About
Shop
Contact Us

Nativity of St John the Baptist

14 June, 2021

 THE NATIVITY OF ST JOHN THE BAPTIST   24/6 

Please note that our ordinary Sunday scripture commentators are not available for today’s  Readings – they will return next week. Instead we offer you our weekday commentator and Irish language Sunday commentator. 

Gospel Text                                      Luke  1:57-66. 80
The time came for Elizabeth to have her child, and she gave birth to a son; and when her neighbours and relations heard that the Lord had shown her so great a kindness, they shared her joy.

Now on the eighth day they came to circumcise the child; they were going to call him Zechariah after his father, but his mother spoke up. ‘No,’ she said ‘he is to be called John.’ They said to her, ‘But no one in your family has that name’, and made signs to his father to find out what he wanted him called. The father asked for a writing-tablet and wrote, ‘His name is John.’ And they were all astonished. At that instant his power of speech returned and he spoke and praised God. All their neighbours were filled with awe and the whole affair was talked about throughout the hill country of Judaea. All those who heard of it treasured it in their hearts. ‘What will this child turn out to be?’ they wondered. And indeed the hand of the Lord was with him.Meanwhile the child grew up and his spirit matured. And he lived out in the wilderness until the day he appeared openly to Israel.

Gospel Reflection          The Nativity of John the Baptist 24/6       Luke 1:57-66, 80

John the Baptist is the only saint, after Jesus himself, whose birth the church celebrates with a solemn feast. We celebrate the birth of John the Baptist on June 24th, six months before we celebrate the birth of Jesus on December 25th. The celebration of the birth of Jesus at Christmas coincides more or less with the winter solstice. Just as the light of the sun begins to make a comeback after darkness has reached its peak, we celebrate the birth of the light of the world. The celebration of the birth of John the Baptist coincides, in contrast, with the summer solstice. Just as the light of the sun begins to decrease, after reaching its peak, we celebrate the birth of the one who said, Jesus ‘must increase, but I must decrease’. The question of the neighbours and relations ask of the child John in the gospel reading, ‘What will this child turn out to be?’ could be asked of any of us. It is a question that could be asked of us at any stage of our lives, ‘What will I turn out to be?’, or to put the question in other terms, ‘Who is God calling me to be’? ‘What is God’s purpose for my life?’ God’s purpose for John’s life and God’s purpose for all our lives have a great deal in common. God wants all of us to do what John did, to point out the Saviour, to make way for Jesus, to lead others to him by what we say and do. John the Baptist, whose birth we celebrate today, has something to teach us about how we might keep faithful to this God-given calling. He was a man of the desert, a man of prayer. We all need to find our own desert place of prayer if we are to remain true to our calling to lead others to the Lord, if we are to turn out as God wants us to.

(This Gospel reflection comes from: Weekday Reflections for the Liturgical Year 2017/2018; ‘LET THE WORD OF GOD DWELL IN YOU’ by Martin Hogan, published by The Messenger c/f   www.messenger.ie/bookshop/)

 

************************************
Machtnamh ar Bhriathar Dé dia Domhnaigh lá breithe Eoin Bhaiste le Pádraig Ó Rúairí, cp, Sliabh Argus, Átha Cliath.

Áthas ar lá breithe Eoin Bhaiste

Is féidir an spiorad áthais ar lá breithe John a cheangailt le brí a ainm san Eabhrais. Ciallaíonn “Yeho-hanan,” “tá an Tiarna geanmhar” agus mar a léiríonn cuntas Lúcás, trí Eoin Bhaiste, taispeáin Dia a ghrá, ní hamháin don lánúin gan leanbh, an sagart Zechariah agus a bhean-chéile Eilís, ach leis an chine daonna ar fad. Mar a léirigh an Baiste an bealach ceart dá mhuintir féin, is féidir le gach duine againn an sórt freastail chéanna a dhéanamh ar bhealaí ciúin do dhaoine eile inár saol. Is féidir linn cabhrú lenár gcomharsana a insint mar gheall ar ghrá agus ar mhaithe le Dia. Ciallaíonn an t-ainm Eoin go bhfuil Dia ghrámharléiríonn Dia fabhar. Tá ainm suntasach againn freisin, mar gheall ar a bheith Críostaithe. Ciallaíonn sé go bhfuil muid páirteach le Chríost, ag roinnt i misean Íosa. Is féidir linn a bheith beannaigh le grásta Dé, chun ár misean a chomhlíonadh chomh maith agus a rinne Eoin féin dá chuid.


********************************************