Articles for Ordinary Time
The parable in today’s reading is really one of my personal favorites among all the parables. A master goes out and plants good wheat with his servants. An enemy comes along and plants many weeds. As the wheat grows, so also do the weeds. We hear again an allusion to our merciful God who…
Continue ReadingHere again, we read the passage in Exodus where God gave the Ten Commandments to the Jews at Mt. Sinai. God is a great lawgiver who institutes laws that are right and just. Our human laws draw their wisdom and inspiration from God’s divine laws. Human laws can become run down and lose their…
Continue ReadingMary Magdalene is called the Apostle to the Apostles. She ran to tell Peter and the other apostle that someone had taken Jesus’ body. Then she later encountered two angels and Jesus Himself who had risen from the dead. She then went to the Apostles again, this time to tell them Jesus indeed had…
Continue ReadingToday’s first reading is used every year in the Easter Vigil. Exodus 14-15 tells of how the Lord led the Jews through the Red Sea to new freedom. The Lord set the people free. How amazing it is! With this victory, the Jews could now call themselves a free people. Moses proclaimed that the…
Continue ReadingJesus is asked, or demanded, to give a sign. Jesus offers the scribes and the teachers nothing less than the Sign of Jonah. Jonah, or Jonas, preached repentance to the city of Nineveh. He called the people of that city to repent of their shameful ways and to come to authentic conversion. Jonah himself…
Continue ReadingForeword: There is always a good time to honor a spiritual hero or role model who has influenced our spiritual journey. One person who I often turn to is Thomas Merton. He is considered one of the greatest Christian writers of the 20th century. His amazing story and mystique have grasped the attention of…
Continue ReadingReflect on these words in the Gospel today, “Behold, my servant whom I have chosen, my beloved in whom I delight.” The Father says these words to Jesus. Now imagine these words being spoken to you. We must see God as a father who loves us deeply. Our experience of God the Father is…
Continue ReadingIn one way or another, we have had moments where we know without a doubt God has worked in our lives; God stepped in and helped us in a moment of crisis. I imagine you can remember this moment down to how you felt before and afterward, what it did for you, and how…
Continue ReadingIt might seem hard always to believe it, but God is present to us in the difficult moments of life. We hear Jesus say to us today, “Come to me, all you who labor and are burdened, and I will give you rest,” but we may not experience that rest; life continues in its…
Continue ReadingWe all like having a clear path. We like knowing yes or no, this way or that way, right or wrong. Certainty is a human desire that we try to fulfill, and when that certainty is thwarted, we often react negatively. This is true in human affairs and affairs of faith. To accomplish this…
Continue ReadingJesus continues, from yesterday, his harsh and brutal truths in today’s Gospel. Here Jesus rebukes the cities and peoples who have witnessed his great miracles and are left unchanged, and they refuse to repent of their sins. He says of them that Sodom, a city so corrupt that God’s wrath destroyed it, would be…
Continue ReadingWe are used to hearing Jesus speak harsh and brutal truths towards his day’s religious and political establishment. We are not always used to, or we purposefully gloss over, the harsh and challenging truths directed to us. Today we have such a time. It is not easy to hear these words, “I have come…
Continue Reading“Jesus…began to send them out two by two…and…He instructed them to take nothing for the journey.” Each Christian is called to spread the Gospel in their unique way. Each of us has particular passions, skills, life experiences, and encounters with God that give life to that message. However, many people feel inadequate to the…
Continue ReadingWhen Jesus spoke to his disciples, one of the most phrases he repeated most was this simple phrase: “Do not be afraid.” No matter who we are, no matter what our age, or circumstances we feel the power of those words. Fear can take on so many forms coming out of the past or…
Continue Reading“People on the move” might be a possible theme for the two readings of today’s liturgy. Social anthropologists have documented the migration of peoples around the world throughout history but surely the most important from our perspective is the Old Testament migration of God’s people to and from Egypt. The powerful Joseph story reaches…
Continue ReadingSome people enjoy crossword puzzles and brain-twisters and are very good at them. Some of us like an occasional crossword puzzle but usually have to cheat when the right word just doesn’t come. It’s always amazing to me that someone can create the puzzle with all the interlocking answers (or pieces) and always with…
Continue ReadingWe’ve all heard the saying, “what goes around, comes around!” What a powerful example we have of that in today’s readings. The brothers of Joseph had thrown him into an empty cistern and then sold him into Egyptian slavery. Now they come starving to Egypt and had to bow down and beg in front…
Continue ReadingOur first reading today again coming from Genesis is downright strange. What can we get out of this story in which Jacob (once he has managed to get his wives, his flocks, and all his possessions across the fording place) stays behind and has a wrestling match all night long with a stranger, namely,…
Continue ReadingStorytelling seems to be a special skill. We’ve all heard a good storyteller who can capture our attention with a story that is colorful, short, and to the point. Our readings for today are filled with gripping stories. The first story coming from the Book of Genesis (a treasure chest of Biblical stories!) presents…
Continue ReadingIt’s a safe bet to say that we can all remember a very special Fourth of July celebration at some time in our life. It may have been our first experience of fireworks, or a hot July afternoon eating watermelon under a shade tree, or a Fourth of July parade around the square of…
Continue ReadingWe identify with the very modern seeming St. Thomas. He is the scientific, skeptical man of our age. The famous meeting of the doubter and the Risen Christ is burned into our memory. Notice, though, that a doubter does not start from doubt but from faith wounded. Have you ever noticed that the most…
Continue ReadingThe reading from Genesis today is lengthy, and yet it cuts out a very key section in the liturgy. The underlying issue in this passage is that Abraham’s wife is dead and he has no more descendants for the covenant. He only has the promised son Isaac. Isaac is distraught at the loss of…
Continue ReadingTypology is a form of biblical interpretation. You look back into the Old Testament and find a type, a symbolic person or event which prefigure fulfillment in Christ (the antitype). Today we have one of the preeminent types for Christ: the Sacrifice of Isaac. Isaac is the beloved son, the son of the covenant.…
Continue ReadingOur two readings speak of expulsions: that of Hagar and Jesus. From a modern Christian point of view, the former case seems at one and the same time unjust and messy in how it came to this point. Suffice it to say that there was a lot of desperation, jealousy, and regret involved in…
Continue ReadingToday the liturgy gives special witness to the confession of Peter on which our faith is built: “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” It is of great interest that the passage from Acts relates that Peter is arrested as the Passover begins. Unlike the Jews who participate in the Feast…
Continue ReadingIt never seems just to punish an entire group for the faults of a few. It is not fair to the innocent, and likewise, it often does not send the right message to the offenders, for whom hopefully the intent is amendment. In a parish, there are times where a priest must correct behavior,…
Continue ReadingThe Judeo-Christian view of death is that it was a consequence of our first parents’ choice to sin. As St. Paul says, “the wages of sin is death” (Rom. 6:23) and “just as through one person sin entered the world, and through sin, death, and thus death came to all” (Rom. 5:12). Still, the…
Continue ReadingLord, I Am Not Worthy It is good to be hospitable. In the first reading, Abraham and Sarah welcome three visitors to rest and eat during a hot summer’s day. Not only is it charitable, but it may also be to our benefit. One of the men promises that Abraham and Sarah will have…
Continue ReadingLaw of Moses; Law of Christ Today, we begin a new section of the Gospel of Matthew: Jesus’ signs of healing. Jesus has concluded giving the new Law in his great Sermon on the Mount. He is now coming down from the mountain, just like Moses came down from Mount Sinai with the Law…
Continue ReadingHe Must Increase; I Must Decrease Only recently did I realize why the Nativity of St. John the Baptist occurs on June 24th. As it is recounted in scripture (see Luke 1:36), John was born six months before Jesus was. But we celebrate the Nativity of the Lord on December 25th, not 24th. Why…
Continue ReadingDescendants and Fruits In the first reading, the LORD makes a covenant with Abram, promising to give him his own descendants and his own land. But before they make a covenant (a solemn pact), Abram expresses his doubt about how this can be. He does not have an heir. The land he is in…
Continue ReadingPearls and Holy Things The first saying of Jesus from the Gospel today is enough for the day’s reflection: “Do not give what is holy to dogs, or throw your pearls before swine, lest they trample them underfoot, and turn and tear you to pieces.” (Matthew 7:6) In my Bible, I had written a…
Continue ReadingSplinters and Beams Recently, I got a wooden beam in my eye. Well, it felt like one, but it was just a tiny splinter of mulch. I was mulching around a tree and it blew right in. Boy, it hurt! I rushed to the nearest sink and splashed my eyes with water. I thought…
Continue ReadingBe Still and Have Faith I’d like to this of today as “Good Refuge Sunday.” Just as there is “Good Shepherd Sunday” in Easter, named after the gospel of that day, so today’s gospel is of Jesus, our Refuge, who calms the wind and seas of our lives. As the story goes, Jesus and…
Continue ReadingToday is the memorial of St. Romuald (956-c 1027), a Benedictine monk who founded the Order of Camaldoli in Tuscany, Italy. The entrance antiphon presents the image of the cedar tree, a metaphor for the monk who flourishes in the courts of the Lord (the monastery): “The just will flourish like the palm tree,…
Continue ReadingIn our first reading today, St. Paul continues the defense of his ministry to the Corinthians by reminding them of his qualifications over those of the “superapostles.” He declares that he is also a Hebrew, a descendant of Abraham. He carefully enumerates the many trials and hardships he has endured in bringing them the…
Continue ReadingIn our opening reading today, St. Paul addresses the Corinthian community concerning division within the church. He speaks of “superapostles,” intruders who are preaching a message different from the Gospel of God he had proclaimed to them. He reminds them that it was he who “betrothed you to one husband to present you as…
Continue ReadingOur readings today focus on the proper interior attitude needed in our works of charity and manner of worship. St. Paul explains to the Corinthians that one must give according to what one has so bountifully received from God without sadness or compulsion, “for God loves a cheerful giver” (2 Cor 9:7). The responsory…
Continue ReadingToday we hear St. Paul encouraging the Christians of Corinth to model their lives on the example of Christ: “Christ…became poor although he was rich, so that by his poverty you might become rich” (2 Cor 8:9). He exhorts them to share not only of their material goods but also to be generous in…
Continue ReadingForeword: During Ordinary Time, the entrance and communion antiphons of the Sunday liturgy are repeated throughout the week. In this way, the themes developed at the Sunday mass are enriched and expanded as they interact with the different readings found on each day of the following week in much the same way that a kaleidoscope…
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