July 17, 2026 July 18, 2026
View Archive Subscribe RSS

Saturday Memorial of the Blessed Virgin Mary

Ordinary Time

First Reading Micah 2:1-5

Woe to those who devise iniquity And work evil on their beds! When the morning is light, they practice it, Because it is in the power of their hand. They covet fields and seize them, And houses, then take them away. They oppress a man and his house, Even a man and his heritage. Therefore the Lord says: "Behold, I am planning against these people a disaster, From which you will not remove your necks, Neither will you walk haughtily, For it is an evil time. In that day they will take up a parable against you, And lament with a doleful lamentation, saying, 'We are utterly ruined! My people's possession is divided up. Indeed he takes it from me and assigns our fields to traitors!'" Therefore you will have no one who divides the land by lot in the Lord's assembly.

Responsorial Psalm Psalm 10:1-2, 3-4, 7-8, 14

Why do you stand far off, Lord? Why do you hide yourself in times of trouble? In arrogance, the wicked hunt down the weak. They are caught in the schemes that they devise.

For the wicked boasts of his heart's cravings. He blesses the greedy and condemns the Lord. The wicked, in the pride of his face, Has no room in his thoughts for God.

His mouth is full of cursing, deceit, and oppression. Under his tongue is mischief and iniquity. He lies in wait near the villages. From ambushes, he murders the innocent. His eyes are secretly set against the helpless.

But you do see trouble and grief. You consider it to take it into your hand. You help the victim and the fatherless.

Gospel Matthew 12:14-21

But the Pharisees went out and conspired against him, how they might destroy him.

Jesus, perceiving that, withdrew from there. Great multitudes followed him; and he healed them all, And commanded them that they should not make him known, That it might be fulfilled which was spoken through Isaiah the prophet, saying, "Behold, my servant whom I have chosen, My beloved in whom my soul is well pleased. I will put my Spirit on him. He will proclaim justice to the nations. He will not strive, nor shout, Neither will anyone hear his voice in the streets. He won't break a bruised reed. He won't quench a smoking flax, Until he leads justice to victory. In his name, the nations will hope."

Reflection

There's something quietly devastating about the picture Micah paints — people lying awake at night, plotting how to take what belongs to their neighbors. Not impulsive theft, but *premeditated* greed. They scheme in the dark and execute the plan at dawn. And the psalm echoes that same portrait: the powerful hunting the weak, the arrogant dismissing any thought of God.

We might be tempted to hear this and think, "That's not us." But consider how often the same seed takes root in smaller soil — the quiet resentment we nurse toward someone who has more, the way we can strategize to protect our own interests at someone else's expense, the slow drift toward treating people as obstacles rather than as bearers of God's image.

Then comes Jesus in Matthew — and the contrast is almost startling. He's being hunted by the Pharisees. His response? He withdraws. He heals. He *doesn't* shout. The Isaiah passage Matthew quotes is worth sitting with slowly: he won't break a bruised reed, won't snuff out a smoldering wick. In the ancient world, a bruised reed was useless — you'd toss it. A smoldering wick was just smoke and inconvenience — you'd pinch it out. But Jesus doesn't.

That's the logic of the Kingdom. The people the world discards, God tends to with particular care.

Today is the Memorial of the Blessed Virgin Mary — a Saturday tradition in the Church that stretches back centuries, a weekly pause to remember the one who bore God into the world with gentleness and trust.

What would it look like for us to move through this Saturday with that same quality — not grasping, not scheming, but attentive to the bruised and the barely-burning around us?

Where in your life are you tempted to plan against rather than pray for someone? Who in your circle is a smoldering wick — nearly out — and what would it mean to tend rather than dismiss them? And when have you yourself felt like a bruised reed, and who showed up with the gentleness of Christ?