Daily Reflection
March 15, 2002

Friday of the Fourth week in Lent
Lectionary: 248
Eileen Wirth

When Secretary of State George Marshall was trying to persuade Congress to appropriate billions of dollars for the Marshall Plan to re-build Europe after World War II, a senator asked him a seemingly softball question.
 
“Won’t this make other countries like us?” the senator asked. Marshall rejected the softball.

You always get in trouble when you try to help people.”
 
I was stunned as I watched this simple but profound exchange on a documentary of Marshall’s life. The memory has helped me many times when some well-meant effort to assist someone or act in good conscience has caused problems.

You always get in trouble when you try to help people; but you must go ahead and do it anyhow. If you have the guts to do so, God will be with you in your ensuing travail. That’s the message of all three of today’s readings. 
 
“Many are the troubles of the just man, but out of them all the Lord delivers him,” says today’s Psalm. “Let us beset the just one, because he is obnoxious to us,” says the reading from Wisdom. Jesus became history’s supreme example of such a hero/victim, as today’s Gospel reminds us.

Most of us experience relatively small penalties for our modest excursions into controversial virtue. Teen-agers get angry with parents who attempt to enforce high moral standards. Students shun classmates who won’t cheat or turn in cheaters. Kids pay a popularily price for refusing to drink or do drugs. Whistle blowers at work may have trouble getting another job. Those distributing the massive amounts raised for 911 victims are learning just how hard that job is.
 
But we have to keep trying. If we do, we can be confident that sooner or later “the Lord will deliver” us from the difficulties we encounter in trying to be faithful to his commands. 

Eileen Wirth

Professor Emerita of Journalism

I’m a retired Creighton journalism professor, active in St. John’s parish and a CLC member. In retirement, I write books about state and local history, including a history of the parish, and do volunteer PR consulting for groups like Habitat for Humanities, refugees etc. I love to read, work out, spend time with family and friends including those who can no longer get out much. 

Writing reflections has deepened my faith by requiring me to engage deeply with Jesus through the Scriptures. In the many years I have been doing this, I’ve also formed friendships with regular readers nationally, most of whom I have never met. Hearing from readers and what I learn by writing make  the hours I spend on each reflection well worth the effort.