Dear Friends,
The Gospel reading for August 17 features Jesus’s words about the cost of following him. Jesus asks his disciples
Do you think that I have come to establish peace on the earth?
No, I tell you, but rather division.
Jesus goes on to note all sorts of conflict that will face new disciples.
As Luke’s faith community remembered Jesus’s words, they would have been strengthened by remembering Jesus’s own relationship struggles. From the beginning of his life and into his ministry, Jesus’s own family was disrupted. John the Baptist, Lazarus, Mary, and Martha. Friends and family in the Nazareth synagogue. His mother and brothers. Other Jewish believers.
Early Christians who heard these words of Jesus were familiar with the conflict their own conversions had created in their own relationships. To Luke’s listeners those disagreements were all too familiar. Their own family and social and religious lives had been turned upside down. Some had been imprisoned. They may have lost contact with siblings or friends. With his stories of Jesus, Luke reminds believers that this struggle of discipleship began with Jesus’s own struggle. Believers are not alone.
C. S. Lewis said that the Gospel was concerned to create "new people" not just "nice people." There are many saints whose beliefs caused disruption with family or friends. Check out the Saint of the Day website for these stories of men and women who challenge us twenty-first century believers.
- Teresa Benedicta of the Cross
- Mary MacKillop
- Kateri Tekakwitha
- Andrew Dung-Lac and Companions
- Matt Talbot
- Franz Jaggerstatter
- Charles Lwanga and Companions
- Damien de Veuster of Moloka’i
- Miguel AgustÃn Pro
- Joan of Arc