Reflections on the Sunday Gospel: How to More Fully Live Out Your Relationship with God

Reflections on the Sunday Gospel: How to More Fully Live Out Your Relationship with God

Reflections on the Sunday Gospel: How to More Fully Live Out Your Relationship with God

Reflections on the Sunday Gospel: How to More Fully Live Out Your Relationship with God

Hardcover

$22.50  $25.00 Save 10% Current price is $22.5, Original price is $25. You Save 10%.
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Pope Francis illuminates a new, vibrant way of experiencing the Gospel through moving, intimate, and deeply meditative reflections that encourage us to live fully with meaning, purpose, and strength.

We live in an unprecedented time that has threatened to upend our daily rhythms, our work, our homes, even our faith. More than ever, we need books like Reflections on the Sunday Gospel to stir us to hope, to comfort, to peace. We need to remember what we live for and how good God is.

These reflections—published in English for the first time, drawn both from homilies given by Pope Francis and readings from the Fathers of the Church, including Saint Augustine, Saint Jerome, and Saint Ambrose—do more than offer a way to enter into the liturgical year with weekly readings to enrich your devotional time. They offer Christ, and the power of His resurrection. They offer His words of assurance: “I have said these things to you, that in me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world” (Jn 16:33, ESV).

Ultimately, as Pope Francis guides us through these timeless words, we will glean how even the giants of the faith needed God as much as we do, and how we can draw near to a good and faithful God no matter where we are or what season we’re in.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780593238158
Publisher: The Crown Publishing Group
Publication date: 11/01/2022
Pages: 304
Sales rank: 403,652
Product dimensions: 7.50(w) x 5.10(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Pope Francis is the first Latin American to be elected to the chair of Peter. Born Jorge Mario Bergoglio in Buenos Aires, Argentina, he was ordained as a priest in 1969. He served as head of the Society of Jesus in Argentina from 1973 to 1979. In 1998 he became the archbishop of Buenos Aires, and in 2001 a cardinal. Following the resignation of his predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, on February 28, 2013, the conclave elected Bergoglio, who chose the papal name Francis in honor of Saint Francis of Assisi.

Read an Excerpt

A New Horizon

First Advent Sunday

Matthew 24:37–­44

41 “Two women will be grinding at the mill; one will be taken, and one will be left. 42 Therefore, stay awake! For you do not know on which day your Lord will come. 43 Be sure of this: if the master of the house had known the hour of night when the thief was coming, he would have stayed awake and not let his house be broken into.”

Today in the Church a new liturgical year begins, which is a new journey of faith for the People of God. And as always, we begin with Advent. The passage of the Gospel (Mt 24:37–­44) introduces us to one of the most evocative themes of Advent: the visit of the Lord to humanity. The first visit—we all know—occurred with the Incarnation, Jesus’ birth in the cave of Bethlehem; the second takes place in the present: the Lord visits us constantly, each day, walking alongside us and being a consoling presence; in the end, there will be the third, the last visit, which we proclaim each time that we recite the Creed: “He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead.” Today, the Lord speaks to us about this final visit, which will take place at the end of time, and he tells us where we will arrive on our journey.

The Word of God emphasizes the contrast between the normal unfolding of events, the everyday routine, and the unexpected coming of the Lord. Jesus says: “In [those] days before the flood, they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, up to the day that Noah entered the ark. They did not know until the flood came and carried them all away” (vv. 38–­39): so says Jesus. It always strikes a chord when we think about the hours which precede a great disaster: everyone is calm, and they go about their usual business without realizing that their lives are about to be turned upside down. Of course, the Gospel does not want to scare us, but to open our horizons to another, greater dimension, one which, on the one hand puts into perspective everyday things, while at the same time making them precious, crucial. The relationship with the God-­who-­comes-to-­visit-­us gives every gesture, everything a different light, a substance, a symbolic value.

From this perspective there also comes an invitation to sobriety, to not be controlled by the things of this world, by material reality, but rather to govern them. If, by contrast, we allow ourselves to be influenced and overpowered by these things, we cannot perceive that there is something very important: our final encounter with the Lord. This is important. That encounter. And everyday matters must have this horizon, and must be directed to that horizon: this encounter with the Lord, who comes for us. In that moment, as the Gospel says, “Two men will be out in the field; one will be taken and one will be left” (v. 40). It is an invitation to be vigilant, because in not knowing when he will come, we need to be ever ready to leave.

In this season of Advent, we are called to expand the horizons of our hearts, to be amazed by the life which presents itself each day with newness. In order to do this, we must learn to not depend on our own certainties, on our own established strategies, because the Lord comes at a time that we do not imagine. He comes to bring us into a more beautiful and grand dimension.

Readings from the Fathers of the Church

Saint Augustine, Let us love and not fear him who will come

What then will the Christian do? He will make use of the world, but not become the world’s slave. What does that mean? In spite of having things, he will behave as if he did not have them. This is what the apostle Paul says: “The world in its present form is passing away. I should like you to be free of anxieties” (1 Cor 7:31–­32).

He who has no worries is serene in waiting for the coming of the Lord. In fact, what sort of love do we have for Christ if we are afraid of his coming? And are we not ashamed of this, brothers? We love him, and we are afraid of his coming. But do we truly love him? Or is it, perhaps, that we love Christ less than our sins? Well then, let us hate sin, and love him who will come to punish sin! Whether we like it or not, He will come. If he does not come immediately, it does not mean that he will never come. He will certainly come, and when you least expect it.

If you want to find him full of mercy, be merciful yourself before he comes. If someone has slighted you, forgive him. If you have something in surplus, give it to your neighbor. Whose, in fact, are the things that you give? Are they not, perhaps, his things? If you were to give your own garment, you would be making an optional donation; but since you give the garment you got from him, you make nothing but a restitution. What in fact do you have that you have not received (cf. 1 Cor 4:7)? These, then, are the victims most pleasing to God: compassion, humility, confession, peace, charity. Let us bring these offerings to the altar and we will wait calmly for the coming of the judge, who will judge the world according to justice and the peoples according to his truth (cf. Ps 9:9).

A Big “Yes”

Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary

Luke 1:26–­38

34 “How can this be, since I have no relations with a man?” 35 And the angel said to her in reply, “The holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. Therefore the child to be born will be called holy, the Son of God. 36 And behold, Elizabeth, your relative, has also conceived a son in her old age, and this is the sixth month for her who was called barren; 37 for nothing will be impossible for God.” 38 Mary said, “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord. May it be done to me according to your word.” Then the angel departed from her.

Today’s Gospel of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary presents a crucial point in the history of the relationship between man and God, leading us to the origin of good and evil. This is when God comes to live among us, becoming man like us.

And this was made possible through a great “yes”—that of the sin was the “no”; this is the “yes,” it is a great “yes”—that of Mary at the moment of the Annunciation. Because of this “yes,” Jesus began his journey along the path of humanity; he began it in Mary, spending the first months of life in his Mother’s womb. He did not appear as a man, grown and strong, but he followed the journey of a human being. He was made equal to us in every way, except for one thing, that “no.” Except for sin. For this reason, he chose Mary, the only creature without sin, immaculate. In the Gospel, with one word only, she is called “full of grace” (Lk 1:28), that is, filled with grace. It means that, in her, full of grace from the start, there is no space for sin. And when we turn to her, we too recognize this beauty: we invoke her, “full of grace,” without a shadow of evil.

Mary responds to God’s proposal by saying: “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord” (v. 38). She does not say: “Well, this time I will do God’s will; I will make myself available, then I will see . . .” No. Hers is a full, total “yes,” for her entire life, without conditions. And just as the original “no” closed the passage between man and God, so Mary’s “yes” opened the path to God among us. It is the most important “yes” in history, the humble “yes” that reverses the prideful original “no,” the faithful “yes” that heals disobedience, the willing “yes” that overturns the vanity of sin.

For each of us too, there is a history of salvation made up of yeses and nos. Sometimes, though, we are experts in the halfhearted “yes”: we are good at pretending not to understand what God wants and what our conscience suggests. We are also crafty. And so as not to say a true “no” to God, we say: “Sorry, I can’t”; “Not today, I think tomorrow.” “Tomorrow I’ll be better; tomorrow I will pray, I will do good tomorrow.” This cunning leads us away from the “yes.” It distances us from God and leads us to “no,” to the sinful “no,” to the “no” of mediocrity: the famous “yes, but . . .”; “yes, Lord, but . . .” In this way we close the door to goodness, and evil takes advantage of these omitted yeses. Each of us has a collection of them within. Think about it: we will find many omitted yeses.

Instead, every complete “yes” to God gives rise to a new story. To say “yes” to God is truly “original.” It is the origin, not the sin, that makes us old on the inside. Have you thought about this, that sin makes us old on the inside? It makes us grow old quickly! Every “yes” to God gives rise to stories of salvation for us and for others. Like Mary with her own “yes.”

Table of Contents

A Note to Readers xiii

A Note from the Curators xv

Introduction xvii

A New Horizon 3

First Advent Sunday

A Big "Yes" 7

Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary

True Joy 11

Third Sunday of Advent

God Near to Us 15

Fourth Sunday of Advent

Feel the Father's Love with Your Hand 19

Christmas of Our Lord

Martyrs, the Ones Who Witness the Light of Truth 23

Feast of St. Stephen, Protomartyr

Communities of Love and Reconciliation 27

Sacred Family

His Closeness Never Fades 32

Second Sunday of Christmastime

Follow the Gentle Light 36

Epiphany of Our Lord

The Attraction of Mildness and Humility 41

Baptism of Our Lord

Behold, the Lamb of God! 45

Second Sunday of Ordinary Time

A Conversation That Changes Hearts 49

Third Sunday of Ordinary Time

Hope in God Never Disappoints 54

Feast of the Presentation of the Lord

Faith Gives "Flavor" to Life 59

Fifth Sunday of Ordinary Time

Being Christians Not "of Facade," but of Substance 63

Sixth Sunday of Ordinary Time

A Christian "Revolution" 68

Seventh Sunday of Ordinary Time

Free Yourself from the Power of Appearance 72

Ash Wednesday

Answer Only with the Word of God 76

First Sunday of Lent

The Cross, the Door of the Resurrection 80

Second Sunday of Lent

The Thirsty Soul Before Jesus 85

Third Sunday of Lent

The Road from Blindness to Light 90

Fourth Sunday of Lent

We Leave the Grave of Our Sins 95

Fifth Sunday of Lent

Who Am I Before the Cross of Jesus? 99

Palm Sunday

A Love Without Measure 104

Holy Thursday

I Will Not Leave You Orphaned; I Give You a Mother 108

Good Friday

Stop, the Lord Is Risen! 113

Easier of Resurrection

The Sepulchre Is Not the Last Word! 117

Easter Monday

Mercy Is a True Form of Awareness 121

Second Sunday of Easter

The Word of God, the Eucharist: They Fill Us with Joy 125

Third Sunday of Easter

The Road from Blindness to Light 129

Fourth Sunday of Easter

The Journey of Hope 133

Fifth Sunday of Easter

Learn the Art of Loving 138

Sixth Sunday of Easter

The Task of the Church 142

Ascension of the Lord

With the Freedom of the Holy Spirit 146

Pentecost

The Love That Is God 150

Holy Trinity

A Gift Without Measure 154

Eleventh Week of Ordinary Time

The Mission Is Not Under the Banner of Tranquillity 158

Twelfth Sunday of Ordinary Time

A Transparent Heart 162

Thirteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time

Jesus Does Not Take Away Our Cross, but Carries It with Us 166

Fourteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time

Reclamation of Our Heart 170

Fifteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time

Imitate God's Patience 174

Sixteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time

The Treasure That Is Jesus 178

Seventeenth Sunday of Ordinary Time

Compassionate Eucharist 182

Eighteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time

In the Church Boat 187

Nineteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time

The Power of Humility 192

Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary

The Courage of Prayer 196

Twentieth Sunday of Ordinary Time

A Heart as Firm as Stone 200

Twenty-First Sunday of Ordinary Time

There Is No True Love Without Sacrifice 204

Twenty-Second Sunday of Ordinary Time

Brotherly Correction 208

Twenty-Third Sunday of Ordinary Time

A Mercy Without Limits 213

Twenty-Fourth Sunday of Ordinary Time

God Does Not Exclude Anyone 217

Twenty-Fifth Sunday of Ordinary Time

A Poor, Humble Church That Trusts in the Lord 221

Twenty-Sixth Sunday of Ordinary Time

The New Wine of Mercy 226

Twenty-Seventh Sunday of Ordinary Time

The Church's Breadth Is the Kingdom of God 230

Twenty-Eighth Sunday of Ordinary Time

The Fundamental Belonging 234

Twenty-Ninth Sunday of Ordinary Time

The Face of the Father and the Face of the Brother 238

Thirtieth Sunday of Ordinary Time

Not Supermen, Simply Saints 242

All Saints Day

Live Every Day As If It Were the Last 246

Thirty-Second Sunday of Ordinary Time

Make the Gifts of God Bear Fruit 250

Thirty-Third Sunday of Ordinary Time

We Will Be Judged on Love 255

Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe Last Sunday of the Liturgical Year

Dates of the Liturgical Calendar 259

Sources 271

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews