Coffee with God:June 3, 2026

June 3, 2026
Saint Charles Lwanga and Companions
Gospel: Mark 12:18–27

Today, together with the universal Church, we celebrate the memorial of the martyrdom of Saint Charles Lwanga and his companions. According to his account, Charles Lwanga was a member of the Baganda tribe, born in the Kingdom of Buganda. He served as a royal page to King Mwanga II of Buganda and was later promoted to the rank of chief. On November 15, 1885, he received Baptism from Père Giraud. Fearing that the Christian worldview would undermine his absolute authority over his subjects, King Mwanga II demanded that all converts renounce their faith. Between 1885 and 1887, he ordered the execution of many Anglican and Catholic believers, including Saint Charles Lwanga and other officials serving at the royal court. Pope Benedict XV beatified Saint Charles Lwanga in 1920. Pope Paul VI canonized him, along with his companions, on October 18, 1964, during the Second Vatican Council.

The Gospel passage for today, taken from the Gospel of Mark, recounts a dialogue between Jesus and the Sadducees. I would like to offer some reflections based on this text.

Like the Sadducees, we often view our relationship with God through the lens of this world. In the eyes of the Sadducees, it seemed perfectly natural that if a man died leaving his wife childless, his brother should marry her to raise up offspring for the deceased. They held that since Moses was the servant of God, the law he promulgated must be divine law. Thus, when Moses wrote in Deuteronomy: “If brothers live together and one of them dies without a son, the widow shall not marry outside the family; the husband’s brother shall go to her, take her as his wife, and perform the duty of a brother-in-law. The firstborn son she bears shall carry on the name of the dead brother, so that his name will not be blotted out from Israel” (cf. Deut 25:5–6), they assumed that even after the resurrection from the dead, the marriage bonds formed in this life would still hold.

From Jesus’ response to the Sadducees, we see that He invites them—and us—to recognize that the temporal dimension in which we now live is not the only one. There exists another dimension, no longer subject to death, where we will fully manifest our identity as children of God. Hearing Jesus’ simple yet profound words about life beyond death brings us deep consolation and hope—a hope urgently needed in our own time, an age rich in knowledge of the universe but poor in wisdom concerning eternal life. Life belongs to God. God loves us and cares deeply for us, even uniting His name with ours. Through Baptism and the anointing of the Holy Spirit, we are united to Christ and become children of God. Our minds must then be conformed to the mind of Christ, viewing ourselves and the world according to the worldview and values of God’s kingdom, living in the light and guidance of the Holy Spirit.

O God, who have made the blood of Martyrs
the seed of Christians,
mercifully grant that the field which is your Church,
watered by the blood
shed by Saints Charles Lwanga and his companions,
may be fertile and always yield you an abundant harvest.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
God, for ever and ever.

©Totus Tuus 2026
Cum Approbatione Ecclesiastica


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