Thursday, March 12, 2026

4 April 2026 - homily for the Easter Vigil Mass - Exodus 14:15-15:1 - Isaiah 54:5-14 - Isaiah 55:1-11 - Romans 6:3-11 - Matthew 28:1-10

This evening’s Mass is the highlight of Holy Week and the highlight of the liturgical year. This evening, we commemorate Christ’s resurrection on Easter weekend. 

The priest has up to seven first readings to choose from, with the priest mandated by the Church to include at least three. These readings span the trajectory of salvation history, These readings announce to us that God’s salvation continues to be accomplished in our present day. 

We start our readings with the story of the Exodus from Egypt, of God securing the liberation of the Israelites through the miraculous parting of the Red Sea. Liberated from slavery in Egypt, the Israelites begin their journey through the desert as God’s chosen people, a passage from slavery to freedom. In the resurrection of Christ that we celebrate this evening at Mass, the passage we undertake is from death to new life, a connection to the promise and fulfillment that we made to the Israelites as they journeyed to the promised land. In the Exodus story, the passage was extended the people of Israel. In Christ and his resurrection, the passage is extended to all.  

Our first reading from Isaiah this evening appeals to the faithfulness of God to his people, encompassing his steadfastness, mercy, loyalty, and love. Even when Israel wandered far from the path of faith, she is still to feel cherished and loved by God. The image of Noah and the flood reassures Israel that she will survive the disasters and calamities that befall her. God’s love will never leave his people. In the light of the paschal candle tonight, in the covenant God makes to us through his beloved son, this becomes our promise and our story too. We will be held in God’s steadfast love. In the chaos of our modern lives, this is an important message for us to hear today. 

In our second reading from Isaiah this evening, God speaks to the people of Israel who are in exile, telling them to come to the living-giving waters of faith. God offers them the opportunity to return to their beloved city, to build themselves up and to flourish once again. This is given to them freely. There is no price to pay. This is not something they have to earn. This is the mystery of salvation that we celebrate tonight through the paschal mystery, through Christ’s death and resurrection. We are invited to God’s grand banquet. We are to come to open hearts to God, just as we are to come with open and grateful hearts to the Eucharist, to the body and blood of Christ that nourishes us each time we come to Mass around the table to the Lord. 

St Paul assures us tonight in his letter to the Romans, just as Christ died on the cross and was raised by the glory of the Father, so do we die with Christ in the waters of baptism and then are raised to new life in him. In a few moments, several adults will be brought into the faith through the waters of baptism, the culmination of a year’s long journey here at our parish. They will live in Christ in the new life they will receive in the waters of baptism. Paul tells us that we must commit ourselves to live for God in the new life we have in our Lord Jesus Christ. 

The disciples who come to the tomb on Easter morning to pay honor and respect to Jesus find an empty tomb. They are greeted by the messages of the angel and by Christ himself. They are told to not be afraid, to share the message they have received with the other disciples. We have journeyed with Christ during the 40 days of Lent. Through our Lenten disciplines and devotions, we have accompanied Christ on his journey to the cross and the resurrection. For some of us, this journey through Lent may have been full of difficult challenges and struggles. For others, this Lenten journey may have been full of profound insights, edification, and enlightenment. No matter where we are in our journey of faith this evening, the light of Christ’s resurrection is there to illuminate our lives of faith. May we take the reality of life and what we have learned on our Lenten journey into this joyful season of Easter.  

3 April 2026 - Homily for the Good Friday Liturgy - John 18:1-19:42

We know that as we come to our parish Friday evening to commemorate the Good Friday Liturgy, we commemorate the death of our Savior on the cross. Jesus had come to us here on earth as a great light. Now, that light has been plunged into darkness. Our Gospel reading today from John give a strong juxtaposition of this light compared to the darkness of the world. In the Gospel of Christ’s passion, Jesus goes to the garden in darkness. Judas leads a band of soldiers and guards into the darkness of the garden, lit by their lanterns and torches. Peter’s denials of Jesus take place in the darkness of the garden, where Peter and the guards try to keep warm by the charcoal fire. Some Scripture scholars speculate that Jesus may have spent the night before his trial with Pilate in the darkness of a dungeon prison cell. 

We see many in our world who have their lives mired in darkness, whether it be the struggle to break free from addictions, being falsely accused, being in a cycle of abuse or violence, imprisoned by anger or fear. Perhaps it is a consolation to know that Jesus, the son of God who brought us salvation and truth endured things similar to the pain and agony that we endure. 

Today, as we work into our church to commemorate our Good Friday liturgy, the one day of the year when a priest is barred from celebrating Mass, we venerate the cross of Christ as a part of this liturgy. The General Instruction for the Roman Missal (GIRM) has an interesting comment regarding the veneration of the cross: “A genuflection, made by bending the right knee to the ground, signifies adoration, and therefore it is reserved for the Most Blessed Sacrament, as well as for the Holy Cross from the solemn adoration during the liturgical celebration on Good Friday until the beginning of the Easter Vigil.” Thus, from the time of the liturgy of the Lord’s passion today until our Easter Vigil Mass tomorrow, we offer the same reverence to the Holy Cross as we would to Christ present in the Blessed Sacrament in the tabernacle. What a powerful teaching this is for us Catholics. Jesus died for us, and his cross is now the symbol of his victory over sin and death. 

Our commemorate of the three liturgies of the Tritium is an important moment for us Catholic in the Church’s liturgical year. Our three commemorations on Holy Thursday, Good Friday, and the Easter Vigil are to been seen as one continuous liturgy that commemorate the paschal mysteries of Christ our Lord. Today is indeed a sober and solemn occasion, but the hope of the resurrection is still alive in our hearts today as we anticipate our celebration of Easter.  

Prayers of the faithful for holy Thursday - 2 April 2026

Introduction: We begin the Paschal Triduum this evening, the three-day remembrance of Christ's passion, crucifixion, and resurrection. We are called to remember how Christ’s life ended here on earth in triumph disguised as defeat. This evening on Holy Thursday we hear how Jesus gave his disciples a model for the mission of the Church, as he came to them as a servant on his knees to wash their feet. May Jesus’ lesson be a example for us as we proclaim his passion, death, and rising to the world. 

Penitential rite - Priest

Lord Jesus, you washed the feet of your disciples.

Christ Jesus, you gave us the Eucharist as the everlasting memorial of your light and life.

Lord Jesus, you summon us to your table of reconciliation and peace.

Priest: May we be animated by the love that Jesus showed humanity as he washed the feet of the disciples and commanded us to do likewise. We now turn to God with our needs and the needs of the world in our prayers: 

1. That with love and compassion, we in the Church may serve those in need just as Jesus served his disciples at the Last Supper. We pray to the Lord.

2. For those who are suffering in pain and in grief. That their burdens may be lifted through God’s mercy. We pray to the Lord.

3. For the men and women who dedicate their lives to ordained or lay ministry. That they may be renewed in mind and spirit as they serve God’s mission. We pray to the Lord.

4. For our Jewish brothers and sisters, that our prayers to God be united with their prayers in our liturgies during holy week. We wish blessings on the Jewish people as them commemorate their holy days this week. We pray to the Lord.

5. For our faith communities of Holy Savior and Immaculate Conception, especially for those who will be received into the Church on Easter weekend. That our participation during these holy days renew in us our mission to serve one another. We pray to the Lord.

6. For the repose of the souls of the faithful departed. For their entry into eternal life. We pray to the Lord.

7. For peace in the Middle East and throughout the world. We pray to the Lord. 

8. For the prayers we hold in the silence of our hearts. For our prayer intentions spoken and unspoken. We pray to the Lord.

Priest: God of the eternal covenant, you so loved the world that you gave us your beloved son to live for us, to die for us, and to guide us to you. We ask that you inspire us to serve one another. We make our prayers through your son Jesus Christ, our Lord forever and ever. AMEN.

2 April 2026 - homily for Holy Thursday - Exodus 12:1-8, 11-14 - John 13:1-15

We started Holy Week last Sunday, with Palm Sunday, marking Jesus’ triumphant enter into the holy city of Jerusalem. On Tuesday, we here in the Diocese of Jackson commemorated Chrism Mass, which the Bishop celebrates with priests from throughout the Diocese and during which he consecrates the sacred Chrism and blesses the other oils. This Mass is amongst the principal manifestations of the fullness of the Bishop’s Priesthood and is considered to be a sign of the close bond between the Priests and their Bishop. Starting several years ago, our Diocese decided to shift the emphasis of the Chrism Mass from the priests to a celebration of the Bishop with the Catholic school children of the Diocese.  

Today, we celebrate Holy Thursday, the Last Supper of Jesus Christ, when he established the sacrament of Holy Communion prior to his arrest and crucifixion. This Mass also commemorates Jesus’ institution of the priesthood. Jesus celebrated the dinner as a Passover feast. During the Mass on Holy Thursday, the establishment of the priesthood is reenacted with the priest washing the feet of twelve parishioners, following the example of Jesus washing the feet of his twelve disciples at the Last Supper. Above all, a priest is to serve God and God’s people with humility and obedience, to be a servant just as Jesus came as a servant. At the end of today’s Mass, the tabernacle is emptied of the Eucharist and put at a place of repose outside of the church’s sanctuary area. The altar is stripped bare. And the Catholic faithful are invited to spend time after the Holy Thursday Mass in Eucharistic adoration with the Lord while the sacrament is in repose. This is done to prepare the Church and to prepare the faithful for crucifixion of Jesus tomorrow on Good Friday. 

Holy Thursday also marks the beginning of the Triduum of liturgies during Holy Week, with the Good Friday liturgy commemorating the day Jesus died, and with the Easter Vigil Mass celebrating the resurrection of our Lord.  

I remember last year, one of the inmates asked me, Father Lincoln, I know that I should know this already, but could you explain to me in words that I can understand what the term “paschal mysteries” means? The word paschal comes from the Hebrew word “pasach” used to describe the passover, when the Lord passed over the houses of the Israelites that were smeared with the blood of a sacrificial lamb on their doorposts, while the Lord struck down the firstborn of the Egyptian households that were not marked with the blood of the lamb. The sacrifice of an innocent lamb became the means of their salvation and their deliverance from captivity in Egypt. We hear about this passover event in Egypt in our first reading from Exodus today. In a similar way to the Passover event in Egypt, God sent his son our Lord Jesus Christ to be our paschal lamb. The essence of our faith is found in the paschal mysteries: that Jesus came to die for us and to free us from sin so that we might have a new and eternal life. The paschal mysteries refer to God’s plan of salvation, which is fulfilled in the major events in Christ life, namely his passion, his death, his resurrection, and his ascension into heaven.  

We come to our Mass today with great love and reverence, as we commemorate the great mysteries of our Catholic faith and as we begin the Triduum of liturgies.  

1 April 2026 - homily for Wednesday of Holy Week - Matthew 26:14-25

We get ready to celebrate the Triduum of liturgies starting tomorrow. The reflection in the Little Black book today was explaining that the word “Triduum” means “three days” in Latin. The Triduum begins on Holy Thursday evening and ends at the Easter vigil on Saturday evening. 

Yesterday at the Chrism Mass, the priests of our Diocese renewed their promise of obedience to the Bishop. As I made the choice yesterday at Mass to continue to be obedient to him, I thought about the different choices we make in life. We make good choices that bring us closer to God, but we can make bad choices that turn us away from God and lead us astray on our journey. 

In today's Gospel, Judas betrayed Jesus after he shared a meal with him and the rest of his disciples on the Jewish holidays. Judas knew in his heart that he would deliver Jesus into the hands of those who wanted to kill him. Judas is an example of choosing to go down the wrong path on our journey of faith. 

Jesus, as the Son of God, could have demanded that people serve him. But Jesus came to serve others, not to be served. Tomorrow, on Holy Thursday, we will remember how Jesus washed the feet of his disciples, an action that was normally performed by a slave or a servant. Jesus came to serve and to help others, which is so different from the attitude that Judas had, how he would betray his friend for his personal gain.

As we commemorate Holy Week, let us remember all those things we need to get rid of so that we will be more like Jesus, who came to serve, and less like Judas, who betrayed Jesus and followed his own self-interests.


1 April 2026 - Prayers of the faithful for the Wednesday of holy week

Lord Jesus - you reach out to us in our brokenness and in our weaknesses. 

Christ Jesus - you bring us the hope of our faith. 

Lord Jesus - you call us to conversion and renewal. 

PRIEST: In faith and trust, we present our prayers to our heavenly Father as we journey with Jesus during the masses and liturgies of Holy Week: 

1. That God will lead us to forgiveness and healing in our lives. 

2. For those who are struggling on their journey of faith, that our commemoration of Holy Week touch their hearts and encourage them on their journey. 

3. For our first responders, for our medical professionals, for our veterans, and for the men and women serving in the military. 

4. For our sick and the afflicted. That God’s love and mercy will renew them and strengthen them and bring them healing in body, mind, and spirit. 

5. For the faithful departed. For their entry into eternal life. For the souls in the process of purification in purgatory. 

6. For peace throughout the world, especially in Ukraine and the Middle East. 

7. For the prayers we hold in our hearts today. 

PRIEST: With humble hearts, we present these prayers through your Son Jesus Christ, our Lord forever and ever.  AMEN.  

31 March 2026 - prayers of the faithful for Tuesday of Holy Week

Lord Jesus - you call us to reconciliation and healing . 

Christ Jesus - you bring us hope. 

Lord Jesus - you call us to conversion. 

Priest: In faith and trust, we present our prayers to our heavenly Father as we commemorate Holy Week: 

1. That our journey of faith will inspire us to reach out to others in spiritual and corporal works of mercy.

2. That we will work toward forgiveness and healing in our own lives and in our community.  

3. That we in the Church may be witnesses to the truth and freedom of our faith. 

4. For healing for the sick and the afflicted. For those in the hospital, hospice, and nursing home.  

5. That God will strengthen all our families in faith, hope, and love. 

6. That all Christians may accompany Jesus on his journey to his death and resurrection during holy week. 

7. For peace in the Middle East and throughout the world. 

8. For the prayers we hold in the silence of our hearts today. 

Priest: With humble hearts, we present these prayers through your Son Jesus Christ, our Lord forever and ever.  AMEN.