Saturday of the Eighth Week in Ordinary Time

Scripture Readings

I recently read the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification that was put together by a body of Catholic and Lutheran scholars.  It was an enlightening little read about where Catholics and Lutherans can find common ground.  This document doesn’t downplay or dismiss real differences, but these theologians found a way to have true dialogue, and that bears fruit.

Friday of the Eighth Week in Ordinary Time

Scripture Readings

Clean-up! Clean-up! Everybody, everywhere. Clean-up! Clean-up! Everybody do your share. Did anyone else learn the song when they were little? Or perhaps you taught it to your own kids? I’m a little out in left field on this but the song kept popping into my head as I read today’s gospel (Brandon needs a vacation...it’s been a long month. lol). In all seriousness, I am a bit of a neat-freak; perhaps borderline OCD. I like to have things organized; I enjoy getting dressed up and looking nice for Sunday mass; the silverware in the dishwasher is separated out so it’s easy to put away afterward; I orient my cards to all face the same way when I play euchre. Crazy, right?

Thursday of the Eighth Week in Ordinary Time

Scripture Readings

The story from the Gospel of Mark that we have before us today can seem pretty straight forward. And that is in part due to the fact that it is a familiar story—a story of Jesus healing someone. And so we might be tempted almost to skim this story, thinking that we already know what it’s telling us. Bartimaeus was blind. He called out to Jesus to heal him. Jesus did and tells Bartimaeus that it is his faith that has made him well. Another miraculous healing!

Memorial of Saint Philip Neri, priest

Scripture Readings

Greatness is standing at the rim of the Grand Canyon at sunset and realizing the scene comes from God’s paintbrush.  Greatness comes when looking up at the thousands of stars seen on a clear night from the middle of country field.  Many of us could think of times when we have experienced God’s greatness.  These moments of wonder and awe can help us feel connected to God in a way that reminds us that we are all in God’s service.

Tuesday of the Eighth Week in Ordinary Time

Scripture Readings

I read a terrific book a few years back by James Martin, S.J. called My Life with the Saints.  It's a spiritual memoir and also an opportunity to take a stroll through several centuries of Catholic life and meet our saints, courtesy of the author.  One of the themes throughout has been all the very ordinary and seemingly small ways that each of the saints carries out the call to follow Christ, which I also find to be a consistent theme in today's readings. 

Memorial of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the Church

Scripture Readings

When taken as a whole there is a tension between Mary and Eve in today's readings. This is nothing new. Since the earliest centuries of the church, writers have discussed the connection, but it is still fruitful to reflect upon.

Saturday of the Seventh Week of Easter

Scripture Readings

When I read the gospels, I recognize there are many stories and details about Jesus that have not been written down for us.  Today’s gospel ends with the statement that the whole world could not contain all the stories about Jesus.  The gospel- or Good News- that Jesus brings through His incarnation is something that we are called to continue to live out in our lives as disciples. If we believe that Christ is alive in us, and we allow His Spirit to direct our words and deeds, then Christ and the gospel continues to live in us, and our stories become part of the Good News.

Friday of the Seventh Week of Easter

Scripture Readings

Today is the feast day of Blessed Franz Jägerstätter, an Austrian farmer, spouse and father, conscientious objector and martyr because of his opposition to the Nazis and refusal to serve in the German army during World War II. If you have not yet seen the Terrence Malick film, “A Hidden Life”(2019), inspired by Franz’s writings and letters (especially to and from his wife) while in prison, I highly recommend it. Although today’s readings are simply for “Friday of the Seventh Week of Easter,” they seem to validate the life of Franz and his wife who exemplify Jesus’ instruction to “Follow me” no matter the cost.

Thursday of the Seventh Week of Easter

Scripture Readings

In today’s gospel, we read a portion of Jesus’ prayer in the garden of Gethsemane following the last supper. Jesus said, “I made known to them your name and I will make it known, that the love with which you loved me may be in them and I in them.” Earlier in the evening, Jesus shared an intimate moment with his friends: washing their feet and breaking bread. He knows the disciples shortcomings and yet loves them in spite of them. Can our own relationships be open to Christ’s love?

Wednesday of the Seventh Week of Easter

Scripture Readings

In today’s Gospel, we get a glimpse into Jesus’ prayer life. It gives me pause to consider what Christ himself prayed for – what was most important, most pressing for him. Our Lord’s prayer highlights his priorities, the deepest cry of his heart for his beloved disciples. In today’s portion of Christ’s prayer, he asks the Father to keep hold of the disciples, to protect them, that they might be one just as the Godhead is one. Today, let us pray with Christ for unity within the Body of Christ and within the entire human family. If it was important to Jesus, it should be important to us, too, right?

Tuesday of the Seventh Week of Easter

Scripture Readings

When I hear the phrase ‘divine providence,’ I assume it means that some special, unlikely blessing allowed someone to have everything they needed.  This is an unfortunate way of thinking.  Doesn’t God provide for us on a daily, or even minute-by-minute basis?  Who gives us the air we breathe?  God alone, unless you’re a scuba diver!  Today’s psalm is a beautiful reflection on God’s generosity, and how it is common.  Indeed, the whole nation of Israel is praising God for the experience of that saving power.  

Monday of the Seventh Week of Easter

Scripture Readings

The Holy Spirit is coming! Can you feel the anticipation in the readings as we lean forward looking toward Pentecost? That anticipation is what brought all three readings together for me. This is what the Lord put on my heart for today.

Saturday of the Sixth Week of Easter

Scripture Readings

Before we dive in, I invite you to engage in the following exercise. Close your eyes. Identify someone you consider a friend; someone who has a special, close, personal relationship with you. Think about this person for a moment. How did you meet? What do you do together? What feelings do you have? What is it about your friendship that is special? What words come to mind when you think of this friend? In our Gospel today, Jesus calls us his friends. What is friendship? Part of it is this mysterious intangible experience. It is not something that we can hold in our hand. But it is something that we live by our being and with our hearts; our feelings. We live it freely and we experience it as a gift. Friendship is an opportunity to freely choose to love someone else and care for who they are. True friendship is typically grounded in a concern on the part of each person for the best of the other, for the other’s sake. It is an embodiment of the commandment we receive today: “love one another” (Jn 15:17).

Feast of Saint Matthias, Apostle

Scripture Readings

Before we dive in, I invite you to engage in the following exercise. Close your eyes. Identify someone you consider a friend; someone who has a special, close, personal relationship with you. Think about this person for a moment. How did you meet? What do you do together? What feelings do you have? What is it about your friendship that is special? What words come to mind when you think of this friend? In our Gospel today, Jesus calls us his friends. What is friendship? Part of it is this mysterious intangible experience. It is not something that we can hold in our hand. But it is something that we live by our being and with our hearts; our feelings. We live it freely and we experience it as a gift. Friendship is an opportunity to freely choose to love someone else and care for who they are. True friendship is typically grounded in a concern on the part of each person for the best of the other, for the other’s sake. It is an embodiment of the commandment we receive today: “love one another” (Jn 15:17).

Solemnity of the Ascension of the Lord

Scripture Readings

Perhaps you have heard of the Millerites, a mid-19th century religious movement started by William Miller (a largely self-educated New York farmer turned fiery preacher) that became widely popular in the US. At the center of the movement was Miller’s claim not only that Jesus’ second coming was imminent but that he could tell them when it would happen. All that was necessary was to read the book of Daniel literally, which prophesied (according to Miller) that Jesus would return 2300 years after 457 BC (the year in which a Persian king decreed that Jerusalem would be rebuilt). Miller did the math, and that meant that sometime between March 21, 1843 and March 21, 1844 Jesus would return in physical form.

Wednesday of the Sixth Week of Easter

Scripture Readings

We search for things all the time. I don’t know how many times I’ve looked for my glasses only to find them on the top of my head! Sometimes I’ll think something is lost only to discover it was right where it was supposed to be all along. Things have a tendency to “hide in plain sight” at times, too. The ultimate search conducted by the human heart is the quest for God. Miraculously, this quest begins not with lostness but with foundness. The God who may seem unknown is actually known intimately by the human soul and that soul is intimately known and loved by its Creator. In reality, God is the Seeker, God pursues us. Wondrously, any human seeker is actually perpetually found, her search swallowed up in the vastness of God’s relentless pursuit of her. We wrongly perceive the Divine as the object of our seeking, but God cannot be objectified. God is the Seeker; we are the sought. It’s a marvelous irony that in our unknowing is the deepest and most intimate knowing. Today, let us awaken more and more in our God in whom we discover ourselves found.

Tuesday of the Sixth Week of Easter

Scripture Readings

Why didn’t Paul and Silas flee the prison in the aftermath of the Earthquake?  And what does this mean for believers today?  If I was unjustly imprisoned and beaten, and then an earthquake allowed me to escape, I think I would take the opportunity, with thanks to God for divine intervention. But if they had fled, the guard would have killed himself, or been killed by the authorities for letting his prisoners escape.  Instead, his life was preserved and his whole family became Christians.  This kind of mercy changes hearts. 

Optional Memorial of John of Avila, Priest and Doctor of the Church

Scripture Readings

It is a pretty common occurrence for people to guess that we are a Catholic family. One of the dead give-a-ways is our kids names. We have Ignatius "Iggy", Hosanna "Zan", Avila, and Elihu "Eli". I could write a reflection about each kid and how they got their name, but I'll save that for another time and place. Instead, I want to turn our attention to sweet Avila Mae.

Saturday of the Fifth Week of Easter

Scripture Readings

One of the most challenging things we face as disciples is discerning God’s will for us. Whether it is the day to day activities, or the larger decisions- jobs, marriage, moves- we are called to pursue the choices that are God’s desire for us. In today’s first reading, St. Paul receives guidance from the Holy Spirit as he travels with Timothy spreading the Good News.  Jesus reminds us in the gospel that God’s will for us may involve suffering and sacrifice, since we follow Jesus.  As disciples of Christ, we will be led by the Spirit if we prayerfully turn to God and place our trust in God’s revelations.

Friday of the Fifth Week of Easter

Scripture Readings

Having been fully vaccinated along with my parents in our respective states, I finally took a long-anticipated flight to Virginia to visit them last month. Much like other families with many miles between them, It had been over a year since we had been together in person due to the risks of the pandemic. I think that was the longest I have ever been apart from my parents in the more than half-century of my life. Of course we had been talking and texting and video-chatting during that time, for which we were very grateful, but it is not the same as physically being with someone. I came to appreciate that all the more when I arrived at their home and hugged them both.