Luke 10.1-9 – Saints Cyril, Monk and Methodius, Bishop, Patrons of Europe
In the Gospel of Luke that we read today, Jesus sends his disciples on a mission two by two, entrusting them not with complex strategies, but with a precise style: poverty, trust, peace. It does not ask to bring security, nor to accumulate tools, but to hand over oneself. It is a Gospel that unmasks the idea of a mission based on efficiency and reminds us that the announcement always arises from a relationship. The disciples are sent as guests, not as masters, and the first word they must say is “peace”.
Not a formula, but a gift that precedes them and judges them: if they don’t bring peace, they aren’t announcing the Gospel. Jesus is realistic: he sends them like lambs among wolves. It does not promise success, but truth. The mission is not protected ground, it is an exhibition, a delivery. Yet this very fragility becomes the place in which God can act. The disciples do not heal because they are strong, but because they are sent. They don’t speak for themselves, but in the name of a Kingdom that is already close, which must not be built but recognized. Treating the sick and announcing God’s closeness are not two separate actions: they are the same thing, because the Gospel is always something that touches the concrete lives of people. The feast of Saints Cyril and Methodius, patron saints of Europe, fits very strongly into this horizon.
Their mission is a living commentary on this Gospel. They did not impose a sacred language, they did not ask others to become different in order to meet God, but they learned the language of the peoples to whom they were sent. They translated the Gospel because they believed that God speaks all languages and inhabits every culture. Like the disciples described in today’s Gospel page, they traveled lightly, bringing peace and announcing a Kingdom that is approaching without violence. Like Cyril and Methodius, and like the disciples of the Gospel, we are called to believe that the Kingdom of God grows wherever someone agrees to be a guestto speak an understandable language and to deliver peace as the first sign of God’s love.
Saturday 14 February 2026 – (Saints Cyril, Monk and Methodius, Bishop, Patrons of Europe – Feast)









