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I'm New Here
Welcome!
FAQs
Welcome Weekends/Donut Sundays
Request More Information
Join our Parish
Become Catholic
Who Are We?
Our Mission & Patron
Parish History
Domestic Church
Meet the Team
Parish Staff
Pastoral Council
Finance Council
Careers
Sacraments
Baptism
Eucharist
Reconciliation
Confirmation
Anointing of the Sick
Marriage
Holy Orders
Ministries
Adult Formation
Small Groups
RCIA: Adult Sacraments
Eucharistic Revival
Lenten Resources & Media
Catholic Social Teaching
Children's Ministry
Faith Formation
Busy Bees
Family Class
St. Bruno Parish School
Youth Ministry
Faith Formation
Confirmation Prep
Get Connected
Human Concerns
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Love One Another Capital Campaign 2023
Gospel Meditation
I'm New Here
August
25
,
2024
The famous Russian novelist Fyodor Dostoyevsky said, “Love in action is a harsh and dreadful thing.” In the Gospel reading this week, Jesus does something harsh and dreadful — he watches his own disciples abandon him. What could possibly be loving about that?
Well, we notice the context is Jesus’ teaching about eating and drinking his body and blood. His followers hear this and say, “This teaching is difficult; who can accept it?” (John 6:60). We shouldn’t imagine we’d do anything different, because not even the ones who stay, like Peter, seem to understand what Jesus is saying. Then we hear this devastating line, “Because of this many of his disciples turned back and no longer went about with him” (John 6:66). Besides the night of the Last Supper, only now do Jesus’ disciples abandon him. And, painfully, Jesus just lets them go.
The best way to make sense out of this is love. Jesus is God’s love in action. He wants to become one with those whom He loves. He wants to love them as His own body. Yes, the oneness manifested in the Eucharist sounds harsh and dreadful because it is rooted in love which is willing to risk abandonment and separation to attain its goal: to be one body with the beloved. It is both terrifying and wonderful that Jesus will risk losing us in order to be one with us. Our response? Lord, we cannot grasp a love so great, but please help us never to abandon it, either. — Father John Muir ©LPi