Showing posts with label Pope Francis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pope Francis. Show all posts

Saturday, August 17, 2024

Homily: 20th Sunday in Ordinary Time


The Synoptic Gospel writes all give us the story of the institution of the Eucharist – the story of Jesus gathering his disciples at table: blessing, breaking and giving them bread and asking them to do the same thing over and over again and…to remember him. But some 20 or so years later, when John takes pen to paper, he doesn’t write anything about the Last Supper, rather he gives us this Bread of Life Discourse which we have listened to these past few weeks. So why did John make this substitution of stories?  After all, what could be more important than Eucharist?  Check it out…


Click here for a podcast of the homily

Click here for the text of the homily

Click here for the readings of the day


Monday, May 27, 2024

Homily: Trinity Sunday 2024


Countless volumes have been written trying to explain the mystery of three persons in one true God, leaving us to resort to metaphors such as the three-leaf clover to try to comprehend the Divinity. Many of us grew up with the quintessential pyramidal Trinity structure of God at the top and Son and Spirit in opposite corners. But what if we looked at this ‘mystery’ from a different perspective? What if we shifted our language of God as a being towards the concept of God as love? What if we focused more on the relationship within the Trinity versus the persons of the Trinity? What if stopped looking at God as a noun…and instead considered God as a verb?  Check it out…

Click here for a podcast of the homily

Click here for the text of the homily

Click here for the readings of the day


Sunday, January 7, 2024

Homily: The Epiphany of the Lord

 

For the past 12 days we have heard the stories of the birth of Jesus Christ as God incarnate indeed good news of great joy all people.  So, on this Feast of the Epiphany of the Lord we celebrate Jesus revealed as the Christ Child to the magi, who arrive by the light of the star. Every year we listen to this well-known Gospel story of the journey of the magi who pay homage to the Christ Child. But today I invite you to just focus on two lines that appear in the Gospel. What are they?  Check it out because…as you will you see, any interaction with this Jesus the Christ, no matter where or how it happens, will change your own journey.

Click here for a podcast of the homily

Click here for the text of the homily

Click here for the readings of the day.

Sunday, April 4, 2021

Homily: Easter Sunday

Love always wins over death!

The Gospel tells us that the disciples had no idea what ‘risen from the dead’ even meant.  Do we?  Wisdom from Pope Francis…and from children in an African tribe may just open our eyes in a new way so that we can better see how we are connected in our call to make all things new. And that Easter tells us that through the life, death and resurrection of Christ, love wins out over death every time and therefore nothing dies forever and that all that has died in love will be reborn into an even larger love – into the Body of Christ. Check it out…

Click here for a podcast of the homily

Click here for the text of the homily

Click here for the readings of the day

Sunday, November 29, 2020

Homily: First Sunday of Advent


 

This weekend we celebrate the First Sunday of Advent and the beginning of a new liturgical year. Once again, we hear from Mark’s Gospel and the need to be awake, alert and always watching?  But what are we watching for…and whatever it is, could it be where we least expect to find it? And how can the story of two boys who run Cross Country Track – one of who is blind, help us to see in a new way?

Check it out…

Click here for the podcast of the homily

Click here for the text of the homily

Click here for the readings of the Sunday

Sunday, October 11, 2020

Homily: 28th Sunday in Ordinary Time


 

“Many are invited, but few are chosen” is unfortunately one of the most misread, misunderstood and misused phrases in the Bible.  Then again, so is the parable of the Wedding Banquet where the King acts with anger and vengeance on those who refuse his invitation to come to the wedding.

So what is the meaning hidden within this parable and how can we really look at what seems to be a line of exclusion at the end of the Gospel?  Check it all out…

Click here for the podcast of the homily

Click here for the text of the homily

Click here for the readings of the Sunday

Saturday, April 14, 2018

Homily: 3rd Sunday of Easter




How does this Easter Season call us to change in order to gain focus and direction within our lives and our faith?  It would seem the release of Pope Francis’ latest exhortation, Rejoice and Be Glad!  lends perfect timing to help answer that question. What suggestions does the Pope make to you and me on how to answer the “call to holiness in a practical way for our own time, with all its risks, challenges and opportunities?”  The answer partly lies with one word echoed throughout Lent and in today’s readings…but it doesn’t mean what you think it does!  So what is it and what did the Pope have to say?  Well better check it all out!
For the podcast of the homily, click here
For the transcript of the homily, click here
For the readings of this Sunday, click here
For a complete copy of the Pope’s Exhortation – Rejoice and Be Glad, click here
 
 
 


 
 



 

 

Sunday, February 19, 2017

Homily: 7th Sunday in Ordinary Time


“Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.” Really?  We have to love those that we fear?  Those who are different from us? The ones who are strangers?

In the past few weeks there has been much written about the plight of the refugees.  Politics aside, as Christians, we are called to live the Gospel…which is much harder than reading or preaching about it.  So what does Jesus say in the Beatitudes?  And how can Pope Francis, Brian McLaren and Leonardo DaVinci add some light on this hotly debated subject?

Check it out…

Click here for a podcast of the homily

Click here for the text of the homily

Click here for the readings of this Sunday 

Sunday, November 20, 2016

Homily: Feast of Christ the King 2016


This weekend we bring our Liturgical Year as well as our Jubilee Year of Mercy to a close as we celebrate the Feast of Christ the King – a time for us to refocus on who or what is “King” in our lives.

There is no shortage of alternative “Kings”, but lately it would seem, politics has been a dominating “King” in all of our lives. If you are like me, maybe you are exhausted from being barraged for the past 18 months with divisive rhetoric from both sides of the isle filled with anger, fear and hatred and then seeing it repeated and amplified through social media – language and actions devoid of love and mercy…and now we are wondering why hate crimes are on the rise?

So what sets the priorities in your life? Who or what is your King?  Perhaps a bit of wisdom from Elie Wiesel, Pope Francis and Lukan Gospels will point us in the right direction. Click and check it out.

Click here for a podcast of the homily

Click here for the text of the homily

Click here for the readings of the day



Saturday, August 13, 2016

Homily: 20th Sunday in Ordinary Time


Jesus says that he did not come to establish peace, but rather division...and that he came to set the earth on fire, and how he wishes it were already blazing!  Was he just having a bad day with his disciples…or hitting home a point that we often miss? Take a minute and check it out and see what Jesus was really talking to you and me about!

For a podcast of the homily, click here 

For the text of the homily, click here 

For the readings of this Sunday, click here

Sunday, January 10, 2016

Homily: The Baptism of the Lord


Original Sin versus Original Blessing? On this Feast of the Baptism of our Lord we come to the end of the Christmas liturgical Season as we celebrate Jesus revealed to us in the Trinity. But do not miss the key part of the baptism story – for they are words that should echo in your hearts each day.  What are those words?  And what does your baptism call you to do? And how does the wisdom of Pope Francis and the concept of a 'mirror neuron network' help explain that?  Check it out!

For the text of the homily, click here

For the readings of the day, click here

Sunday, December 27, 2015

Homily: Feast of the Holy Family


I love how the lectionary uses the story of two parents who lost track of their son during a Passover Festival as the Gospel for this Feast of the Holy Family.  It does reminds us never to equate ‘holy’ parents with ‘perfect’ parents!  I also like the fact this feast day is celebrated so close to Christmas for it allows us to really look at how this God Emmanuel who is with and among us – has a direct connection to our daily life and our family. 

What does that look like for you and your family?  And how does a story of what took place on a battlefield some 100 years ago shed like on what should be happening at your table…in your home…within your ‘family church’?

To listen to the podcast, click here

For the text of the homily, click here

For the readings of the day, click here

Sunday, December 20, 2015

O Clavis David


O Key of David and scepter of the house of Israel, You open and no one can close, You close and no one can open: Come and rescue the prisoners who are in darkness and in the shadow of death.

In my journaling each morning a familiar specter shows up nearly every day.  Like the terrifying faceless ghost of Christmas Future in the Dicken’s classic story, my Inner Critic makes an appearance.  Before 7 a.m. she is judge, jury and jailer – sometimes of people in my life but most often and most reliably of myself. 

This Antiphon reminds me today that the only way to silence this harsh voice is to place my life in the hands of the One who decides ‘what to open and what to close,’  the hands of my God who is longing to release me from my own prison of darkness by forgiveness and mercy.

Sometimes I beat up myself over a task left undone, a misstep, or an unkind word.  And you? What holds you in darkness waiting to be released?  What sits in your shadows hoping to be expunged by the Light?  Less we forget: the Key is mercy.

It Pope Francis who reminds us, “The Lord never gets tired of forgiving us, it is we who get tired of asking for forgiveness.” Or perhaps more simply in the words of Tiny Tim, “God Bless us everyone” And that includes you and me.
  
O come, Thou Key of David, come,
And open wide our heavenly home;
Make safe the way that leads on high,
And close the path to misery.

Rejoice! Rejoice!
Emmanuel shall come to thee, O Israel.
 

Sunday, November 22, 2015

Homily: Feast of Christ the King 2015


This morning we come to the end of our Liturgical Year with the celebration of the Feast of Christ the King as the Church reminds us that Christ is King of all things.  But we cannot forget that we, too, are baptized into Christ’s kingship. 

But with all this talk about ‘kings,’ when Pilate asked Jesus if he was the 'King of the Jews,' Jesus sidesteps that question and says that he came to testify to the ‘truth.’ But what does that ‘truth’ look like? (Funny, Pilate asked the same thing!)

Looking for clarity on all this?  Perhaps Pope Francis, as well as the parable of the Old Turtle can shed light on the “Truth” and better explain what we are called to do with this Feast of Christ the King?

Click here for the podcast
Click here for the text
Click here for the readings of the day

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Homily: 33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time


Today is the 33rd and final Sunday in Ordinary Time. We call these Sunday’s “ordinary,” because they are simply numbered – or, ordinal.  But by calling them ordinary, I think we may have tendency to sweep them aside in deference to the other liturgical seasons and thus forget that each of these numbered Sunday’s provide us a critical piece of the road map for our spiritual journey.

So how does one sum up the entire year of Ordinary Time and extract exactly what is the 'Good News' that Christ has to share?  Check it out…

Click here for the podcast
Click here to the text
Click here for the readings of the day

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Homily: 29th Sunday in Ordinary Time


In October 1974 I was a freshman at Oratory Prep in Summit, NJ and my Dad accompanied me to my first Father and Son Breakfast mass.  Fast forward 41 years later and today I was honored to have preached at the same annual breakfast!

Today’s Gospel story gives us Jesus trying, once again to initiate his disciples so that they gain insight about the paradox of life.  What is that paradox?  Why is initiation even needed?  And how can Pope Francis and Carl Jung shed light on all of this?

Check it out what I had to say today to 200 sons with their fathers…

Click here for the podcast

Click here for the text

Click here for the readings of the Sunday 

Monday, September 28, 2015

Homily: 26th Sunday in Ordinary Time


Over the past few weeks our Sunday Gospels have given us this ongoing dialogue of Christ with his disciples and his patient efforts in trying to teach them what it means to be fully alive.  This past week, as he travelled through our country, Pope Francis was actually doing the same thing.  So what does it look like when the Gospels and Francis come together to teach us how to live?

Check it out….

Click here for the text of the homily

Click here for the podcast of the homily

Click here for the readings of the Sunday

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Homily: 20th Sunday in Ordinary Time


In reviewing the readings for the weekend I wondered why, beginning three weeks ago, that our Sunday lectionary interrupted the Gospel of Mark in order to insert the 6th chapter of John – a sermon often called the “Bread of Life Discourse.”  Instead of following the earlier Gospel writers and recollecting the Last Supper, John talks about Eucharist in a different way.

Why did John make this substitution of stories?  After all, what could be more important than Eucharist?  It would seem that John’s Gospel goes to great lengths to remind us there is more to Eucharist that just coming to the table to receive the real presence of Christ.

So how can the insight of three Jesuits, a game of pinochle and potato pancakes shed light on this Gospel?

Click and check it out…

To listen to the podcast, click here

For a copy of the homily, click here

For the readings of the day, click here

Monday, January 12, 2015

Homily: Baptism of the Lord 2015




In yesterday’s Gospel, Jesus is baptized in the Jordan by John and when he comes out of the waters he hears the words that should echo in each of our hearts and souls every day.  It is core to our baptisms – core to our life.  The problem is that we have forgotten the sounds of those words…and thus can be headed in the wrong direction when it comes to our own spirituality.   

What are those words?  And why do we need to listen for them…but more importantly, why do need to repeat then to those in our lives?  

Check out what I have to say on this.

Click here for the podcast of the homily

Click here for the homily text

Click here for the readings for this Sunday

Monday, April 14, 2014

Passover and Asking the Right Questions


Passover, the Jewish holiday known as Pesach, begins at sundown this evening (April 14th). It commemorates the Israelites' escape from Egyptian slavery and it is observed with a ritualized meal consisting of unleavened bread and cups of wine.  On this evening, the youngest person at the table will ask the question, "Why is this night different from all other nights?"  

I love the fact that the celebration of Passover begins with a question.

Prior Pope John XXIII, Catholics were not really encouraged to ask questions. Then Vatican II came along – and the voices of the faithful began to be heard. Questions soon came forth and they haven’t stopped. Albeit, some of the questions raised are somewhat nonsensical.  Like, “Is it OK for the priest to wash the feet of men AND women at the Holy Thursday liturgy?”  And, “Is it really OK for the congregation to read the part of the ‘crowd’ during the passion readings of Palm Sunday and Good Friday?”

But as we celebrate the first year of Pope Francis, we are hearing real meaningful and substantial questions coming forth.  Such as, “Should the Church really consider married priests?”  According to a recent article in The Tablet, the Pope is encouraging the Bishops around the world to bring that question to him.

And then we have the question of divorced Catholics and their reception of the sacraments – a topic that will be certainly covered at the Bishop’s Synod this October.  After all, Pope Francis in his Apostolic Exhortation, said “The Eucharist, although it is the fullness of sacramental life, is not a prize for the perfect but a powerful medicine and nourishment for the weak. These convictions have pastoral consequences that we are called to consider with prudence and boldness . . . The church is not a tollhouse; it is the house of the Father, where there is a place for everyone, with all their problems."

Sounds like some of the right questions are finally being asked.  Sounds like the wishes of soon-to-be Saint John XXIII of bringing in fresh air to Church may be on the breath of the faithful – of you – asking these needed questions to the right people and looking and expecting Gospel based answers - finally.