Daily Reflection
July 5, 2021

Monday of the Fourteenth week in Ordinary Time
Lectionary: 383
David Crawford

Today’s readings are filled with fear, anxiety, grief, pain and troubles. They are also filled with hope and healing.

Look at the problems Jacob is facing. He has left home, fleeing to save his life because his twin brother plans to kill him. He does not know what lies ahead for him or if he will see his mother and father again. At the start of today’s reading, we find him on his own using a stone for a pillow.

In the Gospel reading, a father is distraught because his daughter has died. The man, an official in the local synagogue, has left his grieving family to beg Jesus for a miracle.

As Jesus accompanies the man to his home, He crosses paths with a woman with a long-term health issue. Imagine the physical challenges and discomfort she felt, and then think of the emotional strain of being socially isolated by a condition that made her “unclean” in Jewish society.

In each of these stories, we find God present – in Jacob’s dream or incarnate in the Gospel. How reassuring it must have been for Jacob to hear God say, “Know that I am with you. I will protect you wherever you go and bring you back to this land.” How joyful it must have been for the Jewish official to see his daughter brought back to life. How relieved the woman must have felt to be cured and able to rejoin society.

I am encouraged by the words of the psalmist recalling God’s promise to be with us in distress whether it is great or small. I am grateful for God’s mercy and compassion, which are available to each of us. There is more to this, though, than just me receiving God’s blessing. Paul, writing to the Corinthians, reminds us: “Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves receive from God.” (2 Corinthians 1:3-4, NIV)

Hear our prayer, O Lord. Incline your ear to us and grant us your peace.

David Crawford

Former Creighton University Archivist

I was Creighton’s University Archivist from January 2007 to April 2021, although as a faculty spouse I had been a part of the Creighton community since 1995.  As University Archivist, I was responsible for archival, rare books and special collections, as well as for a Heritage Edition of The Saint John’s Bible on loan to Creighton.  I left Creighton to assist others with historical, archival, cultural and various artistic projects.

I have been married to my wife, Sue, since 1990.  We have two sons, one a graduate of Fordham and the other a graduate of University of Nebraska-Lincoln.  I enjoy birdwatching, playing soccer, music and comedy.

The online Daily Reflections have been an important part of my faith journey for several years.  I am excited and humbled by the opportunity to write these devotions.