The image of the Good Shepherd is one of the most beloved for Christians. The favorite Psalm of most people is Psalm 23 which begins “The Lord is my Shepherd.” This is somewhat surprising when you consider that in the modern world you very seldom see a shepherd. I remember seeing a shepherd in Huitzila,… Read More »
APRIL162016
The Bible tells us that Jesus was like us “in all things but sin.” We see his humanity so clearly at the end of John 6. St. John tells us that people stopped following Jesus after he told them “my flesh is true food, my blood is real drink.” You can hear the heartbreak in… Read More »
APRIL152016
The conversion of St. Paul was a pivotal moment in the life of the early Church. It was so important that St. Luke tells it three times in the Book of Acts. However, the way Acts reports the story seems somewhat inaccurate to the actual event. In the Acts, Saul (St. Paul) has his encounter… Read More »
APRIL142016
As St.Luke tells the story in Acts, the Jesus movement began to ripple out. After the martyrdom of St. Stephen the persecution of the followers of Jesus causes them to move away from Jerusalem. At first they spread the message in Samaria — among Jews who were not well regarded by the Jerusalem elite. The… Read More »
APRIL132016
The Vatican on Friday published Pope Francis’ eagerly-awaited Apostolic Exhoratation on the family, called the Joy of Love drawing together almost three years of consultations with Catholics in countries around the world. One observation the Holy Father makes in the document is that receiving Holy Communion is not a reward for a job well done.… Read More »
APRIL122016
ST. Luke tells the story of the martyrdom of St. Stephen, the first martyr or protomartyr as the old Latins put it, to connect his death with that of Jesus. Like Our Lord Stephen commends himself into the hands of the Heavenly Father. Like Our Lord he forgives his enemies. The message is that the… Read More »
APRIL112016
St. Luke describes the beginnings of the Church something like a rock dropped into a pond. The ripples from larger and larger circles. The first ripple is the conflict between the Greek and Hebrew speakers found in Acts 7. Out of that experience new models of leadership develop. St. Luke calls them the “deacons.” The… Read More »
APRIL102016
Go, jump in the lake. Back in the olden days if you wanted to get rid of a pest or dismiss someone who was bothering you that’s what you would say: Go, jump in the lake. Get lost. Go jump in the lake. But I grew up in Baltimore. What did I know about lakes?… Read More »
APRIL92016
I get a strange sort of consolation reading about the conflict in the early Church told of in Acts 6. Both the Greek speaking and the Hebrew speaking followers of Jesus were feeling a bit put out, taken for granted, not given their due. This should not be a surprise to anyone who has ever… Read More »
APRIL82016
The way St. John tells the story of the multiplication of the loaves and fishes (the one miracle common to all four gospel writers) has a particularly poignant line. After the apostle Andrew tells Jesus that there is a boy with five loaves and two fish he adds: “but what good are these for so… Read More »
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