In situations requiring difficult decisions, we sometimes ask ourselves: What would Jesus do? In our daily conversations it might be equally helpful to ask: What would Jesus say? Or, expressed differently, would I be saying the same thing (I am saying now) if Jesus were literally/physically present? Well, the fact is that Jesus is always […]
Saturday of the 24th Week
In the mysterious providence of God, some of us began our spiritual journey with hearts that were like that rocky ground in which the germinating seed of salvation battles to survive and flourish. Some of us were more fortunate and began with fundamentally good soil, but because of various spiritual wounds, have had to battle […]
Feast of Saint Lawrence
The seed that falls to the ground, dies, and yields much fruit, doesn’t have too much say in the matter—it falls where the sower casts it. Similarly, although many martyrs were given the option of avoiding their fate by denying Christ, others were given no choice and simply murdered by their oppressors—Edith Stein being an […]
Saturday of the 16th Week
Our presence at this Eucharist is a witness to the communal dimension of our Christian faith—a reminder of our oneness in Christ and our fundamental incompleteness apart and separated from one another. Nevertheless, Mary Magdalene, alone and weeping outside the empty tomb expresses that other and personal dimension to our faith in Christ. Although we […]
Feast of Saint Thomas
The incident in which Thomas gains faith by actually touching the risen body of Christ, is one that also raises questions, questions about the nature of the resurrected body—that body we are promised in baptism. For, although Thomas is able to touch the sacred wounds of Christ’s resurrected body, it is also a body which […]
Friday of the 11th Week
According to Jesus’ dictum, we can best discover just what our treasures are by examining where our heart is. And in this world where moth and decay constantly threaten any of our earthly treasures we have a convenient method for determining just where our heart is by becoming aware of the many things that upset […]
Memorial of Saint Ephrem
Although Christianity is often construed as a new religion quite distinct from Judaism, today’s gospel is a reminder that the Christian faith is actually not a new religion, but rather the culmination of a millennia-long process begun in Eden. After our First Parents’ act of disobedience (and in what is sometimes referred to as the […]
Friday of the Ninth Week
Today’s first-reading-account of the safe return of Tobiah with his wife Sarah, and the subsequent curing of Tobit’s blindness, overflows with great joy, celebration, gratitude, and consolation. As such it represents a foretaste of heaven, mirroring the joy and celebration that will be ours when we pass from this life into that Eternal Home prepared […]
Friday of the Eighth Week of the Year
Virtue and leading a holy life are not things that we are permitted to vacation from, every now and again. Unlike that unfortunate fig tree, there can be no off-season—never a time when we aren’t working at bearing the fruits of holiness. For the true disciple of Christ, the failure to continuously bear some fruit […]
Tuesday in Ascensiontide
Some of us are, by nature, “big picture” people, while some of us tend to focus on details and short-term issues. Saint Paul was, clearly, a “big picture” person and thus able to proceed to Jerusalem with equanimity of heart, even though the Holy Spirit had been warning [him] that imprisonment and hardship awaited [him]. […]