Daily Scripture Readings Thursday January 21 2010 2nd Week in Ordinary Time

January 21 2010 Thursday Second Week in Ordinary Time
Saint of the Day – St. Agnes

About the sources used. The readings on this site are not official for the Mass of Roman Rite of the Catholic Church in the USA, but are from sources free from copyright. They are here to present the comparable readings alongside traditional Catholic commentary as published in the Haydock Bible for your own personal study. Readings vary depending on your local calendar.

Official Readings of the Liturgy at – http://www.usccb.org/nab/

1 Samuel 18:6-9; 19:1-7
Douay-Rheims Challoner

Now when David returned, after he slew the Philistine, the women came out of all the cities of Israel, singing and dancing, to meet king Saul, with timbrels of joy, and cornets. And the women sung as they played, and they said:

Saul slew his thousands, and David his ten thousands.

And Saul was exceeding angry, and this word was displeasing in his eyes, and he said:

They have given David ten thousands, and to me they have given but a thousand, what can he have more but the kingdom?

And Saul did not look on David with a good eye from that day and forward.

And Saul spoke to Jonathan, his son, and to all his servants, that they should kill David. But Jonathan, the son of Saul, loved David exceedingly. And Jonathan told David, saying:

Saul, my father, seeketh to kill thee: wherefore look to thyself, I beseech thee, in the morning and thou shalt abide in a secret place, and shalt be hid. And I will go out and stand beside my father in the field where thou art: and I will speak of thee to my father, and whatsoever I shall see, I will tell thee.

And Jonathan spoke good things of David to Saul, his father: and said to him:

Sin not, O king, against thy servant, David, because he hath not sinned against thee, and his works are very good towards thee. And he put his life in his hand, and slew the Philistine, and the Lord wrought great salvation for all Israel. Thou sawest it and didst rejoice. Why therefore wilt thou sin against innocent blood, by killing David, who is without fault?

And when Saul heard this, he was appeased with the words of Jonathan, and swore:

As the Lord liveth, he shall not be slain.

Then Jonathan called David, and told him all these words: and Jonathan brought in David to Saul, and he was before him, as he had been yesterday and the day before.

Responsorial Psalm Ps 55:2-3, 9-13 (Ps 56 NAB)
DR Challoner Text Only

Have mercy on me, O God, for man hath trodden me under foot;
all the day long he hath afflicted me fighting against me.
My enemies have trodden on me all the day long;
for they are many that make war against me.
I have declared to thee my life:
thou hast set me tears in thy sight, As also in thy promise.
Then shall my enemies be turned back.
In what day soever I shall call upon thee,
behold I know thou art my God.
In God will I praise the word, in the Lord will I praise his speech.
In God have I hoped, I will not fear what man can do to me.
In me, O God, are vows to thee, which I will pay, praises to thee:
Because thou hast delivered my soul from death, my feet from falling:
that I may please in the sight of God, in the light of the living.

The Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ According to Saint Mark 3:7-12
Haydock New Testament

But Jesus retired with his disciples to the sea; and a great multitude followed him from Galilee and Judea, And from Jerusalem, and from Idumea, and from beyond the Jordan: and they about Tyre and Sidon, a great multitude, hearing the things which he did, came to him. And he spoke to his disciples that a small ship should wait on him, because of the multitude, lest they should throng him: For he healed many, so that they pressed upon him to touch him, as many as had evils. And the unclean spirits, when they saw him, fell down before him: and they cried, saying:

Thou art the Son of God.

And he strictly charged them that they should not make him known.

Haydock Commentary 1 Samuel 18:6-9; 19:1-7
Notes Copied From Haydock Commentary Site

  • Ver. 6. Philistine. Some explain this of some fresh achievement against that nation, (Malvenda.  W.) but without reason. — Dancing. Heb. also playing on the flute, or on some such instrument of music.  C. — So Mary sung after the Israelites had crossed the Red Sea.  Ex. xv. 20.  2 K. i. 20.  Judg. xi. 34.
  • Ver. 7. Sung. The chorus of their song is given.  C. — “The women sung, Saul slew his thousands; and the virgins answered, And David,” &c.  Josephus. — The death of Goliath was equivalent to the slaughter of thousands, as he had filled the whole army of Israel with dismay.  H.
  • Ver. 8. A thousand. These women were guilty of an indiscretion, through excess of zeal, as it is always displeasing for the sovereign to hear any of his subjects preferred before him.  S. Chrys. hom. i. de Saul. — The jealousy of Saul was the more excited, as he had been threatened with the loss of his kingdom, and perceived in David all the qualifications of a king.  A malo principe tanquam successor timetur quisquis est dignior. Pliny in Traj. — But was David responsible for what was spoken in  his praise?  C. — The Vat. Sept. omit what follows till v. 12.  “And Saul feared David, (13) and he removed,” &c.  The Alex. copy agrees with the Vulg.  H. — Those who are proud, cannot bear the praises of others.  W.
  • Ver. 9. Eye. Sept. “and Saul suspected.”  H. — Chal. “laid snares for David.”  C.
  • 1 KINGS 19
  • CHAPTER XIX.
  • Ver. 1. Jonathan. He was most interested, as David might be feared as a competitor; (M.) and, under the cloak of friendship, he might more easily destroy him.  Saul was a stranger to the generous sentiments of his son, or he would never have made the proposal.  H. — Grotius compares him with Germanicus.  C.
  • Ver. 2. Morning. Sept. add, “to-morrow.”  M.
  • Ver. 3. Field. Saul would come thither, or Jonathan would sound his father’s disposition, and give David information in the place appointed.  C.
  • Ver. 3. Hand, in danger.  M.
  • Ver. 6. Slain. His inconstant temper might cause him to be moved with the expostulation of his son; but he presently relapsed, if he were ever sincere.  C. — The Scripture seems to insinuate that he was.  M.

Haydock Commentary Mark 3:7-12

  • Ver. 8. What is to be understood by Idumea, see Rutter’s Evangelical Harmony.  Vol. i. p. 286.
  • Ver. 11-12. The unclean spirits being obliged by the Divine Power, not only to come and worship, but also to declare his majesty, exclaimed: Thou art the Son of God. How astonishing then is the blindness of the Arians, who even after his resurrection denied him to be the Son of God, whom the devils confessed as such when clothed with human nature.  But it is certain that not only the devils, but the infirm that were healed, and the apostles themselves were forbidden, as well as the unclean spirits, to proclaim his divinity; lest the passion and death of Christ might be on that account deferred.  Ven. Bede.