Sunday
            Gospel
            Reflections
          
          July 6, 2025, Cycle C
          Luke 10:1-12, 17-20
Trusting the Mission
          by Fr. Joseph M. Rampino
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This week’s Gospel most
        often turns our
        minds to consider vocations, with Christ saying, “The harvest is
        abundant, but
        the laborers are few, so ask the master of the harvest to send
        out laborers for
        his harvest.”
This command of the
        Lord’s is certainly
        important for us to hear; we always stand in need of young
        people who look out
        into the harvest of the world and let the master of the harvest
        move them to
        offer their lives in gathering it. Nevertheless, there is
        another lesson
        present in this Gospel passage that is of the utmost importance
        to all of us in
        our pursuit of heaven.
Throughout this passage,
        Christ orders
        his disciples to accept what is given to them. As they go on
        their mission,
        they are to carry nothing of their own, “no money bag, no sack,
        no sandals.”
        They are to stay in whatever house which first receives them.
        They are to eat
        and drink whatever they are given. If the town receives them,
        they are to work
        healings. If not, they are to move on. These instructions tell
        the disciples in
        essence that divine providence is to set the boundaries and
        outlines of their
        ministry; they are not to determine the course of their work
        themselves. Jesus
        is telling his disciples that they are to accept the place he
        gives them
        exactly as he gives it to them.
This command of the Lord
        applies to us
        as well. Each of us has been set into a certain place within the
        plan of
        Almighty God. He has placed us into a certain time in history,
        in a certain
        culture, a certain place, with certain parents and family
        heritages, with a
        certain body, a certain soul, and certain gifts. We have not
        chosen any of
        these but have received them. Often, even while making our free
        choices to
        reach for the good, for the Lord, from within the lives we have
        received, we
        face situations, opportunities, and challenges that we could
        never have
        predicted, and most often would or could never have chosen, for
        good or ill.
We can be tempted so
        easily to reject
        the place that God has given us. We can daydream about how
        things might have
        been if we had received
another place in
        history, a different
        personality, different opportunities, or if we had the foresight
        to have made
        different choices. We long sometimes to be people other than
        ourselves, or
        idealized versions of ourselves. We can dream of different homes
        and
        possessions, different careers, or even different relationships
        as the way
        forward toward real happiness. In some cases, we might even act
        in rejection of
        the place God has given us.
But the Lord’s command
        remains. “Stay
        in the same house and eat and drink what is set before you.”
        Christ who loves
        us has given us a particular mission- field, with particular
        people he calls us
        to love in concrete situations and contexts particular to us. He
        asks us to be
        faithful to this part of the harvest he has chosen for us. He
        calls us to grow
        and exercise our freedom not by rejecting who we are and where
        we have been sent,
        but precisely in engaging in that mission field creatively,
        giving freely the love
        that only we can give. The disciples in today’s Gospel did just
        this, trusting
        in the Lord’s command, and came home rejoicing that miracles of
        mercy and
        healing had taken place through their obedience. If we too trust
        Jesus and
        accept what his providence has given us, we also can hear his
        beautiful
        assurance: “Your names are written in heaven.”