
Episodes

Wednesday Jan 02, 2019
Following the Star
Wednesday Jan 02, 2019
Wednesday Jan 02, 2019
Our modern culture suggests a tension between spirituality and religion. But the Magi in today’s Gospel demonstrate that when spirituality is lifted up by revelation—when the Magi are told by the religious leaders where the Messiah is to be born—we find the object of our spiritual longing.

Wednesday Dec 26, 2018
Hannah, Her Son, and the Holy Family
Wednesday Dec 26, 2018
Wednesday Dec 26, 2018
Lots of people today will tell you what makes a family well-adjusted, functional, and peaceful. But in this week’s readings for the Feast of the Holy Family, which center on two exemplary women, Hannah and Mary, the Church wants to tell us what makes a family holy.

Wednesday Dec 19, 2018
A New David
Wednesday Dec 19, 2018
Wednesday Dec 19, 2018
The New Testament authors consistently reached to the Old Testament for their categories of understanding. Hence, Jesus is the Torah in person; the new and definitive Temple; the prophet par excellence; the fulfillment of the covenant; etc. But one of the most important of these Old Testament points of reference is the Mashiach, the anointed one, the Messiah—which is to say, the new David.

Wednesday Dec 12, 2018
Rejoice Always!
Wednesday Dec 12, 2018
Wednesday Dec 12, 2018
Like most of the prophets, Zephaniah trades in a fair amount of doom and gloom—but he also dreams of the great day of victory and vindication. The Apostle Paul—the former rabbi Shaul, who had studied the prophets and their works under the great teacher Gamaliel—came to see that in the Paschal Mystery, in the dying and rising of Jesus, the totality of Zephaniah’s message was realized. The destruction that Zephaniah and the others foresaw came massively true in the destruction of Christ’s body on the cross. However, having gone all the way down, God in Christ brought the human race all the way up. Therefore, rejoice!

Wednesday Dec 05, 2018
Mountains and Valleys
Wednesday Dec 05, 2018
Wednesday Dec 05, 2018
In our Gospel for today, Luke invokes the most significant cultural and political players of that time and place; but then, just as he did in the Christmas story, he pulls the rug out from under us. The word of God, the definitive guide to life, came not to one of the major players in their palaces, but to this isolated oddball, this mad prophet wearing animal skins and eating locusts. And this oddball prophet, who speaks the word of God, is ushering in a whole new way of ordering one’s life.

Wednesday Nov 28, 2018
A New Fixed Star
Wednesday Nov 28, 2018
Wednesday Nov 28, 2018
This Sunday is New Year’s Day, in the liturgical sense of the term. With the first Sunday of Advent, we commence the liturgical year of 2019. And New Year’s day is always a good time for resolutions, taking stock, starting over again. I want to interpret our Gospel for this Sunday, which portrays Jesus is full apocalyptic mode, in that spirit.

Wednesday Nov 21, 2018
What Does It Mean to Say that Christ Is King?
Wednesday Nov 21, 2018
Wednesday Nov 21, 2018
The liturgical year ends with the feast of Christ the King. This day reminds us what the Christian thing is all about: that Jesus really is the king, the Lord of our lives; that we belong utterly to him; and that we can say, with St. Paul, “It is no longer I who live but Christ who lives in me.”

Thursday Nov 15, 2018
Daniel and the New Kingdom
Thursday Nov 15, 2018
Thursday Nov 15, 2018
Our first reading for this weekend is from the utterly fascinating book of Daniel. Daniel is an example of apocalyptic literature, and apocalyptic books reveal something of decisive significance. We see that significance when Jesus comes preaching the kingdom of God, by which he was taken to be announcing the fulfillment of the Daniel prophecy. This is the apocalypse, the great unveiling: a new kingdom has come, a dominion that will last forever.

Wednesday Nov 07, 2018
A Tale of Two Widows
Wednesday Nov 07, 2018
Wednesday Nov 07, 2018
Today’s Scriptures highlight two widows and two very important biblical principles: God reveals himself precisely at that moment of our greatest vulnerability and need, and the grace in your life will increase in the measure that you give it away.

Wednesday Oct 31, 2018
Hear, O Israel
Wednesday Oct 31, 2018
Wednesday Oct 31, 2018
Our first reading for Mass this week contains the defining prayer of the Jewish tradition: the “Sh’ma.” In the Gospel, when asked which commandment is the greatest, Jesus, a pious Jew, recites this prayer from the book of Deuteronomy. We Christians too claim—or better, are claimed by—this great prayer. But what does it mean?