Saint Maximilian Mary Kolbe, Priest and Martyr

CHRYSOSTOM:

He does not say “accuse him” or “punish him” or “take him to court.” He says “correct him.” For he is possessed, as it were, by some stupor, and drunk in his anger and disgrace. The one who is healthy must go to the one who is sick. You must conduct your judgment of him privately. Make your cure easy to accept. For the words “correct him” mean nothing other than help him see his indiscretion. Tell him what you have suffered from him.
What then if he does not listen, if he stubbornly flares up? Call to your side someone else or even two others, so that two witnesses may corroborate all that’s said. For the more shameless and boldfaced he is, so much the more must you be earnest toward his cure, not toward satisfying your anger and hurt feelings. For when a physician sees the sickness unyielding, he does not stand aside or take it hard but then is all the more earnest. That then is what Christ orders us to do. You appeared too weak since you were alone, so become stronger with the help of others. Two are sufficient to reprove the wrongdoer. Do you see how he seeks the interest not of the aggrieved party alone but also that of the one who caused the grief? For the person injured may be the one who is more taken captive by passion. He becomes the one that is diseased and weak and infirm.
This effort may occur many times, as he attempts to lead him first alone and then with others. If he persists, then make the effort with the whole congregation. “Tell it,” he says, “to the church.” If he had sought the interest of the aggrieved alone, he would not have told him to approach the sick individual seventy-seven times. He would not have attempted so many times or brought so many treatments to the malady. He might have just let him be if he persisted uncorrected from the first meeting. But instead he shows us how to seek his cure once, twice, and many times: first alone, then with two, then with many more. read more

Tuesday of the Nineteenth Week in Ordinary Time

Despising one of these little ones… we should examine our thoughts to see if we can grasp what Jesus is talking about.  Obviously we shouldn’t be despising anyone, but Jesus wants us to pay particular attention to the “little ones.”  In the first half of today’s gospel we could understand the little ones as referring to children and littleness as a reference to their innocence or inexperience in the ways of sin.  In the second part of today’s gospel we are given the parable of straying sheep – a clearer reference to the sinner.  So on the one hand littleness refers to childlike simplicity, and on the other hand it refers to the helplessness of a sinner who has wandered far from safety. read more

Monday of the Eighteenth Week in Ordinary Time

The symbolism of the multiplication of loaves and fish has to do with the teaching of Jesus.  Jesus breaks down the Law (five loaves, the pentateuch), and the prophets (the two fish, major and minor prophets) so that all may be nourished by this teaching.  The insufficiency of the Law and the Prophets is made abundantly nourishing through the grace of Christ.  This was the same reality that the children of Israel struggled with in the desert.  The food that God provided, the manna, seemed truly insufficient.  The people wanted flesh to eat, to satisfy their cravings.  God comes in the flesh of Jesus to fully satisfy our cravings.  The Law and the Prophets could not satisfy the craving for communion with God because it only served to reinforce the weight of sin and separation.  Jesus is not bringing a teaching that is different in content from the Law and the Prophets.  Rather, He makes that teaching abundantly satisfying by fulfilling it in His flesh and multiplying it for us. read more