Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
J.D. Long GarcíaFebruary 28, 2025
Photo from Unsplash.

A Reflection for Tuesday of the Eighth Week in Ordinary Time

Find today’s readings here.

“We have given up everything and followed you.” (Mark 10:28)

My eldest son is a senior in high school. I find myself—too often, no doubt—sharing with him stories from when I was his age. Every now and then, they resonate. But my son is a far better student than I was, has far fewer destructive habits and has accepted roles that I couldn’t have cared less about.

Just recently, my son played the mayor in his school’s performance of “The Music Man.” It was majestic. I saw it twice. As part of the preparation, my wife and I watched the film version of the musical with my son after he got the role. It’s a fun film, though my son’s school wisely cut at least one offensive number.

On opening night, I went to see the musical with my parents. Throughout, my mom kept asking me questions about the other actors. “Does he know her?” Etc. “Mom, I don’t go to school here.”

The performance itself was a pure delight, in part because I was relieved that my son did so well. It was the first time he was in a high school play. In my perhaps biased opinion, he played the role of mayor better than anyone in the history of the universe.

The crowd roared as the actors took their final bows. When the curtains dropped, a thunder of squeals, shrieks, cheers and howls poured into the auditorium from backstage. I pictured the actors turning to each other and screaming.

They did it. Together.

They worked many long hours, dancing and singing over and over. “Cheep-cheep-cheep” and “Ice cream” and “Wells Fargo Wagon.” The opening number on the train—which involved nine different singers—takes precise timing that must have required countless boring repetitions. And the library sequence!

The cast of teenagers came together to create a beautiful work. And they rejoiced not only in the execution of the musical, but in each other. Along the way, a new community was formed.

This, I think, is what today’s Gospel is about. A new community of individuals who left their families to pursue a common goal. In the case of the Gospel, it is about following Jesus. These early followers gave up houses and siblings, parents and children, and land. And while there were hardships along the way, God had much greater things in store: a deeper bond with each other and, eventually, eternal life.

Now, I’m a big fan of purgatory. It gives guys like me a sporting chance to get into heaven. (It’s almost like rent-to-own salvation.) Anyway, if I do make it in, I imagine I’ll hear cheers similar to those heard back stage on opening night. The angels and the saints and my deceased friends and loved ones will squeal and shriek to welcome me.

We do not have to wait for heaven. We can give up everything else and rejoice in God and each other today.

More: Scripture

The latest from america

The Trump administration “immediately terminated” its contract with the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops for refugee resettlement, effective Feb. 27, according to letters issued by the U.S. State Department a day earlier.
Gina Christian - OSV NewsFebruary 28, 2025
At the National Catholic Prayer Breakfast, Vance said he wasn’t there to litigate “about who’s right and who’s wrong,” and credited Francis as one who “cares about the flock of Christians under his under his leadership.”
Pope Francis had a setback after suffering an isolated coughing fit on Friday that resulted in him inhaling vomit, requiring non-invasive mechanical ventilation.
Gerard O’ConnellFebruary 28, 2025
"St. Thomas Aquinas says that all of the works of God recorded in the Old Testament and everything that pertains to Christ in the New Testament are contained in the Psalter in the form of praise," wrote the theologian Lawrence S. Cunningham in this 1997 article on praying with the Psalms.
Lawrence S. CunninghamFebruary 28, 2025