Daily Reflection
February 13, 2014

Thursday of the Fifth week in Ordinary Time
Lectionary: 332
Rev. Larry Gillick, SJ

It is said that necessity is the mother of invention. In today’s Gospel reading, compassion is the response to a mother whose necessity is her daughter’s life. The mother is not of the Jewish tradition or faith, but has heard of this Jesus and his command even over the unclean spirits.

This story and the following healing of a man with a hearing difficulty, ends a chapter of conflict between Jesus and the Pharisees. They have ears, but do not hear and eyes but do not see. They like arguing of course about how Jesus does not fit the profile of the Messiah.

We hear the cry for help from a loving mother for her daughter and she has crossed over the boundaries into Israel to whom Jesus has been sent and to whom he is to feed the Children. This becomes the tension which her faith, based on necessity, moves Jesus. “Dog” - household pet or not - was the term the Jews used for those outside the limits of their nation. The mother has a clever comeback when Jesus remarks that he has come first to feed Israel. She responds with a verbal invention which her necessity provokes. She will gladly eat the saving crumbs from the table of the Jews, if only her daughter would be clean.

I am aware that there are many personal, national and international necessities with which to come to the feet of Jesus. I have found that when I come to pray with Jesus he seems to be at my feet and is asking for a quiet time of his blessings and encouraging me to be more and more peaceful with myself. He invites me to cast out or put aside my unclean spirits. In a while Jesus moves me out to deal with as many necessities as I can that day with as many clever inventions as are appropriate.

Worries can be the mother of discouragement and isolation. Prayer is a meeting with God’s grace that reinvents my spirit and my graced life.

Rev. Larry Gillick, SJ

Director of the Deglman Center for Ignatian Spirituality

I entered the Society of Jesus in 1960, after graduating from Marquette University High School in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and attending St. Norbert College for two years.  I was ordained in 1972 after completing theological studies at the Toronto School of Theology, Regis College.  I presently minister in the Deglman Center for Ignatian Spirituality at Creighton and give retreats. 

I enjoy sharing thoughts on the Daily Reflections.  It is a chance to share with a wide variety of people in the Christian community experiences of prayer and life which have been given to me.  It is a bit like being in more places than just here.  We actually get out there without having to pay airlines to do it.  The word of God is alive and well.