonymous, often forgotten because of the hectic rhythm
of life that we lead. Loaded with work, we rush about non-stop
without thinking of those who, due to their illness or for whatever
other circumstance, remain marginalised from the frenetic activity of
our world. However, Jesus told us: «Truly, I say to you:
whenever you did this to these little ones who are my brothers and
sisters, you did it to me» (Mt 25:40). The great thinker
Blaise Pascal follows this idea when he says that «in his
believers, Jesus finds himself in the agony of Gethsemane until the
end of time».
The
centurion of Capernaum does not forget about his servant who is ill
in bed, because he loves him. In spite of being more powerful and
having more authority than his servant, the centurion is grateful to
him because of all his years of help and appreciates him very much.
Because of that, he approaches Jesus, and in the Saviour's presence,
manages to make an extraordinary confession of faith, seen in the
liturgy of the Eucharist: «I am not worthy to have you under my
roof. Just give an order and my servant will be healed» (Mt
8:8). This confession is based on hope; it comes from the centurion's
faith in the Lord and, at the same time, from his feeling of lack
personal worthiness, which makes him aware of his own neediness.
We can only approach
Jesus with a humble attitude, like that of the centurion. That way we
can live the hope of Advent: the hope of salvation and life, of
reconciliation and peace. Only he who acknowledges his poverty and
realizes that the meaning of life is not to be found in himself, but
in God, in turning his life over to Him, can really have hope. Let's
approach Christ confidently, and, at the same time, make the
centurion's prayer our own.
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