Daily Reflections

Saturday of the Fourth Week in Ordinary Time

February 4, 2023

  In today’s Gospel, Jesus sees the vast crowd that is looking for him and waiting for him, and he feels compassion for them. And he does something for them out of his compassion for them. First of all, this tells us how God feels about us, especially when we feel lost, confused, and far…

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Friday of the Fourth Week in Ordinary Time

February 3, 2023

  In today’s Gospel, Mark recounts the events in Herod’s court that led to the execution of John the Baptist. Matthew also recounts the same episode in his Gospel. However, Mark includes an interesting little tidbit that Matthew omits, but that we should take a deeper look at. Mark writes that Herod was afraid of…

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Feast of the Presentation of the Lord

February 2, 2023

  Today is the Feast of the Presentation of the Lord. The Law of God commands that the firstborn son must be taken to the temple and offered to God, and so in obedience, Joseph and Mary do this with Jesus. It is interesting to consider that since Jesus is God Incarnate, before his Incarnation,…

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Wednesday of the Fourth Week in Ordinary Time

February 1, 2023

  When the Holy Family returned from Egypt after the death of Herod, they left Egypt and settled in the town of Nazareth. So, Jesus grew up in that town. In today’s Gospel, Jesus returns to his hometown after having spent some time in his public ministry. Since Jesus grew up there, the people of…

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Memorial of St. John Bosco, priest

January 31, 2023

  In today’s Gospel passage, we are presented with two miracles. At the beginning of the passage, Jesus is approached by a man named Jairus, who is a synagogue official and whose daughter is ill. Jairus asks Jesus to heal his daughter and Jesus agrees to accompany him back to the home. When they arrive,…

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Monday of the Fourth Week in Ordinary Time

January 30, 2023

  In today’s Gospel, passage Jesus travels to the land of the Gerasenes, and encounters a man who has been possessed by evil spirits. This man howls and screams every day and gashes himself with rocks, etc. His neighbors have tried to restrain him, but even chains cannot hold him. He just breaks free. So…

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Fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time

January 29, 2023

  In today’s Gospel passage, we see the beginning of Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount. In the first sentences, Jesus sits and his disciples come to him and he begins to teach them. In our culture we are used to people standing behind a podium when they address us, so we find it striking that…

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Memorial of St. Thomas Aquinas, Priest and Doctor of the Church

January 28, 2023

  Mission Accomplished Today, in the opening prayer, we ask God to grant “that we may understand what he (St. Thomas Aquinas) taught and imitate what he accomplished.” Whoa. Really? He wrote about 60 works. One of them contains about 3,100 articles (the Summa Theologiae or “Summary of Theology”). Through his writing, teaching, and preaching,…

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Friday of the Third Week in Ordinary Time

January 27, 2023

  Mysterium “…[H]e spoke the word to them as they were able to understand it” (Mk 4:33). There was a priest-monk among our community who would love to talk with guests, especially those who had never been to the Abbey or for whom monastic life was a mystery (surprisingly a lot of people). They were…

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Memorial of Sts. Timothy and Titus, bishops

January 26, 2023

  The Monastic Habit “So do not be ashamed of your testimony to our Lord…” (2 Tm 1:8a) I admit, I have hesitated to share my faith in Christ—with strangers, family, friends, and now my classmates. Yet now that I am a monk and wear the monastic habit, it’s harder to hide my faith. But…

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Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul, Apostle

January 25, 2023

  Whose Horse? Have you noticed that many paintings and icons of the Conversion of St. Paul depict the murderous man with a horse? Caravaggio did two paintings of the subject around 1601. Both include a horse amid dramatic lighting and emotive figures. In traditional and modern icons, a horse is very often seen standing…

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Memorial of St. Francis de Sales, Bishop and Doctor of the Church

January 24, 2023

  The Priesthood My spiritual director in college assigned me to read the Letter to the Hebrews. He wanted me to have some spiritual reading, to read it prayerfully while I discerned a call to the priesthood. Hebrews was a lot of theology for me to take in as a 20-year-old. I’m still striving to…

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Day of Prayer for the Legal Protection of Unborn Children

January 23, 2023

  The Heart of the Matter Today is a day of prayer for unborn children. God intended children to be born in love—real, sacrificial, unifying love. But when that real love is missing, misguided, or twisted, children are often conceived but not born into loving situations. It is sad to see a child abandoned, unloved,…

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Third Sunday in Ordinary Time

January 22, 2023

  A Great Light “The people…have seen a great light.” Isaiah 9:1 What does this mean to us today? We hear it in church; we read it in our Bibles or daily devotionals. But what does it mean? This ancient prophecy by Isaiah meant one thing to the people who heard it or read it…

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Memorial of St. Agnes, virgin & martyr

January 21, 2023

  “When his relatives heard of this they set out to seize him, for they said, ‘he is out of his mind.’” (Mark 3:21) The response of the crowd in today’s Gospel with the tone of the first reading and the psalm could not be more different with the reaction of Jesus’ relatives. The first…

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Friday of the Second Week in Ordinary Time

January 20, 2023

  “Brother and sisters: Now our high priest has obtained so much more excellent a ministry as he is mediator of a better covenant, enacted on better promises” (Hebrews 8:6). This new covenant, given to us by the Son, is better because the because of what it brings about and how it is brought about.…

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Thursday of the Second Week in Ordinary Time

January 19, 2023

  In today’s Gospel, we see the great desire of the people to seek out Jesus. They came from far away just to see him and touch him so that they may be healed. At that time, the people and even Jesus—for he was worried about being crushed by the crowd—were limited by humanity. But…

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Wednesday of the Second Week in Ordinary Time

January 18, 2023

  In today’s Gospel, Jesus poses a question to the Pharisees that I found to be very profound. He says, “Is it lawful to do good on the Sabbath rather than to do evil, to save life rather than to destroy it?” This is profound to me because it is easy to see the good…

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Tuesday of the Second Week in Ordinary Time

January 17, 2023

  “Brothers and sisters: God is not unjust so as to overlook your work and the love you have demonstrated for his name by having served and continuing to serve the holy ones” (Hebrews 6:10). In today’s reading from Hebrews, we see that God looks upon all we have done and are doing and remembers…

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Monday of the Second Week in Ordinary Time

January 16, 2023

  “Son though he was, he learned obedience from what he suffered; and when he was made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.” Oftentimes, we are called to do what we at first do not want to do or are maybe just too scared to do. At the…

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Second Sunday in Ordinary Time

January 15, 2023

  In today’s readings, we see how God acts in our lives; he calls us and then exceeds our expectations. Our God is not a God who is distant, but rather a God who enters into our lives and brings us closer to Himself, and then raises us up to become more than we could…

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Saturday of the First Week in Ordinary Time

January 14, 2023

  Often, cradle Catholics, usually women, will come to me and admit that they do not feel that sinful. The sentiment is sincere, and it is not that they do not sin, but rather that they feel somehow their conversion was minimal. Having never overcome some grave sin or falling away, can they experience the…

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Friday of the First Week in Ordinary Time

January 13, 2023

  We are used to Jesus performing dramatic miracles, but certainly less familiar with dramatic means to His miracles. When the friends of the paralytic man opened up the roof and lowered him on a stretcher into the home where Jesus’ was, it could have seemed tactless, overbearing, and for the paralytic himself, embarrassing. The…

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Thursday of the First Week in Ordinary Time

January 12, 2023

  The Letter to the Hebrews says a very curious thing today: “We have become partners of Christ if only we hold the beginning of the reality firm until the end.” It’s that beginning of the reality that sticks out to me. Why is the beginning so important for Christian life and ministry? Realistically, human…

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Wednesday of the First Week in Ordinary Time

January 11, 2023

  In contemporary culture, we have made individual happiness the end-all-be-all. Even well-formed Christians have had the live-and-let-live mentality of, “if it doesn’t bother me, I can’t intervene.” But happiness is fleeting and subjective. I remember being in a college classroom and a classmate saying that, logically speaking, God could not punish you for a…

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Tuesday of the First Week in Ordinary Time

January 10, 2023

  My Dad was a small-town attorney and municipal judge. In his office, he had many law degrees and awards up on the wall. If you were to go there back then, you’d also notice a very strange framed picture among those prestigious plaques. It was a drawing I had made at five years old.…

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The Baptism of the Lord

January 9, 2023

  The Feast of the Baptism of the Lord ends the Christmas Season. It probably seems very unlike other Christmas events: the Nativity, Holy Family, and Epiphany. However, this feast is sometimes called the Theophany, which means “a manifestation of God.” Like all the Christmas mysteries, we grapple with the “both/and” of Jesus’ divine and…

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The Epiphany of the Lord

January 8, 2023

  We all know the three gifts the Magi brought to Jesus at the Epiphany—His “manifestation” to all peoples of the world. What do they symbolize? Gold has an easy answer: recognizing Christ’s kingship. The incense may be harder, as even modern Catholics do not seem to know—much less appreciate—why we use incense to this…

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Christmas Weekday – January 7

January 7, 2023

  A simple but sometimes overlooked reflection on the wedding feast of Cana is that we are called to genuine human joy. We, of course, are called to have our hope on the future joy that we will receive in heaven as our true and everlasting joy, but God did not make us suffer and…

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Christmas Weekday – January 6

January 6, 2023

  “On coming up out of the water, he saw the heavens being torn open.” Imagine the scene: you look up and see dazzling lights, lightning and fire, and what seems like the day sky ripping apart to reveal the night sky, and with it, a booming voice says, “you are my son!” What an…

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Memorial of St. John Neumann, Bishop

January 5, 2023

  We are all probably familiar with the phrase, “blood is thicker than water.” Typically, it means that family comes first. We are willing to support and protect family before anything else, even our own comfort. This week we have been reflecting on what it means to be sons and daughters of God, and today…

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Memorial of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, Religious

January 4, 2023

  “No one who is begotten by God commits sin because God’s seed remains in him.” This sentence in John’s letter should give us pause. If we have been made to be sons and daughters of Christ in baptism, does that not mean we are begotten by God? Yes, we are, but it means we…

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Christmas Weekday – January 3

January 3, 2023

  Sonship in the scriptures is essential. It often signifies two things. The first is belonging to a people and family, and the second is priestly ministry. Within a theological framework, this sonship is vital for both men and women because it is in this sonship we find our fullest identity. Regarding sonship and belonging,…

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Memorial of Sts. Basil the Great and Gregory Nazianzen, Bishops and Doctors of the Church

January 2, 2023

  We have just welcomed Christ into the world. Jesus, born of the Virgin, visits us, and we call him Emmanuel. With rejoicing, we pledge our faith and life to this small child, “Lord be with us always!” Then amid the rejoicing, we begin to experience suffering, pain, confusion, and distraction—consider the feasts we have…

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Solemnity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God

January 1, 2023

    As we finish the Octave of Christmas, we face a roller coaster of emotion. We have experienced the joy of the coming of Christ, the horror of the slaughter of innocence, and the comfort of John the Evangelist. In the face of such strong emotions and experiences, it is easy to get overwhelmed…

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The Seventh Day in the Octave of Christmas

December 31, 2022

  Throughout these Christmas Octave reflections, we can hope that the thought of God communicating His divine love in human form provides a background or a sounding board for all of us. The birth of the Christ is the grand announcement “sung out by the heavenly hosts” to the world that a particular point had…

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Feast of the Holy Family of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph

December 30, 2022

  As this Octave of Christmas continues to unfold, the liturgical readings provide us with something like observation windows concerning the “rest” of the Christmas story. While growing up, we always enjoyed hearing our elderly aunts, uncles, and grandparents telling stories about the “good old days,” even if we had heard them before. The stories…

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The Fifth Day in the Octave of Christmas

December 29, 2022

  The smile of an infant lying in its mother’s arms can touch the heart of anyone. Sometimes people even find a new language of cooing with the little one to show their joy. Today’s Gospel story of Joseph and Mary bringing their child for the required temple rites seems to focus on the experience…

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Feast of the Holy Innocents, martyrs

December 28, 2022

  Even with our sensitivities somewhat dulled by constant reports of horrible violence inflicted on innocent people, the story of the slaughter of the innocents continues to jolt our imagination. How could someone be so cold-hearted and paranoid as to order the execution of all two-year-old male children in and around Bethlehem? Perhaps the best…

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Feast of St. John, Apostle and evangelist

December 27, 2022

  The series of feast days during this Christmas Octave week and their liturgical readings remind us of a wonderful family Christmas banquet. Just when you think all the food is on the table you’re surprised with yet another dish or course which adds another level of delight. Yesterday the feast of martyr St. Stephen…

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