Friends, this Sunday, we hear the story of the woman caught in adultery from the eighth chapter of John. René Girard thought that this story was particularly clear in showing the dynamics of what he called the scapegoating mechanism. And in the response of Jesus to the violence of the mob, we see the glory of God, who does not sanction this scapegoating frenzy, but rather meets the misery of our sin with his mercy.
Episodes
Wednesday Mar 30, 2022
Wednesday Mar 23, 2022
Everything He Has Is Yours
Wednesday Mar 23, 2022
Wednesday Mar 23, 2022
Friends, our Gospel reading for this Fourth Sunday of Lent is one of the greatest stories ever told: the parable of the prodigal son. In a way, this parable about giving and receiving gifts tells us everything we need to know about our relationship to God.
Wednesday Mar 16, 2022
Who is God?
Wednesday Mar 16, 2022
Wednesday Mar 16, 2022
Friends, on this Third Sunday of Lent, we have the privilege of reading one of the most important texts in the Bible: God addressing Moses from the burning bush. In this passage, the true God manifests his own identity: he is closer to you than you are to yourself, yet higher than anything you can possibly imagine. And he gives himself a name: “I Am Who I Am”—not a being among beings, but Being itself.
Wednesday Mar 09, 2022
Awaiting Resurrection
Wednesday Mar 09, 2022
Wednesday Mar 09, 2022
Friends, all three of our readings for the Second Sunday of Lent emphasize the transcendent world, the goal of all our religious striving. St. Paul speaks of how the Lord Jesus “will change our lowly body to conform with his glorified body.” We get a glimpse of what this transformation, this metamorphosis, will be like in the Transfiguration of Jesus.
Wednesday Mar 02, 2022
Three Levels of Temptation
Wednesday Mar 02, 2022
Wednesday Mar 02, 2022
Friends, we come now to the great and holy season of Lent, a time to get back to spiritual basics. This First Sunday of Lent, we hear Luke’s account of the temptation of Jesus. What Jesus faces in the desert are three classical substitutes for God—three levels of temptation, three types of diversion from the ultimate good. Can we look honestly and directly at those things that will cause us to deviate from the path the Lord has for us?
Tuesday Feb 22, 2022
Beware of Blind Guides
Tuesday Feb 22, 2022
Tuesday Feb 22, 2022
There are a lot of people claiming to be spiritual gurus, teachers, and guides today. But is the person to whom you’ve entrusted your life spiritually blind? Whom are you going to follow, and why? Toward
the end of Luke’s Sermon on the Plain, Jesus—the definitive spiritual guide—offers us important lessons that help us discern our spiritual guides.
Wednesday Feb 16, 2022
Give As God Gives
Wednesday Feb 16, 2022
Wednesday Feb 16, 2022
Friends, whenever we give or receive a gift, we're always caught in a difficult rhythm of exchange and mutual obligation. The great exception to this rule is God, who is utterly gratuitous in his giving. But in Luke’s Sermon on the Plain, we are invited to share, by grace, in the very way that God exists and that God loves, giving to those in need without expecting anything in return.
Wednesday Feb 09, 2022
To What Does Your Heart Belong?
Wednesday Feb 09, 2022
Wednesday Feb 09, 2022
Friends, when our heart belongs to anything in this world, we live in an empty and lifeless spiritual space. But when our heart belongs to the Lord, the rest of our life falls into right order around that center. Our readings this week raise a crucial question: To whom—or to what—does your heart belong?
Wednesday Dec 15, 2021
Give Up the Ego-Drama!
Wednesday Dec 15, 2021
Wednesday Dec 15, 2021
Friends, most of us are stuck in the boring and narrow confines of the ego-drama. Mary is not playing an ego-dramatic game; she is playing a theo-dramatic game. We hear of how she sets out "with haste"—the sign of the saints—and it's because she knows her mission and her purpose in God's story.
Wednesday Aug 05, 2020
The Best and Worst of Religion
Wednesday Aug 05, 2020
Wednesday Aug 05, 2020
Our first reading for this weekend, taken from the first book of Kings, is one of the most beautiful and memorable passages in the Old Testament. It tells of the prophet Elijah, who heard a tiny, whispering voice, which this was the presence of the Lord.