Fr Xavier Writes 21st July 2024
Today in the gospel, we see Christ took pity on the crowd, who were like sheep without a shepherd. The apostles are returning from their first experience of missionary work. They are tired and in need of a rest. Christ knows how they feel and he takes them off to a quiet place, where they can relax and have some time for prayer. But it doesn’t work like that. The people did seek them out and spotted them. Jesus didn’t ask them to go home, didn’t say that he had done enough that day, but since their state was deplorable, he was alert to their needs.
We can draw a lesson from the open-hearted care of Christ in placing the needs of others before his own. If there is no rest for Jesus, there is no rest for his followers. By our baptismal calling, all of us have Christian responsibilities and a certain amount of shepherding to do. In families, if growing children are not cared for and given the proper direction, they are going to be lost and wander aimlessly through life with no purpose. To be a good shepherd, the pathway he wishes us to tread is the straight and narrow one of the Ten Commandments. We need to continually be linked to Christ through prayer, in order that we don’t wander off and find other pathways more attractive.
We also need a quiet spot in our lives where we can be alone with Christ in prayer. We should get out, like Christ, to listen to the healing voice of God and refresh ourselves spiritually. God’s voice is heard in moments of stillness. Alone in his presence, we should ask ourselves where we are going and what we are trying to achieve.
Do we understand our shepherding responsibility?
Do we find time to come apart and rest in prayer?









