Twenty-Seventh Sunday in Ordinary Time

AMBROSE:

He fenced it [the church] in with a rampart, as it were of heavenly precepts and with the angels standing guard, for “the angel of the lord shall encamp round about them that fear him.” He placed in the church a tower, so to speak, of apostles, prophets and teachers, ready to defend the peace of the church. He dug around it, when he had freed it from the burden of earthly anxieties. For nothing burdens the mind more than exaggerated solicitude for the world and desire either for wealth or for power. read more

Saint Therese of the Child Jesus, Virgin and Doctor of the Church

When we examine the spiritual doctrine of St. Therese it becomes clear that although she spoke about childhood and littleness, she does not encourage people to become infantile or ignorant.  We could see part of the doctrine of spiritual childhood expressed in today’s Gospel about being messengers of peace.  Living the little way of love means bringing the Gospel of peace with us wherever we go.  We are not ignorant or unaware of the brokenness of our world and of the hearts of men.  We are not surprised that people are violent, mean and hateful.  Facing the wolves, however, we are not afraid of what they can do to us.  “Fear not the one who can only destroy your body.  Fear the one who can cast both body and soul into Gehenna.”  We fear only God, but spiritual childhood teaches us to see God as our Father and to trust that He is teaching us how to take the difficult step through death to eternity.  The fearlessness we are called to embrace before the peril of the Cross is not military-grade mental or physical toughness – it is the calm and gentle conviction that our Father is lovingly guiding us through death to new life.  We can be abandoned to that love no matter how painful life may become.  We can continue to be at peace even when others work to destroy peace. read more

Twenty-Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time

JOHN CASSIAN:

When we have made the Lord’s yoke heavy and hard to us, we at once complain in a blasphemous spirit of the hardness and roughness of the yoke itself or of Christ who lays it on us.

MARIUS VICTORINUS:

He has done well to put [the Spirit] third. For the first is to be called in Christ, the next to have love. But when both are true and they have already been called in Christ and enjoy the consolation of loving and being loved, without doubt the fellowship of the Spirit is there.…

CHRYSOSTOM: read more