That Should Have Been Obvious
We are in the “Good Shepherd Season” of the Church year. Often we read about sheep going through gates, grazing in pastures, hearing the voice of the leader, even following the shepherd. Homilists instruct us to be like sheep. Pope Francis exhorted us to smell like sheep. Too often, though (at least it seems so […]
On Waking Up
When Pope Leo XIV woke up this morning, what were his first thoughts? “Oh, that was an interesting conclave.” Then with more consciousness, “Oh, I’m the Pope.” Because he knows several languages, were his waking thoughts in English, Italian, or Spanish? Perhaps our waking thoughts were also on the Pope. Excellent news casts brought Rome […]
Jesus Christ Is Risen Today
I imagine you sang “Jesus Christ Is Risen Today” complete with trumpets on Easter Sunday morning. I hope you sing it again regardless of the date on the calendar. After all, Jesus is risen. Jesus is always risen. What we sing about is the reality. It’s the perennial, non-stop Paschal Mystery. Whatever Jesus did is […]
Easter Week’s Verbs
A good strong verb, even a little one, adds color to a written composition. Which is better: (a) He made demands as if he were a king or (b) He pontificated? Your answer is a matter of opinion. One thing I’ve noticed about the Resurrection stories is that they have good verbs—not that they’re the […]
The Emmaus Story – My Favorite Story
Do you ever look forward to your favorite Scripture story, waiting for it to be read in church? Well, I do. I anticipate my favorite Gospel story on Wednesday in Easter Week. Remember the story of the two disciples on the road to Emmaus? Every year I sympathize with Cleopas’s dejection over Jesus’ crucifixion and […]
It Isn’t Over Yet
Easter isn’t over yet. It’s hardly begun—even if you’ve already devoured the chocolate bunny from your Easter basket. Every day this week is just like Easter. And each day is a solemnity with all the festivity of Easter Day. For the rest of the week, we sing the Gloria at Mass, and the dismissal adds […]
A New Way of Saying Who We Catholics Are
The Most Reverent Charles Jason Gordon wrote a very insightful article in the April 2025 issue of America. I hope you’ll read it. Reminding us of the four marks of the Church, (one, holy, Catholic, apostolic) he discusses the four “marks” of the synodal Church he observed at the Synod on Synodality. They are relating, […]
Advent Isn’t the Only Season of Waiting
The key word in Advent is “wait.” We wait for Santa, loved Nativity stories, the first snowfall, Advent calendars’ last doors—and the final ribbon on the last package. While we wait, our days (sometimes as few as 21) are so filled that we really don’t wait. We rush. But Lent takes forever. Marking the halfway […]
Make Sure You Look Good on Wood
Daniel Berrigan quipped “Before you get serious about Jesus, first consider how good you are going to look on wood!” When teaching high school students, I used this line during Lent. Adolescents, as you know, are very conscious of their looks. Already on Ash Wednesday, some were worried about the ashen smudge on their foreheads. […]
The Cross—The Symbol that Crystallizes All Jesus’ Teaching
I am re-reading Ron Rolheiser’s book The Passion and the Cross this Lent. Each page prepares me to listen to the Passion Narratives read during Holy Week with more intent. Called “the ultimate revelation of God,” the cross will tell us who God is. What does the cross reveal about God? When Jesus Christ died, […]