Posts by Kaity Holtman
Sixth Sunday of Easter
Theatre is one of the best performing arts. So much work goes into preparing a play and performing it that it is something that builds good character and creativity. It is so great to get a show “on the road” and ready to perform. In theatre, every role is vital to the performance. The…
Read MoreSaturday of the Fifth Week of Easter
In today’s Gospel, Jesus tells us a very important truth: that in every age, the Gospel encounters opposition. We see this in Jesus’ own life, since the opposition to him and his ministry conspires to have him crucified. They actually succeed in this, but as we have seen with Easter, their triumph over Jesus…
Read MoreFriday of the Fifth Week of Easter
In today’s Gospel passage, Jesus gives us his own commandment for how we are to live: “love one another as I have loved you.” So Christ’s command to us is to love the way that he loves. In order to fully grasp this, we must understand that love is the very heart of God’s commandments…
Read MoreThursday of the Fifth Week of Easter
In today’s Gospel passage, Jesus says to us “if you keep my commandments, you will remain in my love.” When I read that sentence, I find it a little off-putting, and I suspect most everyone else does also. I think this is because we tend to feel that God’s commandments are somewhat arbitrary and…
Read MoreWednesday of the Fifth Week of Easter
If you happen to be at Conception Abbey on this day and attend Mass or one of the major hours of prayer, Vigils, Lauds, or Vespers, you will notice that the monks are wearing more than our usual monastic habits. Over the top of the habit, we will be wearing an extra-long, black flowing…
Read MoreTuesday of the Fifth Week of Easter
In today’s Gospel passage, Jesus tells us “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you.” He also tells us “Do not let your hearts be troubled or afraid.” If we want to know what it looks like to live by these two sayings of Jesus, we see a perfect example in the…
Read MoreMonday of the Fifth Week of Easter
In today’s first reading, Paul and Barnabas enter the town of Lystra and begin preaching the Gospel to the inhabitants of that town. In the midst of their preaching, Paul spots a man who has been crippled from birth. Paul recognizes that the man has the faith to be healed and so tells him…
Read MoreFifth Sunday of Easter
Possibly the most intimidating thing that Jesus says to us is found in the Sermon on the Mount, (Matthew 5:48). In this verse, Jesus says to us, “You, therefore, must be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect.” That is the RSVCE version. The New America version, that we more commonly use in our…
Read MoreSaturday of the Fourth Week of Easter
One should take a deep breath and consider carefully the possible ramifications before one prays, “Thy Will be done.” For control freaks, this will be very difficult. St. Paul and Barnabas experienced great success in Antioch, where the community embraced the Good News and were called Christians. Now in a different Antioch (in Pisidia)…
Read MoreFriday of the Fourth Week of Easter
Malcolm Gladwell, in his book Outliers, presented something he called the 10,000-hour rule. Basically, in order to master a particular skill, it takes 10,000 hours of intensive practice. Anders Ericsson modified that rule in a 1993 research paper to include “deliberate practice,” by which he meant that a teacher’s guidance was also necessary to…
Read MoreThursday of the Fourth Week of Easter
In the first reading for Mass today, St. Paul is speaking in a synagogue to others of Jewish heritage. All would have known what was written about the long-awaited Messiah. Nonetheless, St. Paul leads them through a history lesson from the lawgiver Moses, through the prophet Samuel, and to King David. What is new…
Read MoreFeast of Sts. Philip and James, Apostles
By the time that St. Paul wrote his first letter to the Corinthians around 56 AD, the young Church was exhorting its followers that salvation depended on knowing the Good News and holding fast to it. Such Good News included these things about Christ: Christ died for our sins He was buried He was…
Read MoreMemorial of St. Athanasius, Bishop and Doctor of the Church
Those sheep who do not belong to Christ do not recognize the Shepherd’s voice. There was no shortage of persons who were intrigued by Jesus. They knew him as the son of Joseph and Mary. They were curious when he performed extraordinary acts. But, ironically, on the Feast of the Dedication (Hanukkah, or Festival…
Read MoreMonday of the Fourth Week of Easter
Today is the Memorial of St. Joseph the Worker. Human beings, created in the image and likeness of God, have the dignity of being sons and daughters of God. This dignity is not to be taken lightly. As we progress from children to adults, we, in a sense, go from being sheep to being…
Read MoreFourth Sunday of Easter
What is a sheep? What is a shepherd? What does it mean to follow Christ? Being called a sheep might mean that I am a follower, I stay with the herd, and I do not go out on my own. It might mean that I need others in my life, I must trust someone…
Read MoreMemorial of St. Catherine of Siena, Virgin and Doctor of the Church
Anyone who knows about earthquakes also knows about aftershocks. They follow the big one. Perhaps the earthquake image can describe the effect of some of the statements and challenges Jesus lays out for the early Christian community. Today’s Gospel is easily seen as a continuation of yesterday’s Gospel in which Jesus clearly calls himself…
Read MoreFriday of the Third Week of Easter
“But that’s impossible!” Surely this must have been the response of people who heard that the well-known Paul of Tarsus had suddenly become a follower of Jesus. How was it possible that this Jewish super zealot who had broken into people’s homes to arrest anyone claiming to follow The Way had been totally changed?…
Read MoreThursday of the Third Week of Easter
Hitchhiking is rare these days. Years ago, in less dangerous times it was common to “hitch” or “thumb” a ride. Many times that brief chance encounter resulted in a powerful memory either for the driver or the passenger. We can delight in the story of the Ethiopian eunuch who just happened to be passing…
Read MoreWednesday of the Third Week of Easter
Do you remember as a young kid watching a movie and about halfway through you began to think that the ending was coming soon and you felt sad because you didn’t want it to end? Was that an early experience of the struggle between fantasy and the world of reality? What was more important…
Read MoreFeast of St. Mark, evangelist
If you were asked to make a list of contemporary heroes, whom would you choose? I would suggest our own first responders. They know what to do when called upon. They are people with a mission. Rewinding to the early Church, I suggest that St. Mark the Evangelist, today’s feast day, should be called…
Read MoreMonday of the Third Week of Easter
Like a bell that continues to resonate long after it has been struck, our reflections on the Word of God during this Easter season cause us to stop and linger in the silence. We can wonder what it must have been like for the early Church to ponder and digest the most drastic fluctuations…
Read MoreThird Sunday of Easter
Some things are meant to be savored. It takes time and gentle reverence to allow goodness to come to the surface. Maybe that’s the way we come to know the most important things in life. If that’s true then we’re still moving toward an answer in response to that common question, “What just happened?”…
Read MoreSaturday of the Second Week of Easter
Today’s extract from the gospel of St. John brings us great consolation and hope: “The sea was stirred up because a strong wind was blowing…they saw Jesus walking on the sea and coming near the boat, and they began to be afraid. But he said to them, “It is I. Do not be afraid”…
Read MoreFriday of the Second Week of Easter
Today’s gospel periscope from St. John recounts the miraculous multiplication of loaves and fishes. There is one part of the passage that deserves special attention, “‘Gather the fragments left over, so that nothing will be wasted.’ So they collected them, and filled twelve wicker baskets with fragments from the five barley loaves that had…
Read MoreThursday of the Second Week of Easter
On Monday and Tuesday of this week, we heard from the gospel of St. John Jesus’ discussion with Nicodemus the Pharisee about the necessity of being “born from above.” Today’s passage continues to explore that message: “The one who comes from above is above all. The one who is of the earth is earthly…
Read MoreWednesday of the Second Week of Easter
Jesus’ words in today’s gospel passage seem rather harsh for the Easter season! “the light came into the world, but people preferred darkness to light, because their works were evil. For everyone who does wicked things hates the light and does not come toward the light, so that his works might not be exposed.…
Read MoreTuesday of the Second Week of Easter
It was only a short time ago, on Tuesday of the fifth week of Lent that we heard the story of the Israelites, worn out by their desert journey, complaining to Moses about the lack of food and water. God had just worked such great wonders among them and had freed them from slavery…
Read MoreMonday in the Second Week of Easter
Today we hear Jesus’ mysterious words to Nicodemus: “The wind blows where it wills, and you can hear the sound it makes, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes; so it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit” (Jn 3:8). What is this wind that blows…
Read MoreSunday of Divine Mercy
Missouri is popularly known as the “Show-Me State.” While the exact origin of that title is somewhat uncertain, most Missourians will admit that it does seem to describe the practical, down-to-earth folk of the rural areas of the state. “I have to see it to believe it.” Today’s gospel brings us face to face…
Read MoreSaturday in the Octave of Easter
The name of Jesus has power. By the name of Jesus, Peter healed the crippled man, and the name of Jesus gives them the courage to stand up in opposition to the leaders who wanted to silence them. In like manner, the name of Jesus can also empower us. The name of our LORD…
Read MoreFriday in the Octave of Easter
When the beloved disciple declares that the man on the seashore is the LORD, we who have heard the Gospels repeatedly throughout our lives may overlook that he does not identify him as Jesus but as the LORD. In John’s Gospel, however, the disciples never refer to Jesus as LORD until after the Resurrection.…
Read MoreThursday in the Octave of Easter
Jesus has been raised from the dead, but he still bears the wounds of his crucifixion in his hands, feet, and side. They did not vanish when he was restored to life, but they no longer cause him pain or threaten him in any way. They are the marks that identify him as the…
Read MoreWednesday in the Octave of Easter
Every Christian goes through discouragement at some point in their faith life. When we begin to recognize the love of God and to hope in the promise of Heaven, the experience is exhilarating, but our joy does not remain at these highest levels. Additionally, the further we go in our life of faith, the…
Read MoreTuesday in the Octave of Easter
When the people heard what Peter told them about Jesus and the Resurrection, they were frightened because they had not believed in the Lord. Some of them may even have been among the crowds who shouted for him to be crucified. Peter assures them, though, that the promise of salvation is still available to…
Read MoreMonday in the Octave of Easter
The chief priests hear the account of what happened at the Resurrection and still cannot accept that Jesus is the Son of God! They have seen Jesus perform many wondrous deeds, and now they are told that an angel descended from Heaven like lightning to open the tomb; their reaction should be to question…
Read MoreThe Resurrection of the Lord
You’ve heard of “black holes” in outer space: those invisible centers of such strong gravity that everything in its vicinity, including light, is drawn inescapably into it. While this phenomenon is a fairly recent discovery in science, it is an ancient idea in theology. The scriptures suggest that God has been working slowly…
Read MoreHoly Saturday
Today is Holy Saturday. There are no Scripture readings for our reflection because there is no Eucharist celebrated during the day. This is so because Jesus is in the tomb. We are grieving and mourning. We should observe a great silence. If you pray the Roman Liturgy of Hours, you will find a very…
Read MoreGood Friday of the Lord’s Passion
In today’s first reading, God is speaking through the prophet Isaiah. God says, “See, my servant … a man of suffering … spurned … held in no esteem.” In the second reading, from the Epistle to the Hebrews, we learned the name and identity of this servant. It is Jesus who was “able to…
Read MoreHoly Thursday – Evening Mass of the Lord’s Supper
The highlight of the Mass on Holy Thursday is the institution of the Eucharist. We recall how Jesus at the Last Supper gave us the Sacrament of His Body and Blood. Our second reading captured this key event. Jesus took bread, broke it and said, ‘This is my body …’ He took the cup,…
Read MoreWednesday of Holy Week
Once again, we have Judas Iscariot as a central figure in the Gospel. This time it is from the pen of St. Matthew. Judas is a picture of human tragedy. His was a failed life. He had been chosen by Jesus Himself. How could this have happened? Judas was probably a talented man, probably…
Read More