Tag Archives: Christian

23rd Sunday of the Year: Take up your cross.

Study: Reflect on a truly difficult time in your life.  Where did you find the strength to continue?

Pray:  Is there a challenging situation in your life right now?  Ask the Lord for grace and wisdom.

Serve:  How can you help someone in a tight spot today?  How can you help them carry their cross?

Mass Readings – 23rd Sunday of the Year

There is a sobering element in the readings this week that focuses on the cost of discipleship.  We commonly speak of “carrying the Cross” as a way of understanding how our sacrifices and burdens become transformed when we participate in the Cross of Christ.

The first reading from the book of Wisdom reminds us that our mortal natures cannot fathom the breadth and depth of God’s plan.  We rely on the Lord, and we trust that through the power of the Holy Spirit God reveals the path of our lives – and provides us with the strength for the journey.

The psalm response “In every age, O Lord, you have been our refuge” helps us understand that when times get tough we turn to Jesus.  He is the source of our strength, and with his grace we find a safe place from which we can prepare our hearts for the demands of the day.

Paul’s letter to Philemon touches upon our human weakness.  Paul, imprisoned for his faith, is sending back a runaway slave (Onesimus) to his master – urging Philemon to accept his former servant with kindness as a brother in the Lord.  Paul, Onesimus, and Philemon must all trust in the Lord for the strength to do what is right, even when it is difficult.

Finally, the Gospel speaks bluntly about the cost of discipleship.  The price might be our family, our relationships, our possessions…yet through it all the Lord affirms that his grace empowers us to carry our Cross.  For indeed, we all have crosses, and we can face them with hope – knowing that the Lord, who carried his Cross, will help us with our own.

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Catholic Inspiration Archives

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Note: This post was first published on August 29, 2019.


22nd Sunday of the Year: Living the virtue of humility. Catholic Inspiration

The Book of Sirach exhorts us to “conduct our affairs with humility,” and through truth, honesty and perspective we can confront the pride in our hearts with this powerful (and often underappreciated) virtue.

Mass Readings – 22nd Sunday of the Year

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Catholic Inspiration Archives


Daily Mass: How are we using what we’ve been given? Catholic Inspiration

The Lord’s parable about the three servants illustrates how we can all use wisely our resources even if we have all been blessed in greater and lesser ways. Point: how will we use what we have been given today?

Mass Readings – Saturday of the 21st Week of the Year

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Catholic Inspiration Archives


Daily Mass: Wise or foolish? (Hint: go for wise.) Catholic Inspiration

The Lord uses a parable to raise an obvious point: it’s wise to be prepared! May this wisdom inspire us to be prepared for the day when the Lord will call us out of this world.

Mass Readings – Friday of the 21st Week of the Year

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Catholic Inspiration Archives


Daily Mass: The death of John the Baptist. Catholic Inspiration

The death of John the Baptist makes it clear that in no uncertain terms there is a price for following the Lord. Our “yes” to God means that we will follow a path where sacrifice will be part of the offering of our lives.

Mass Readings – The Passion of St. John the Baptist

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Catholic Inspiration Archives


Daily Mass: Who do we think we’re kidding? Part II Catholic Inspiration

Today’s readings all continue from yesterday, and the Psalm and Gospel remind us that rather than flee from our sins we call upon the grace and strength of God. After all…who do we think we’re kidding?

Mass Readings – Wednesday of the 21st Week of the Year (St. Augustine)

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Catholic Inspiration Archives


Daily Mass: Who do we think we’re kidding? Catholic Inspiration

Both Jesus and the Psalmist show us that God knows us through-and-through. Rather than pretend (and become hypocrites,) we have the opportunity today to acknowledge our sins with humility and receive the grace of God.

Mass Readings – Tuesday of the 21st Week of the Year (St. Monica)

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Catholic Inspiration Archives


22nd Sunday of the Year: The call to live a humble life.

Study:  Reflect on a person who loves selflessly.  What qualities do you see in their behavior toward others?

Pray:  Ask the Lord for the awareness to see more clearly the needs of others, and the grace to respond with love.

Serve:  How might you make a sacrifice to help someone?  How might you let go of what you want in order to assist another in need?

Mass Readings – 22nd Sunday of the Year

The theme of humility surfaces throughout the readings this week.  Check this out:

  • 1st Reading – “My child, conduct your affairs with humility.”
  • Psalm – “God, in your goodness, you have made a home for the poor.”
  • 2nd Reading – We draw near to Jerusalem, where Jesus and the angels dwell.
  • Gospel – “For everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, but whoever humbles himself will be exalted.”

What does humility mean?  What does it mean to say that a person is humble?  The word is often misunderstood and misused, and yet it is an important concept in the Scriptures and Church teaching.

At it’s heart, humility is about our perspective of ourselves against a larger background.  We are not the center of the universe!  Rather, we understand that we exist in relationship to the Lord and one another.

God is the center and origin of our lives, from which we derive all grace and blessings.  We are sustained in the mind of God, and invited to love the Lord with all our heart and mind, body and soul.  For remember: the Lord loved us first, and out of love gave his Son to save us from our sins.

Yet the relationship is not just between ourselves and the Lord.  We also exist in relationship to one another.  We are part of a great communion of souls – both living and dead – and we are invited to grow in love of those around us.

Humility arises when we see ourselves clearly in the light of these relationships.  We understand that our needs and wants are always set in the context of other (often far greater) concerns.  When this happens we grow in awareness of how our lives interact and weave together, fostering communication, cooperation, and respect.

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Catholic Inspiration Archives

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Note: This post was first published on August 22, 2016.


21st Sunday of the Year: Unity, Discipline and Heaven. Catholic Inspiration

The readings this Sunday both challenge and console us to foster unity, endure discipline, and focus on the Kingdom of Heaven. While life will not be easy, God will give us what need for the journey.

Mass Readings – 21st Sunday of the Year

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Catholic Inspiration Archives


Daily Mass: Inviting others to meet Jesus. Catholic Inspiration

St. Philip offers us an example about how to invite another person (in this case Nathaniel) to meet Jesus. We, too, can be a bridge that brings someone to the Lord today.

Mass Readings – Saturday of the 20th Week of the Year (St. Bartholomew)

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Catholic Inspiration Archives