Sunday
Gospel Reflection
October
19, 2025 Cycle C
Luke 18:1-8
Reprinted
with permission of the “Arlington Catholic Herald
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“If faith fails, prayer
perishes,” said St. Augustine. When he read and meditated on
today’s Gospel, he saw a deep connection between faith and
prayer. The Gospel has a parable about the necessity of
perseverance in prayer — or more precisely, it is about the
necessity to “pray always,” as St. Luke says explicitly.
The widow obtains the
just judgment she desires, even from an unjust judge. Why?
Because of her persistence in asking. If even a corrupt judge
will finally answer that widow’s pleading because she did not
relent, how much more will God hear the unceasing prayers of his
children. And immediately after making this point about prayer,
Our Lord mentions faith. He asks, “But when the Son of Man
comes, will he find faith on earth?” Prayer and faith, faith and
prayer: the two are intimately connected.
And so, St. Augustine
says, “If faith fails, prayer perishes. For who prays who does
not believe?” Faith is the spring from which prayer flows forth.
When our faith dries up, usually so does our life of prayer.
This means that when we
notice ourselves letting prayer fall by the wayside, it should
signal to us that we have let our faith grow weak. It is not
just that we are busy. Even busy people can make time for
prayer. It is that we have let our faith grow weak. This is not
a reason for despair or discouragement. It is a wake-up call. We
can hear Jesus’ words to us today as a heartfelt plea: “But when
the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth?” Will he find
faith in your heart today?
If you have let your
prayer life slip, now you have something to pray: “Lord, I
believe; help my unbelief” (Mk 9:24); “Increase our faith” (Lk
17:5). The relationship between faith and prayer works both
ways. The holy Bishop of Hippo said, “Faith pours out prayer,
and the pouring out of prayer obtains the strengthening of
faith.” With whatever faith you have (no matter how weak), pour
forth prayers that the Lord may strengthen your faith. He will
answer those prayers.
A similar observation
was made by Pope Francis a few years ago. In his Angelus address
Oct. 16, 2022, he said to us, “We often focus on so many urgent
but unnecessary things. We occupy and preoccupy ourselves with
so many secondary realities. And perhaps without even realizing
it, we neglect what matters most and we allow our love for God
to grow cold, to grow cold bit by bit.
“Today, Jesus offers us
the remedy to rekindle a tepid faith. And what is the remedy?
Prayer. Prayer is the medicine for faith, it is a tonic for the
soul. However, it needs to be constant prayer.
“If we must undergo a
treatment to get better, it is important to follow it well, to
take the medicine consistently and regularly in the right way
and at the right times. This is necessary in all of life. Let us
think of a houseplant: We must water it consistently every day.
We cannot soak it and then leave it without water for weeks.
“Even more so with
prayer. We cannot live only on strong moments of prayer or
occasional intense encounters, and then ‘go into hibernation.’
Our faith will dry up. We need the daily water of prayer, we
need time dedicated to God, so that he can enter our time, into
our lives; consistent moments in which we open our hearts to him
so that he can daily pour out on us love, peace, joy, strength,
hope, thus nourishing our faith.”
Through prayer, God will
pour out on us what nourishes our faith. And that faith itself
will be like a spring of water that pours forth more prayer,
which in turn strengthens faith more. Faith and prayer, prayer
and faith: the two are intimately connected. If your faith is
weak, there is an answer. Pray.
Admit to God your need for him. Ask him to do for you what you
cannot do for yourself. Will he be slow to answer you?