Monday, October 20, 2025

Deacons Retreat (October 17-19, 2025)


I look forward to my annual deacon retreat every October at Cedarbrake Catholic Retreat Center. The facilities are topnotch and the meals are superb.

It was wonderful to pray Morning and Evening Prayers, attend Mass in the beautiful Adoration Chapel, and spend a Holy Hour in Adoration of our Lord Jesus Christ in the Blessed Sacrament.

We also had a lot of time to rest and relax from our toil. I explored the grounds of the retreat center while praying the mysteries of the Holy Rosary. After all, October is the month dedicated to the Holy Rosary.

Thank you, Dcn. Barry, for another great retreat and, especially, for our wonderful speaker - Dr. Roland Millare, from the St. John Paul II Foundation. It was a beautiful message on the Eucharist and our marriage and diakonia.



Previous reflections:

Homily for Monday of the Twenty-ninth Week in Ordinary Time (Year C - 10/20/2025)


Good morning. We plan for many things in our lives - college and post-graduate education, careers, businesses, and even marriage and family. These are all good things but, as Jesus tells us in today’s Gospel, even more important than all these is for us to be “rich in what matters to God.” And what is it that matters to God? Saint Paul gives us the answer to this question in his First Letter to the Corinthians when he wrote these words: “For I resolved to know nothing while I was with you except Jesus Christ, and him crucified” (2:2).

Pope Leo XIV, in his recent General Audience, said that Jesus is “the destination of our journey. Without his love, the voyage of life would become wandering without a goal, a tragic mistake with a missed destination. We are fragile creatures. Mistakes are part of our humanity; it is the wound of sin that makes us fall, give up, despair. To rise again instead means to get up and stand on our feet. The Risen One guarantees our arrival, leading us home, where we are awaited, loved, saved.” The Holy Father’s words echo those of Saint Paul, in today’s first reading, when he wrote to the Romans, saying: “Abraham did not doubt God's promise in unbelief; rather, he was empowered by faith and gave glory to God and was fully convinced that what God had promised he was also able to do.” Our relationship with God, our trust in His promises in our Lord Jesus Christ, and our desire to follow His will for our lives with the grace of the Holy Spirit, these are ways in which we become “rich in what matters to God,”

Saint Paul of the Cross, whose memorial we celebrate today, is an example for us to follow. “After much waiting and prayer, Paul discerned his vocation: God was calling him to start a new religious order dedicated to Jesus’ passion. He spent 6 more years studying for the priesthood as preparation, during which time he still had doubts. He wrote in one of his letters: ‘I experienced interior desolation, depression, and doubts. It seemed to me that I would never be able to persevere in my vocation. . . Everyone seemed happy except me.’ Despite his doubts, Paul persevered and kept his faith” (Dynamic Catholic). “God called him to form a group of men dedicated to preaching parish missions. These men, called Passionists, would preach the mystery of Christ crucified—the mystery of the Father’s love—in hopes that Christians would turn from their sins and rededicate their lives to Christ” (Loyola Press). “Paul of the Cross died in 1775, and was canonized in 1867” (Franciscan Media).

Like Saint Paul of the Cross, Jesus calls us to live our lives in a way that we “store up treasures in heaven. . . For where your treasure is, there also will your heart be” (Matthew 6:20-21). And so, my sisters and brothers in Christ, let us go forth from Mass, having received our Lord Jesus Christ in the Eucharist, and be strengthened to be “rich is what matters to God” and, in doing so, glorify God by our lives.

Readings: https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/102025.cfm



Monday, October 13, 2025

Homily for Monday of the Twenty-eighth Week in Ordinary Time (Year C - 10/13/2025)


Good morning. The Catechism states that “‘by the sacrament of Confirmation, [the baptized] are more perfectly bound to the Church and are enriched with a special strength of the Holy Spirit. Hence, they are, as true witnesses of Christ, more strictly obliged to spread and defend the faith by word and deed” (1285). In other words, when we were anointed with the Sacred Chrism at Confirmation, we received the “grace of apostleship: and were “set apart for the Gospel of God” to boldly proclaim the Good News of Jesus Christ to the world by “word and deed.”

We are called to “belong to Jesus Christ” and “to be holy” in the “obedience of faith.” Jesus tells us to “be holy because I [am] holy” (1 Peter 1: 16). So how do we grow in holiness in life? Saint Peter instructs to be “like obedient children” by not acting with the “desires of your former ignorance but, as [Jesus] who called you is holy, be holy yourselves in every aspect of your conduct” (1:14-15). Moreover, in the Vatican II document, titled “Lumen Gentium,” the Church fathers wrote on this universal call to holiness in the Church, saying: “In order that the faithful may reach this perfection, they must use their strength accordingly as they have received it, as a gift from Christ” (40). In other words, we are called to discern how God is calling us to use the gift of our time, talent, and treasure that He has given us to fulfill the great commandment to love God and love our neighbor.

In the same way that Jonah was a sign to the Ninevite and Jesus was a sign to God’s people during his time on earth, Christ continues to be a sign for our generation and beyond. Therefore, as the Vatican II fathers instruct us: “they must follow in His footsteps and conform themselves to His image seeking the will of the Father in all things. They must devote themselves with all their being to the glory of God and the service of their neighbor. In this way, the holiness of the People of God will grow into an abundant harvest of good, as is admirably shown by the life of so many saints in Church history” (40). Not only do we look at Jesus, Mary, and Joseph as signs of holiness to strive for in our own lives, we also have the saints to model our lives after to grow in holiness.

And so, my sisters and brothers in Christ, let us “follow the poor Christ, the humble and cross-bearing Christ in order to be worthy of being sharers in His glory. Every person must walk unhesitatingly according to his own personal gifts and duties in the path of living faith, which arouses hope and works through charity.” (40). Therefore, let us receive our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ in the Eucharist worthily and go in peace from Mass, glorifying the Lord by our lives, so that we can return to the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass and receive the Lord worthily in the Eucharist. Amen.


Saturday, October 11, 2025

Homily for Eric & Catherine's Wedding (10/11/2025)


Good afternoon and welcome! It is a joyous occasion for all of us today as we come together to witness Eric and Catherine stand before our Lord Jesus Christ, in the midst of his Church, and enter into a covenant of  love with God and each other, receive the graces that flow from the Sacrament of Marriage, and embark on a lifelong journey as husband and wife, guided by the Holy Spirit. As Jesus tells us in the Gospel passage, Eric and Catherine “are no longer two but one flesh.”

Eric and Catherine, Christ speaks these words of encouragement to you both, saying: “what God has joined together, no human being must separate.” At this moment, I invite you both to turn around and look at your family and friends, in particular your parents and sponsors. Let their witness of marital love inspire you to be the best version of yourselves for each other. Family and friends, thank you for your care and kindness toward Eric & Catherine. I ask you all to always speak words of encouragement to this beautiful couple and to always let your actions toward them be ones of loving support.

More importantly, Eric and Catherine, God joins you together today, you must not separate. Marriage is a sacrament of service because, as husband and wife, you are called to love each other by serving one another selflessly and sacrificially, to will the good for one another, to wake up every morning committing yourselves to your marriage and family come what may. Some days will be more challenging than others, no doubt about it. However, God permits you to experience not only the joys of married and family life but also go through the challenges of marriage to expand the capacity of your hearts to love each other even more. In those challenging times, I encourage you to hold each other close to the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary and know in your hearts that God is always close to you, cheering you on in your marriage. Remember also that precious moment on your wedding day when you held each other’s hands, looked into each other’s eyes, and exchanged your vows of love and fidelity for one another.

Eric and Catherine, in a few moments from now, you will exchange wedding rings that symbolize the endless love that you have for each other in the unbreakable bond of marriage. Every time you look at your wedding ring, as I do every day, hold on to this truth in your hearts. Eric, know that you are a worthy husband and you found in Catherine a worthy wife whose “value is far beyond pearls.” Same with you, Catherine, every time you look at your wedding ring, know that you are a worthy wife and you found in Eric a worthy husband whose “value is far beyond pearls.” Entrust your hearts to each other. Above all, entrust your hearts to God and you will come to realize that you both are worthy husband and wife for each other precisely because of your fear of the Lord.

In marriage class, I challenge you both to go to Mass together and to pray together and pray for each other. I am proud of you because you are doing all these things on your wedding day. Keep it up in your married life together because, when you keep our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ at the center of your marriage, he will help you to be “one flesh.” God will teach you to be patient and kind with each other. He will help you not be jealous nor pompous, not be inflated nor rude, not to seek your own interests nor be quick-tempered, not to brood over injury nor rejoice over wrongdoing, but rejoice in the truth of His love for you and your love for Him and for each other. God will help you bear all things, believe all things, hope all things, and endure all things in your marriage. God will never fail you and, if you cooperate with Him, as I know in my heart that you both will, He will never let you fail each other. Amen.

Thursday, October 9, 2025

Excerpts from "Dilexi Te" - Pope Leo XIV's Apostolic Exhortation on Love for the Poor


These are excerpts from Pope Leo XIV's Apostolic Exhortation that struck me as I read it for the first time and desire to meditate on these words over time.

Chapter 1

. . .those who suffer know how great even a small gesture of affection can be, and how much relief it can bring. . . No sign of affection, even the smallest, will ever be forgotten, especially if it is shown to those who are suffering, lonely or in need, as was the Lord at that time. (4)

In fact, there are many forms of poverty: the poverty of those who lack material means of subsistence, the poverty of those who are socially marginalized and lack the means to give voice to their dignity and abilities, moral and spiritual poverty, cultural poverty, the poverty of those who find themselves in a condition of personal or social weakness or fragility, the poverty of those who have no rights, no space, no freedom, (9)

Thus, in a world where the poor are increasingly numerous, we paradoxically see the growth of a wealthy elite, living in a bubble of comfort and luxury, almost in another world compared to ordinary people. This means that a culture still persists — sometimes well disguised — that discards others without even realizing it and tolerates with indifference that millions of people die of hunger or survive in conditions unfit for human beings. A few years ago, the photo of a lifeless child lying on a Mediterranean beach caused an uproar; unfortunately, apart from some momentary outcry, similar events are becoming increasingly irrelevant and seen as marginal news items. (11)

The poor are not there by chance or by blind and cruel fate. Nor, for most of them, is poverty a choice. Yet, there are those who still presume to make this claim, thus revealing their own blindness and cruelty. Of course, among the poor there are also those who do not want to work, perhaps because their ancestors, who worked all their lives, died poor. However, there are so many others — men and women — who nonetheless work from dawn to dusk, perhaps collecting scraps or the like, even though they know that their hard work will only help them to scrape by, but never really improve their lives. Nor can it be said that most of the poor are such because they do not “deserve” otherwise, as maintained by that specious view of meritocracy that sees only the successful as “deserving.” (14)

The fact that some dismiss or ridicule charitable works, as if they were an obsession on the part of a few and not the burning heart of the Church’s mission, convinces me of the need to go back and re-read the Gospel, lest we risk replacing it with the wisdom of this world. The poor cannot be neglected if we are to remain within the great current of the Church’s life that has its source in the Gospel and bears fruit in every time and place. (15)

Chapter 2

Precisely in order to share the limitations and fragility of our human nature, he himself became poor and was born in the flesh like us. We came to know him in the smallness of a child laid in a manger and in the extreme humiliation of the cross, where he shared our radical poverty, which is death. . . God has a special place in his heart for those who are discriminated against and oppressed, and he asks us, his Church, to make a decisive and radical choice in favor of the weakest. (16)

By his Incarnation, he “emptied himself, taking the form of a slave, being born in human likeness” ( Phil 2:7), and in that form he brought us salvation. His was a radical poverty, grounded in his mission to reveal fully God’s love for us (cf. Jn 1:18; 1 Jn 4:9). As Saint Paul puts it in his customarily brief but striking manner: “You know well the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, so that by his poverty you might become rich” ( 2 Cor 8:9). (18)

And the Church, if she wants to be Christ’s Church, must be a Church of the Beatitudes, one that makes room for the little ones and walks poor with the poor, a place where the poor have a privileged place (cf. Jas 2:2-4). (21)

I often wonder, even though the teaching of Sacred Scripture is so clear about the poor, why many people continue to think that they can safely disregard the poor. (23)


. . .the intrinsic value of respect for others is expressly stated: anyone in need, even an enemy, always deserves our assistance. (25)

Chapter 3

. . .the Apostles laid their hands on seven men chosen from the community. To a certain extent, they integrated them into their own ministry, instituting them for the service — diakonía in Greek — of the poorest (cf. Acts 6:1-5). It is significant that the first disciple to bear witness to his faith in Christ to the point of shedding his blood was Stephen, who belonged to this group. In him, the witness of caring for the poor and of martyrdom are united. (37)

A little less than two centuries later, another deacon, Saint Lawrence, will demonstrate his fidelity to Jesus Christ in a similar way by uniting martyrdom and service to the poor. [23] From Saint Ambrose’s account, we learn that Lawrence, a deacon in Rome during the pontificate of Pope Sixtus II, was forced by the Roman authorities to turn over the treasures of the Church. “The following day he brought the poor with him. Questioned about where the promised treasures might be, he pointed to the poor saying, ‘These are the treasures of the Church’.” [24] While narrating this event, Saint Ambrose asks: “What treasures does Jesus have that are more precious than those in which he loves to show himself?” [25] (38)

Saint John Chrysostom, Archbishop of Constantinople: ". . .give him the honor he has commanded, and let the poor benefit from your riches. God does not need golden vessels, but golden souls. . . What advantage does Christ gain if the sacrificial table is laden with golden vessels, while he himself dies of hunger in the person of the poor? Feed the hungry first, and only afterward adorn the altar with what remains. [31]" (41)

For the Bishop of Milan, almsgiving is justice restored, not a gesture of paternalism. (43)

For Augustine, the poor are not just people to be helped, but the sacramental presence of the Lord. (44)

Augustine puts the following words in the Lord’s mouth: “I received the earth, I will give heaven; I received temporal goods, I will give back eternal goods; I received bread, I will give life… I have been given hospitality, but I will give a home; I was visited when I was sick, but I will give health; I was visited in prison, but I will give freedom. The bread you have given to my poor has been consumed, but the bread I will give will not only refresh you, but will never end.” [36] The Almighty will not be outdone in generosity to those who serve the people most in need: the greater the love for the poor, the greater the reward from God. (45)

During a plague in the city of Carthage, where he was Bishop, Saint Cyprian reminded Christians of the importance of caring for the sick: “This pestilence and plague, which seems so horrible and deadly, searches out the righteousness of each one, and examines the minds of the human race, to see whether the healthy serve the sick; whether relatives love each other with sincerity; whether masters have pity on their sick servants; whether doctors do not abandon the sick who beg for help.” [38] (49)

. . .the poor were not a problem to be solved, but brothers and sisters to be welcomed. (56)

. . .compassion was not an option, but the true path of following Christ. (58)

For the Christian faith, the education of the poor is not a favor but a duty. Children have a right to knowledge as a fundamental requirement for the recognition of human dignity. Teaching them affirms their value, giving them the tools to transform their reality. Christian tradition considers knowledge a gift from God and a community responsibility. Christian education does not only form professionals, but also people open to goodness, beauty and truth. Catholic schools, therefore, when they are faithful to their name, are places of inclusion, integral formation and human development. By combining faith and culture, they sow the seeds of the future, honor the image of God and build a better society. (72)

[Pope Francis] also said: “Every human being is a child of God! He or she bears the image of Christ! We ourselves need to see, and then to enable others to see, that migrants and refugees do not only represent a problem to be solved, but are brothers and sisters to be welcomed, respected and loved. They are an occasion that Providence gives us to help build a more just society, a more perfect democracy, a more united country, a more fraternal world and a more open and evangelical Christian community.” [66] The Church, like a mother, accompanies those who are walking. Where the world sees threats, she sees children; where walls are built, she builds bridges. She knows that her proclamation of the Gospel is credible only when it is translated into gestures of closeness and welcome. And she knows that in every rejected migrant, it is Christ himself who knocks at the door of the community. (75)

Christian holiness often flourishes in the most forgotten and wounded places of humanity. The poorest of the poor — those who lack not only material goods but also a voice and the recognition of their dignity — have a special place in God’s heart. They are the beloved of the Gospel, the heirs to the Kingdom (cf. Lk 6:20). It is in them that Christ continues to suffer and rise again. It is in them that the Church rediscovers her call to show her most authentic self. (76)

Saint Teresa of Calcutta. . . “We are wanting to proclaim the good news to the poor that God loves them, that we love them, that they are somebody to us, that they too have been created by the same loving hand of God, to love and to be loved. Our poor people are great people, are very lovable people, they do not need our pity and sympathy, they need our understanding love. They need our respect; they need that we treat them with dignity.” [67]. . . as Pope John Paul II reminded the pilgrims who came to Rome for her beatification: “Where did Mother Teresa find the strength to place herself completely at the service of others? She found it in prayer and in the silent contemplation of Jesus Christ, his Holy Face, his Sacred Heart. She herself said as much: ‘The fruit of silence is prayer; the fruit of prayer is faith; the fruit of faith is love; the fruit of love is service.’ It was prayer that filled her heart with Christ’s own peace and enabled her to radiate that peace to others.” [68] (77)

Saint John Paul II reminded us that “there is a special presence of Christ in the poor, and this requires the Church to make a preferential option for them.” [70] Therefore, when the Church bends down to care for the poor, she assumes her highest posture. (79)

Chapter 4

. . .the dignity of every human person must be respected today, not tomorrow, and the extreme poverty of all those to whom this dignity is denied should constantly weigh upon our consciences. (92)

As it is, “the current model, with its emphasis on success and self-reliance, does not appear to favor an investment in efforts to help the slow, the weak or the less talented to find opportunities in life.” [100] The same questions keep coming back to us. Does this mean that the less gifted are not human beings? Or that the weak do not have the same dignity as ourselves? Are those born with fewer opportunities of lesser value as human beings? Should they limit themselves merely to surviving? The worth of our societies, and our own future, depends on the answers we give to these questions. Either we regain our moral and spiritual dignity or we fall into a cesspool. (95)

Chapter 5

No Christian can regard the poor simply as a societal problem; they are part of our “family.” They are “one of us.” Nor can our relationship to the poor be reduced to merely another ecclesial activity or function. In the words of the Aparecida Document, “we are asked to devote time to the poor, to give them loving attention, to listen to them with interest, to stand by them in difficult moments, choosing to spend hours, weeks or years of our lives with them, and striving to transform their situations, starting from them. We cannot forget that this is what Jesus himself proposed in his actions and by his words.” [114] (104)

It is important for us to realize that the story of the Good Samaritan remains timely even today. “If I encounter a person sleeping outdoors on a cold night, I can view him or her as an annoyance, an idler, an obstacle in my path, a troubling sight, a problem for politicians to sort out, or even a piece of refuse cluttering a public space. Or I can respond with faith and charity, and see in this person a human being with a dignity identical to my own, a creature infinitely loved by the Father, an image of God, a brother or sister redeemed by Jesus Christ. That is what it is to be a Christian! Can holiness somehow be understood apart from this lively recognition of the dignity of each human being?” [116] What did the Good Samaritan do? (106)

Pope Saint Gregory the Great. . . courageously denounced contemporary forms of prejudice against the poor, including the belief that they were responsible for their plight: “Whenever you see the poor doing something reprehensible, do not despise or discredit them, for the fire of poverty is perhaps purifying their sinful actions, however slight they be.” [119] Not infrequently, our prosperity can make us blind to the needs of others, and even make us think that our happiness and fulfillment depend on ourselves alone, apart from others. In such cases, the poor can act as silent teachers for us, making us conscious of our presumption and instilling within us a rightful spirit of humility. (108)

The poor, too, remind us how baseless is the attitude of aggressive arrogance with which we frequently confront life’s difficulties. They remind us how uncertain and empty our seemingly safe and secure lives may be. Here again, Saint Gregory the Great has much to tell us: “Let no one consider himself secure, saying, ‘I do not steal from others, but simply enjoy what is rightfully mine.’ The rich man was not punished because he took what belonged to others, but because, while possessing such great riches, he had become impoverished within. This was indeed the reason for his condemnation to hell: in his prosperity, he preserved no sense of justice; the wealth he had received made him proud and caused him to lose all sense of compassion.” [120] (109)

Yet we must never forget that religion, especially the Christian religion, cannot be limited to the private sphere, as if believers had no business making their voice heard with regard to problems affecting civil society and issues of concern to its members. [125] (112)

In reality, “the worst discrimination which the poor suffer is the lack of spiritual care… Our preferential option for the poor must mainly translate into a privileged and preferential religious care.” [127] Yet, this spiritual attentiveness to the poor is called into question, even among Christians, by certain prejudices arising from the fact that we find it easier to turn a blind eye to the poor.  (114)

Almsgiving at least offers us a chance to halt before the poor, to look into their eyes, to touch them and to share something of ourselves with them. In any event, almsgiving, however modest, brings a touch of pietas into a society otherwise marked by the frenetic pursuit of personal gain. In the words of the Book of Proverbs: “Those who are generous are blessed, for they share their bread with the poor” (22:9). (116)

Saint John Chrysostom is known for saying: “Almsgiving is the wing of prayer. If you do not provide your prayer with wings, it will hardly fly.” [129] In the same vein, Saint Gregory of Nazianzus concluded one of his celebrated orations with these words: “If you think that I have something to say, servants of Christ, his brethren and co-heirs, let us visit Christ whenever we may; let us care for him, feed him, clothe him, welcome him, honor him, not only at a meal, as some have done, or by anointing him, as Mary did, or only by lending him a tomb, like Joseph of Arimathea, or by arranging for his burial, like Nicodemus, who loved Christ half-heartedly, or by giving him gold, frankincense and myrrh, like the Magi before all these others. The Lord of all asks for mercy, not sacrifice... Let us then show him mercy in the persons of the poor and those who today are lying on the ground, so that when we come to leave this world they may receive us into everlasting dwelling places.” [130] (118)

Whatever form it may take, almsgiving will touch and soften our hardened hearts. It will not solve the problem of world poverty, yet it must still be carried out, with intelligence, diligence and social responsibility. For our part, we need to give alms as a way of reaching out and touching the suffering flesh of the poor. (119)

Christian love breaks down every barrier, brings close those who were distant, unites strangers, and reconciles enemies. It spans chasms that are humanly impossible to bridge, and it penetrates to the most hidden crevices of society. By its very nature, Christian love is prophetic: it works miracles and knows no limits. It makes what was apparently impossible happen. Love is above all a way of looking at life and a way of living it. A Church that sets no limits to love, that knows no enemies to fight but only men and women to love, is the Church that the world needs today. (120)

Homily for Thursday of the Twenty-Seventh Week in Ordinary Time (Year C - 10/9/2025)


Good morning. In yesterday’s Gospel, Jesus gives us the perfect prayer - the “Our Father” or the “Lord’s Prayer”. We pray the Our Father prayer at Mass and when we pray the Holy Rosary. It is a prayer that reminds us that we are adopted sons and daughters of God, who we call upon as Father, and coheirs of the kingdom of heaven through our Lord Jesus Christ. As I mentioned in my homily yesterday, the Lord’s Prayer is an invitation for us to enter into communion with the Holy Trinity through the Sacraments of the Catholic Church, namely Baptism, Eucharist, and Reconciliation. 

Bishop Robert Barron wrote that “prayer is intimate communion and conversation with God.” This is the intimacy, the friendship that our Lord spoke of in today’s Gospel when he said, “I tell you, if he does not get up to give him the loaves because of their friendship. . .” As baptized Christians, Jesus calls us “friends” because, in prayer, Jesus tells us “everything [he has] heard from [his] Father. . . and whatever [we] ask the Father in [Jesus’ name] he may give [us]” (John 15:15-16). This is the intimate, loving relationship that we can have with our Father in heaven through prayer.

However, as we heard in today’s Gospel, we must be persistent. Jesus tells us, “ask and you will receive; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks, receives; and the one who seeks, finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened. What father among you would hand his son a snake. . . If you then, who are wicked, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him?” Bishop Robert Barron had this to say about persistence in our prayer life: “You also have to pray with persistence. One reason that we don’t receive what we want through prayer is that we give up too easily. Augustine said that God sometimes delays in giving us what we want because he wants our hearts to expand to be able to receive it.”

Moreover, Thomas Merton tells us that “Jesus always reminds us to ask, in order that we may receive. The Holy Spirit is the most perfect gift of the Father to men, and yet he is the one gift which the Father gives most easily. . . the Holy Spirit will never be refused. ‘If you then, who are wicked, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him?’” And so, my sisters and brothers in Christ, let us be persistent in our prayer life and trust that God will answer our prayers in His time and according to His will. As the Lord tells us in today’s first reading: “for you who fear my name, there will arise the sun of justice with its healing rays.” Our healing starts with prayer and ends with “Jesus, I trust in you.”


Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Homily for Wednesday of the Twenty-Seventh Week in Ordinary Time (Year C - 10/8/2025)


Good morning. In today’s Gospel, Jesus gives us the perfect prayer - the “Our Father” or the “Lord’s Prayer”. We know this prayer by heart because we pray it at every Mass, every time we pray the Holy Rosary, and, for those of us who pray the Liturgy of the Hours, with Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer. When we pray the Our Father prayer, we come to realize that our God is “a gracious and merciful God, slow to anger, rich in clemency, loath to punish,” as Jonah so eloquently put it in today’s first reading.

In the Lord’s Prayer, Jesus teaches us to pray for forgiveness and reconciliation of differences with one another, especially our loved one. We pray for persistence in prayer. We pray that God nourishes us every day with His living word in Sacred Scriptures and the Eucharist because, we profess what Peter confessed: “[My Lord and my God], to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life” (John 6:68). In the Lord’s Prayer, Jesus invites us into an intimate relationship with our Father in heaven, our Creator, the Author of our life who breathes his Spirit into us and sustains us with His love, mercy, and grace. This is “a radically new way of approaching God, and reveals what Jesus uniquely offers us: a completely new identity as children of God, wherein we can come to know him more intimately than we ever thought possible” (Michael Stevens).

Bishop Robert Barron wrote that “prayer is intimate communion and conversation with God. Judging from Jesus’ own life, prayer is something that we ought to do often, especially at key moments in our lives.” In my “The Word on Fire Bible: The Gospel,” there is a picture of an etching by Rembrandt of King David in prayer. The piece shows David “in prayer, kneeling at the side of his bed. The scene is so personal and informal. . . as if David were interrupting his normal routine to take a moment before the Lord” (Michael Stevens).

My sisters and brothers in Christ, our prayer time can be communal and formal like here at the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Our prayer time can also be personal and informal like when we “go to [our] inner room, close the door, and pray to [our] Father” in sacred silence (Matthew 6:6). How many times in the Gospel did Jesus go away to a quiet place to pray and spend in sacred silence with his heavenly Father? Let us pray daily and “[rejoice] always. Pray without ceasing. In all circumstances give thanks, for this is the will of God for you in Christ Jesus” (1 Thessalonians 5:17).


Deacons Retreat (October 17-19, 2025)

I look forward to my annual deacon retreat every October at Cedarbrake Catholic Retreat Center . The facilities are topnotch and the meals a...