Daily Reflections
The epic saga of Job comes to an end today. Job goes onto repent of his questioning of God. He says that he knows God can do all things. Thus, Job is restored by the Lord and receives double the number of all the livestock and resources he lost before. The Book of Job…
Continue ReadingThis day we celebrate our “little friends”, our Guardian Angels. We often don’t think about them, but we are surrounded by angels who protect us. God, in His eternal wisdom and great love, grants that every person has an angel assigned to protect them and guard them. Some may find this idea to be…
Continue ReadingHere’s to St. Thérèse of the Child Jesus. Oh, what an amazing Saint! This Saint came to the Carmelite convent in Lisieux at the age of 15. She, without meaning to set a fire, actually ended up setting a fire to the World. She grew to maturity in the community life in the cloister…
Continue Reading“No one who sets a hand to the plow and looks to what was left behind is fit for the kingdom of God” (LK 9:62). I’ve thought over these words many times in my life. I heard this Gospel for the first time when I was in Catholic elementary school. It stuck out to…
Continue ReadingThis day is celebrated as a Solemnity at Conception Abbey because the three Archangels are our main patrons after the Virgin Mary. There is an old title for the Feast of the Archangels called Michaelmas, or St. Michael’s Mass. In the Fifth Century, a Basilica was dedicated to St. Michael in Rome on September…
Continue ReadingWhat a contrast we see between today’s two readings. Job’s character and faith are questioned by the Devil. God permits Job to lose most of his family and his possessions. Yet Job refuses to curse the Lord. “We accept good things from the Lord. Should we not accept evil?” The disciples, on the other…
Continue ReadingCertain Sundays throughout the liturgical year offer different approaches to a recurring theme. Today’s readings present the theme of mercy for a repentant sinner. Those who are just and turn to wickedness will find a just recompense for their betrayal of justice. It’s not the Lord’s way that is unfair. It is the way…
Continue ReadingVanity of Vanities – the theme recurs. Qoheleth sets out the joys of youth, contrasted with the inevitable weakness that comes with age. The many references in this passage pose somewhat poetic images to represent the advancing of years. I’ll leave it to your own reflection to draw out those references. Because man goes…
Continue ReadingEvery time I encounter these lines from Ecclesiastes, I cannot help but hear the melody of a pop song of the 1960s. Younger readers may not know it: “Turn, Turn, Turn,” by the Byrds. There is an appointed time for everything under the sun. That’s very different than saying there is time for everything.…
Continue ReadingVanity of vanity, all is vanity and a chasing after wind :: the refrain uttered numerous times in the book of Ecclesiastes :: from the mouth of the teacher, Quoheleth. Whenever we hear the opening lines of the book of Ecclesiastes, with its solemn tone – vanity of vanities – we cannot help but…
Continue Reading“They set out and went on their way, traveling from village to village, spreading the good news, and curing diseases.” Ready or not, we might say, Jesus was sending them out to spread the Good News. Jesus sent them out with little training (by modern standards in ministry), and the instructions he gave were…
Continue ReadingWhere is wisdom to be found? What is wisdom? The dictionary defines it as accumulated philosophic or scientific learning or knowledge; insight; good sense; sound judgment. It is something acquired over time. It is the good judgment that flows from reflection. The wisdom we seek leads us closer to God. It is an insight…
Continue Reading“I plead with you… live a life worthy of the calling you have re¬ceived.” These are the words of Paul. The words of John Chrysostom, whose feast we celebrated last week, tell us “I do not think it possible for a person to be saved who has never done anything for the salvation of…
Continue ReadingThere’s a saying that goes something like this: “the ocean of God’s love is bigger than a thimble of the human mind.” Isaiah tells us that God’s “thoughts are not your thoughts, nor are your ways my ways.” In today’s parable, the vineyard owner proves to be very generous to his workers. Even to…
Continue Reading1 Cor 15:35-37, 42-49; Lk 8:4-15 “As for the seed that fell on rich soil, they are the ones who, when they have heard the word, embrace it with a generous and good heart, and bear fruit through perseverance.” These words, coming at the end of our Gospel today, give us some understanding of…
Continue Reading1 Cor 15:12-20 + Lk 8:1-3 From our Gospel today, I suggest a thought from the very last line: “who provided for them out of their resources.” This undoubtedly refers to their material resources. However, I suggest we think about another resource place – the human heart. The catechism [#2563] describes the heart as the…
Continue Reading1 Cor 15:1-11 + Lk 7:36-50 Hidden in our Gospel today is a beautiful little lesson in humility. It goes like this: the passage usually rendered, “her many sins are forgiven her because she has shown such great love,” is more accurately to be rendered, as we read in today’s text: “her many sins…
Continue Reading1 Cor 12:31—13:13 + Lk 7:31-35 We wonder how our Gospel today is putting us, our “generation” of believers, in question. Jesus told those of his generation, the people of his time, that they were refusing to listen and choose. He compared them to children who were stubborn and wanted things their own way.…
Continue ReadingHeb 5, 7-9; John 19:25-27 “When Jesus saw his mother and the disciple there whom he loved he said to his mother, ‘Woman, behold your son.’ Then he said to the disciple, ‘Behold your mother.’” Today we focus upon the mystery of Mary’s sorrow as playing a part in Christ’s redemption of the world.…
Continue ReadingJust as Moses lifted up the serpent in the desert, so must the Son of Man be lifted up. I offer a word which perhaps gives us a way into our readings today. That word is eventfulness. We can apply this word to our lives: ‘What is the eventfulness of my life at this…
Continue ReadingIt is a coincidence that our first reading today and the Gospel are about vengeance and forgiveness. This occurs shortly after the anniversary of the events of 9/11. Vengeance was the cause of that tragedy. But our first reading tells us that “Wrath and anger are hateful things.” And, “the vengeful will suffer the…
Continue ReadingToday’s Gospel is from the conclusion of Jesus’ Sermon on the Plain. If we look back over the whole sermon (see Luke 6:20-49), which we heard this week, what might we gain from such a spiritual treatise? There is no other teaching quite like it. The kingdom of God values the opposite of what…
Continue ReadingIf I preach the Gospel, this is no reason for me to boast, for an obligation has been imposed on me, and woe to me if I do not preach it! (1 Corinthians 9:16) Let me be honest. I am unworthy to preach, and even to write these reflections: unqualified, immature in the faith,…
Continue Reading“Do to others as you would have them do to you.” (Luke 6:31) This has been called the “Golden Rule” with which many of us are familiar. It is “golden” perhaps because it is a principle that, if lived by, is known to bring divine blessing, peace between the parties, and even success in…
Continue ReadingToday the Church commemorates a Spanish missionary who is known for his untiring ministry to Africans as they arrived in slave ships on the shores of Cartagena in 17th century Colombia. For almost forty years, Pedro Claver, “slave of the slaves forever,” as he called himself, cared for their bodily and spiritual needs. It…
Continue ReadingToday the Church celebrates the birthday of Mary, the wife of Joseph, and the mother of Jesus. Her birth is not recounted in Sacred Scripture, but the circumstances of her marriage to Joseph and of the birth of her son are (in Matthew 1-2 and Luke 1-2). From these sacred stories and also from…
Continue ReadingOn a certain Sabbath, Jesus went into the synagogue and taught. (Luke 6:6a) Let us go in with him. Let us hear what he has to say. Yet, today it is not so much what he says but what he does that is the lesson. Who is there in the synagogue? There was a…
Continue ReadingJesus said to his disciples…. Jesus spoke. He spoke a language his followers could understand. Yet, at times they did not understand. Some of the things he said were puzzling and even turned some of them away. A similar dynamic is true today. Jesus speaks to us. Though, we often need interpreters, scholars, and…
Continue ReadingSt. Paul discusses in today’s first reading what being an apostle entailed for him. For as I see it, God has exhibited us apostles as the last of all, like people sentenced to death Paul knew that is wasn’t easy to be an Apostle, but required the virtue of perseverance. I’ve been taught as…
Continue ReadingThe Pharisees compared Jesus’ disciples with those of John. They questioned why Jesus’ disciples didn’t fast and offer prayers in the way John’s and their disciples did. Jesus gives a classic response. “Can you make the wedding guests fast while the bridegroom is with them?” Jesus was pointing out that there is a proper…
Continue ReadingYou’ve probably heard a great deal about vocations in recent years. It seems every Catholic Church has some vocation poster for this, that, or the other thing. We all have a vocation. The vocational majority will start families and have kids. There is discernment involved in finding someone you are meant to be with.…
Continue ReadingRecently I’ve been reading Escape from Freedom by Erich Fromm. This book is a classic. Basically, it asks (or asked) the question of why people in free societies would sometimes give up their freedom and support authoritarian regimes. Erich Fromm had a startling but clear answer for this: freedom in individualistic societies could lead…
Continue ReadingIt has to be one of the greatest ironies in the Gospel. As Christians, we learn from a young age that Jesus Christ is the Son of God. Yet the people around Jesus did not know or understand this fundamental truth. In the Sunday reading 10 days ago, Peter called Jesus the Messiah, the…
Continue ReadingThis week we take a tour through St. Paul’s powerful first letter to the Corinthians. In it, he calls the Corinthians to clean up their act and return to the Gospel. He tells them that he didn’t come to them with “sublimity” or high and mighty words. He came to them with the truth…
Continue Reading“You duped me, O LORD, and I let myself be duped…” We can all relate to this on some level. We start out on a path with high hopes and dreams. Then we run into challenges we never saw coming. Oh, the things we never signed up for! I started out at Conception Abbey…
Continue ReadingWe often have to admit that God’s ways are not our ways. Sometimes God’s ways seem to derail our desires and best intentions but even make no sense from our perspective. That struggle to accept God’s ways can leave us weary and even wondering whether our God is a loving God. The worldwide pandemic…
Continue ReadingYesterday’s celebration of St. Monica was a natural introduction to the towering figure of her son St. Augustine of Hippo. As an early theologian and doctor of the Church, St. Augustine set the bar very high for all who would lift up the mysteries of faith to greater understanding and appreciation. Augustine brought a…
Continue ReadingI once heard a story about an exam given to police recruits to test their response to unusual situations. The question was: “What would you do if you had to stop a speeder who turned out to be your mother?” One young man answered: “I’d call for back-up!” It is true that mothers can…
Continue ReadingCOVID-19 has drastically changed the way people around the world live and interact with one another. What was once normal is no more. Social gatherings carry the danger of disease. Rather than gathering in person, many now turn to the computer and its ability to transport people through the wonders of virtual reality. In…
Continue ReadingWe have some very avid gardeners in the monastery. They love to get their hands dirty with digging, planting, weeding, and then nurturing with plenty of TLC. Those tomato plants get extra help when a wire cage is put around each one to hold it upright. Is St. Paul speaking as a tomato grower…
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