Friday, June 26, 2026

26 June 2026 - prayers of the faithful for Friday of the 11th week in Ordinary time - prison ministry

Lord Jesus - you call us to missionary in spirit. 

Christ Jesus - you proclaim the good news of the Gospel. 

Lord Jesus - you bring us God’s peace. 

Priest: We come before our loving Father this evening as we lift our prayers to heaven. 

1. For Pope Leo XIV, and Bishop Joseph Kopacz. For all who lead us in the Church in faith and love. We pray to the Lord. 

2. May the words and actions of our daily lives help us to bear witness to the joy of the Gospel. We pray to the Lord. 

3. For all civic and governmental leaders. May our worldwide leaders work for the basic needs of all people. We pray to the Lord. 

4. May we welcome the lost and the marginalized in our community. We pray to the Lord. 

5. For the anguished and the sorrowful. May their hope be in Christ’s healing love. We pray to the Lord. 

6. For our deceased loved ones and family members. May God welcome home those who have taken their last breath here on earth. 

7. For our children and family. May they feel our prayers and love reaching out to them. We pray to the Lord. 

8. For all who are traveling during these summer month. For safe travels. We pray to the Lord. 

9. For the prayers we hold in the silence of our hearts. 

Priest: Gracious and merciful Father, listen to our needs as we reach out to you for purpose, hope, and direction. We make our prayers through your son Jesus Christ, our Lord forever and ever. AMEN. 

Thursday, June 25, 2026

7 July 2026 - prayers of the faithful for Tuesday of the 14th week in ordinary time

Lord have mercy - you bring us the love of your Father. 

Christ have mercy - you call us to continue your mission and ministry.

Lord have mercy - you are our savior and our redeemer. 

Prayers: Let us pray to our loving Father as we lift our prayers to heaven. 

1. For Pope Leo XIV, Bishop Joseph Kopacz, and all our Church leaders. May their lives bear witness to Gospel joy and commitment.

2. For all civic and governmental leaders. May they work for us and peace in our communities. 

3. That all of us Christians work towards a thriving Christian witness to the world. 

4. For the afflicted and those who suffer in everyday life each day. May there be people who reach out to them. May their hope be in Christ’s healing love. 

5. For those who have died. For their entry into eternal life. For those who grieve their deceased loved ones. 

6. For greater love and care for God’s creation. 

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

Priest: Gracious and merciful Father, we asks that you hear the prayers that we present to you today through your son Jesus Christ, our Lord forever and ever. AMEN. 


Prayers of the faithful for the 14th Sunday of Ordinary Time - 5 July 2026 - prison ministry

Introduction: With great joy, we celebrate our nation’s independence day this weekend and the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. As we gather as a community of faith, may we give thanks for the many blessings we have as individuals, as families, and as a nation. We we approach the Lord’s table today with reverence and hope. 

Lord Jesus - you give praise to your heavenly Father. 

Christ Jesus - you reach out to those who are burdened in life. 

Lord Jesus - you are seated at the right hand of the Father. 


Priest: Christ invites us to come to him with all that burdens us. In his name, we now offer our prayers with hope and trust: 

1. We pray for Pope Leo XIV, Bishop Kopacz, and all our Church leaders. May they be strengthened by the Spirit in proclaiming the Gospel to the world. We pray for the leaders of our Catholic community here at CMCF. We pray to the Lord. 

2. We pray for all religious and governmental leaders. May they collaborate together to bring peace to the world. We pray to the Lord. 

3. For people struggling with anxiety or stress or depression, especially those who have suffered abuse of any kind. May we, as members of God’s holy church, reach out to all in need to help lighten their burdens. We pray to the Lord. 

4. For the sick and the afflicted in our families and here at CMCF. For all who have asked for our prayers. We pray to the Lord. 
5. We pray for our country as we celebrate the 4th of July this weekend. We pray to the Lord. 

6. For our children and families. For safe travels during the summer. And for a good summer break. We pray to the Lord. 

7. For boldness and courage in our lives of discipleship. That we may be faithful in our witness of the Gospel message and dedicated in our service. We pray to the Lord. 

8. For the prayers we hold in the silence of our hearts. We pray to the Lord. 

Priest: We praise you, O God, for all the ways in which you care for your people. Receive these prayers on behalf of those who seek healing and release from life’s burdens. We ask this through Christ our Lord forever and ever. Amen.

Prayers of the faithful for the 14th Sunday of Ordinary Time - 5 July 2026

Introduction: With great joy, we celebrate our nation’s independence day this weekend and the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. As we gather as a community of faith, may we give thanks for the many blessings we have as individuals, as families, and as a nation. We approach the Lord’s table today with reverence and hope. 

Lord Jesus - you give praise to your heavenly Father. 

Christ Jesus - you reach out to those who are burdened in life. 

Lord Jesus - you are seated at the right hand of the Father. 

Priest: Christ invites us to come to him with all that burdens us. In his name, we now offer our prayers with hope and trust: 

1. We pray for Pope Leo XIV, Bishop Kopacz, and all the bishops of our Church. May they be strengthened by the Spirit in proclaiming the Gospel to the world. We pray to the Lord. 

2. We pray for all religious and governmental leaders. At all levels, may they be led to a realistic collaboration to bring peace to the world. We pray to the Lord. 

3. We pray for people struggling with anxiety or stress in their lives, especially those who have suffered abuse of any kind. May we, as members of your church, reach out to all in need to help lighten their burdens. We pray to the Lord. 

4. We pray for the sick and the afflicted of our parish. For all who have asked for our prayers. We pray to the Lord. 
5. We pray for our country as we celebrate the 4th of July this weekend. We pray to the Lord. 

6. For boldness and courage in our lives of discipleship. That we may be faithful in our witness to the Gospel message and dedicated in our service. We pray to the Lord. 

7. For the prayers we hold in the silence of our hearts. We pray to the Lord. 

Priest: We praise you, O God, for all the ways in which you care for your people. Receive these prayers on behalf of those who seek healing and release from life’s burdens. We ask this through Christ our Lord forever and ever. Amen.

Bulletin Reflection - 5 July 2026 - 14th Sunday in Ordinary Time

This weekend we celebrate our country’s national holiday and the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. As we remember how the US Bishops consecrated our country to the Sacred Heart of Jesus last month in honor of that 25th anniversary, I pray that all of us continue to grow in our devotion to the Sacred Heart and in our love for the Eucharist. May we continue to find ways that we can live out the spirit of the Eucharist each day. I wish all of you a blessed holiday weekend. May we pray together for our country and give thanks for the many blessings we have had as a nation. Father Lincoln. 

Monday, June 22, 2026

28 June 2026 - homily for mission appeal for the 13th Sunday in Ordinary Time cycle A - Matthew 10:37-42

It is very wonderful being with all of you here today to celebrate Mass around the table of the Lord. My name is Father Lincoln Dall. I come to you as a brother in Christ from the Diocese of Jackson (Mississippi) in the deep South. When your parish receives a mission visit, you probably expect a missionary serving in a faraway land overseas. However, I’m from missionary territory in our own country. Our Diocese has the lowest percentage of Catholics of any Diocese in the US, about 3%. However, we have the largest Diocese geographically east of the Mississippi River. Most of our 73 parishes and 15 mission churches are small and located in rural areas. We don’t have any large cities in Mississippi, so our parishes are spread out throughout sparsely populated rural areas, which would be familiar to all of you here in southern Indiana. Some counties in Mississippi only have one parish. Some do not even have that.

In our Gospel today, Jesus talks about how his disciples should received a warm welcome when the bring the Gospel to the community. But also Jesus gives us a challenging instruction, warning that “anyone who prefers father or mother to me is not worthy of me”. This challenge reflects the reality of the Early Church, where the threat of persecution was common. In cases where some family members were Christian and some were not, the choice between “preferring” mother or father to following to Christ faced such believers in their daily reality. We see a lot of religious persecution throughout the world today and even a backlash against Christianity in our own country. In the midst of the challenging circumstance of the modern world, we try to bring the Gospel message to the people of the Diocese of Jackson in a warm welcoming spirit in both our words and our actions in different ways. 

As you are hearing my homily today, you probably do not detect a strong Southern accent. That is because I am not originally from Mississippi. I am originally from Chicago. I currently serve as the pastor of Immaculate Conception Catholic Church in Raymond, MS and Holy Savior Catholic Church in Clinton, MS, two towns just outside the city of Jackson. I have also been working in the chancery office for 8 years, currently serving as vicar general of the Diocese. 

In wanting to share some specific ministry stories with all of you, I thought of the prison ministry in our Diocese, something that is very dear to my own heart. I have been involved in prison ministry for 18 years. I go out to the federal prison in Yazoo City, which has about 6,000 inmates, and the Central Mississippi state prison just outside of Jackson, with about 3,500 inmates. For many years, we struggled to even get access to see the inmates. Often, at the state prison, I would have mass at the foyer of the building where the inmates lived, sometimes in the fire station at the prison, or even on a picnic bench outside the prison cafeteria. Several years ago, we got access to have Mass in the chapel and have been able to go out every week, which has made a huge difference. You can imagine the terrible living conditions we have in the prisons in Mississippi. There is a lot of gang activity, violence, and drug use. Most of the inmates live in housing units that have no air conditioning. Unbelievable. Yet, our ministry has transformed the lives of many inmates. We usually have about 150 inmates attending Mass during any given week. We have 10 men entering the Church this year. For the last two years, we have been operating a garden project as a part of our ministry, where were have garden areas around the prison where the prisoners grow vegetables, herbs, and flowers. It has been a huge success. We try to tie the gardening to our Catholic spirituality. A lot of the produce goes to the prison cafeteria, and in certain raised garden, the inmates get to keep the produce for themselves. I am very passionate about the prison ministry.  It is amazing to see God at work in this mission environment of the prisons. 

I am here as a priest from the missionary Diocese of Jackson to share some of our stories with you as a part of our Church’s larger missionary effort.  Pope Francis always said that we as a Church should never lose our missionary identity, that we are to be a Church who goes forth into the world and invites others to our faith. All of us are called to be missionary in spirit, to be a part of the universal mission effort of the Church. Most importantly, in a world torn apart by divisions and conflict, we must recognize each other as our brothers and sisters in Christ. When we see ourselves as missionary in spirit, when we encounter our neighbor and invite him into our faith, it will open up so many possibility for us as well on our own journey and to see the Gospel in a new wonderful light. 

I am so grateful to be here with all of you this weekend. To celebrate around the altar of the Lord. Your parish is going to have a second collection to help us with the missionary needs of our Diocese, to help our different ministries, our rural parishes, and our rural schools. I want to thank you for any help you are able to give. Also, I ask for your prayers for our Diocese of Jackson. And be assured that I will keep all of you and your parish in my prayers as well.

28 June 2026 - homily for the 13th Sunday in Ordinary time - 2 Kings 4:8-11, 14-16A; Matthew 10:37-42

When I prepare for my homilies and first look at the readings for a Sunday, I try to see a common theme in them. Sometimes the theme is direct and evident.  Other times the theme is more subtle. The theme that strikes me in today’s readings is the importance of being welcoming and hospitable.  

One of the American Catholics I admire greatly is Dorothy Day.  I had heard about her when I was a college student at Wake Forest, since she passed away when I was in college. As a young adult, before her conversion to Catholicism, Dorothy Day was a journalist who very much lived in the secular world, with organized religion being of little importance to her. However, she was not content with that lifestyle and was searching for something else. She came to the Catholic faith through he friendship with a religious sister who lived near her home in New York. In 1933, with her friend Peter Maurin, she started the Catholic Worker Movement and their houses of hospitality, modeled after the way the monasteries would welcome visitors and strangers in the Middles Ages. All people were welcome to the Catholic Worker houses of hospitality, especially the poor, the downtrodden, the outcasts. Since this was in the middle of the Great Depression in the 1930s, those who needed to be welcomed were vast. Today, many decades after their founding, there are more than 175 Catholic Worker Houses operating throughout the world. Dorothy Day once said: “Those who do not see the face of Christ in the poor, are atheists” who do not receive the entirety of Christ’s Good News.  She also said: "If I have achieved anything in my life, it is because I have not been embarrassed to talk about God." Dorothy Day died in New York City in 1980 at the age of 83. In 2000, Cardinal O’Connor of New York proposed her cause for sainthood. She was declared a Servant of Good by the US Bishops in 2012. Her cause for sainthood is under review by the Vatican. 

In our first reading today, a reward is promised to the Shunammite woman who welcomed and gave hospitality to the prophet Elisah. Her hospitality foreshadows the promise in today’s Gospel, for the person who “receives (or welcomes) a prophet because he is a prophet will receive a prophet’s reward.”  What a wonderful welcome this Shunammite woman made for Elisha in her humble abode: a small room on the roof of the house, with a bed, a table, a chair, even a lamp.  This humble, generous gesture of hospitality, offered simply out of respect for a man of God and with no thought of a reward whatever, grants her, in fact, a wonderful reward: next year, she and her husband, who were childless up to this point, would receive the gift of new life in a child born to them.  Elisha tells her that next year “you will hold a son in your arms”. So too, today’s Gospel tells us that even a simple gift of a cup of cold water will not go unnoticed by the Lord.

The idea of a warm welcome is only part of today’s Gospel message.  Jesus gives us a challenging instruction, warning that “anyone who prefers father or mother to me is not worthy of me”. This challenge reflects the reality of the Early Church, where the threat of persecution was pervasive. In cases where some family members were Christian and some were not, the choice between “preferring” mother or father to following to Christ was a daily reality for such believers. We only have to look at what is in the newspapers or on the TV to see that this was not simply a challenge for those first Christians. We see a lot of religious persecution throughout the world today and even a backlash against Christianity in our own country. At first glance, some of these phrases in the Gospel reading may seem enigmatic, but delving into them, they are certainly relevant to our modern reality. 

When our Diocese formulated goals some years ago, the term “intentional disciple” was used a lot. So, what exactly is an intentional disciple? It is one who listens and learns from Jesus, our teacher, and then chooses to follow the teacher and apply what he teaches. An intentional disciples intends to practice what is taught. St Paul’s message to Christ’s disciples in Rome in the second reading today stresses the radical change we receive in the waters of baptism: a “death” to our old existence, a death to selfishness and sin. As baptized disciples of Christ, we are made new creations who live in the light of Christ’s resurrection.  As disciples of Christ, we can truly be intentional disciples, in union with Christ, in union with Christ’s love, embodying the values of his Good News. May we all strive to follow Jesus as true disciples.