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Are You Prepared to Receive God?

Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time Matthew 13:1–;23 At the heart of this Gospel is a profound truth: God is always revealing. God is always sowing seeds of grace, love, hope, wisdom, understanding, correction, and encouragement into our lives. The question is not whether God is communicating—Jesus makes it clear that God is. The real question is whether we are able, willing, and ready to receive what God offers. God is always sowing these life-giving seeds generously into our lives, but the fruit they bear depends on the condition of our hearts. Jesus uses the image of God being like a sower scattering God's seed everywhere—on the path, on rocky ground, among thorns, and on good soil. No matter where it lands, the seed itself is unchanging and perfect, but its ability to grow and produce fruit depends entirely on the condition of the soil, which represent the disposition of our hearts and our willingness to accept God's truth. This is not careless farming. It is a pictu...

Grace: God's Love at Work in Us

Grace is one of the most beautiful truths of our faith. At its heart, grace is God sharing God's own life with us—not because we earn it or deserve it, but because God loves us. Grace is God moving toward us, lifting us, healing us, and empowering us to become the best versions of ourselves that God intends. "Grace is the free and undeserved assistance God offers us so that we might respond to [God's] call to share in [God's] divine life and attain eternal life" ( USCCA , p. 329). It is God’s free gift of God's own divine life poured into our hearts. Grace is God’s loving initiative that draws us into intimate relationship with God—Creator, Savior, and Sustainer—and gives us the desire and strength to respond. There are four primary ways the Church speaks about grace: (1) Sanctifying or habitual grace : the stable, ongoing gift of God’s life in us. We receive it first in Baptism, when we are infused with the Holy Spirit and become members of the Chur...

Rest for the Weary Heart

Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time Matthew 11:25–30 Jesus’ words in this Gospel feel like a deep breath for the soul. Jesus begins by praising God for revealing God's love not to the powerful or the learned, but to the “little ones”—those who come with open hearts, humility, and trust. God’s truth isn’t something we earn by intelligence or status; it’s something we receive when we let our ego diminish enough to be taught. Then Jesus offers one of the most comforting invitations in all of Scripture: “Come to me, all you who labor and are burdened, and I will give you rest.” Jesus knows the weight we carry—our worries, responsibilities, disappointments, and hidden struggles. Jesus doesn’t tell us to push harder or pretend we’re fine. Jesus simply invites us to come to him. When Jesus speaks of his “yoke,” he isn’t adding more demands. A yoke joins two animals so they can pull together. Jesus is saying, “Let me carry your burden with you.” Jesus' yoke is easy not becaus...

Grieving the Losses We Carry

Grief is not only about the death of someone we love. We also grieve the quieter, less visible losses that accumulate over a lifetime—changes in our health, our memory, our emotional resilience, our independence, our employment, our roles, and the dreams or routines we once held dear. These losses can unsettle us just as deeply, yet we often struggle to name them or give ourselves permission to grieve and mourn them. Elisabeth KĂĽbler‑Ross, M.D. described the following five stages of grief—not as a straight line, but as experiences we move in and out of. David Kessler later added a sixth stage. Together, they offer a compassionate way to understand what our hearts go through. 1 Denial can appear as “I’m fine” or “This can’t be happening.” It protects us until we’re ready to face the truth. Anger may rise when life feels unfair or when our bodies or abilities no longer cooperate. Anger is not a failure of faith—it’s a sign that something precious has been touched or affect...

A Love That Puts Christ First

Thirteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time Matthew 10:37–42 Jesus’ admonition in the Gospel against loving family members before him can sound startling at first. Jesus isn’t telling us to love our families less—he’s inviting us to love him first . When Christ is at the center of our hearts, every other relationship becomes stronger, healthier, and more rooted in real love. Putting Jesus first doesn’t diminish our love for others; it purifies it. Jesus also speaks of taking up our cross. This isn’t about seeking suffering—it’s about choosing faithfulness even when it costs us something. Every day we face small crosses: choosing patience when we’re frustrated, forgiveness when we’re hurt, generosity when we’re tired, or integrity when it’s inconvenient. These are the quiet, hidden ways we follow Christ. Then Jesus shifts to something beautifully simple: the reward for offering even “a cup of cold water” to one of his little ones. In God’s eyes, no act of kindness is too small. A...

What Do You Hope For From Your Church?

At the heart of every life, whether it is known or not, is a deep and simple desire: to encounter God in a way that gives their life meaning, direction, and hope. People come to the Catholic Church carrying joys and wounds, questions and convictions, longing for a place where faith becomes real and life becomes more whole. And the beautiful truth is that the Catholic Church—despite her human imperfections and failings—exists precisely to meet these longings with and through the grace of Christ. Most Catholics, whether they say it aloud or not, hope for several things from their faith: A sense of belonging . People want to know they are not alone—that the Church is a family where they are welcomed, known, and valued. Spiritual nourishment. Catholics expect the sacraments to strengthen them, the Scriptures to guide them, and homilies to be relevant and speak truth to real life. Moral clarity and wisdom. In a confusing world, people look to the Church for steady teaching that ...

Do Not Be Afraid—You Are Held by God

Twelfth Sunday in Ordinary Time Matthew 10:26–33 Jesus speaks the words, as recorded in this Gospel passage, to his disciples at a moment when they are stepping into a world that will not always welcome them. Jesus doesn’t pretend that following him will be easy. Instead, Jesus gives them—and us—something far better: the assurance that we are deeply known, completely seen, and lovingly held by God. “Nothing is concealed that will not be revealed,” Jesus says—not as a threat, but as a promise. God sees the truth of our hearts, our intentions, our struggles, and our efforts to be faithful even when no one else notices. In a world where misunderstanding and judgment can weigh heavily on us, Jesus reminds us that God’s vision is clear and compassionate. Then Jesus speaks the words we need to hear and believe, perhaps more than ever: “Do not be afraid.” Not because life is without danger, but because we are never outside of God’s care. Jesus points to sparrows—small, inexp...