Wednesday, May 13, 2026

17 May 2026 - prayers of the faithful for the Ascension - prison ministry

Lord Jesus, you are the eternal Son of the Father. 

Christ Jesus, your presence fills the universe. 

Lord Jesus, you guide us home with you into bright glory. 

PRIEST: We now present our prayers for our needs and the needs of the world to the God the Father who sent us his son, our Lord Jesus Christ:

1. For God’s pilgrim people throughout the world. We pray for a willingness to follow the path of love and mercy that God sets before us. We pray to the Lord.

2. For those who feel alone or abandoned. May we reach out to help our neighbors lost among violence, depression, addictions, and neglect. We pray to the Lord. 

3. For those who have served our country whom we remember on the Memorial Day weekend. For those who lost their lives in defending our country. For the families who survived them and mourned them. We pray to the Lord. 

4. For an affirmation and awareness of the dignity of all human life.  We pray to the Lord. 

5. For our family members and loved ones. May they feel our prayers and love reaching out to them each day. We pray to the Lord. 

6. For all who are grieving or suffering in different ways. May Christ Jesus offer hope and encouragement through the struggles of our journey. We pray to the Lord. 

7. For peace throughout the world, especially in the Middle East and Ukraine. For safety for the men and women in the military. We pray to the Lord. 

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

PRIEST: God of all, we believe that we shall see the good things that you have in store for us in the land of the living. Hear the sound of our call, have mercy on us and answer us, through your son Jesus Christ, our risen Lord forever and ever. AMEN.

17 de marzo de 2026 - homilía de la Ascensión de nuestro Señor Jesucristo - Hechos de los Apóstoles 1:1-11 - Mateo 28:16-20

Hoy, celebramos con la Iglesia universal la Ascensión de nuestro Señor, Jesucristo. Tal vez, tenemos preguntas sobre el motivo de esta celebración en la temporada de pascua. Por supuesto, después de la resurrección de Cristo, los discípulos de nuestro Señor quisieron tener su presencia visible siempre con nosotros.

La ascensión es un misterio de nuestra fe católica. La ascensión de nuestro Señor es la culminación de los misterios pascuales de la vida, el ministerio, la pasión, la muerte y la resurrección de Cristo. La ascensión de Cristo el paso final antes de la venida del Espíritu Santo en Pentecostés.

Pero, ¿qué significa esta palabra “Ascensión”? No utilizamos esta palabra frecuentemente en las conversaciones diarias en el mundo moderno. La Ascensión de Jesucristo no es solo una ascensión física donde él pasa de un espacio aquí en la tierra a otro espacio en los cielos. Podemos decir que la ascensión es una intensificación de la presencia del Señor en nuestra realidad, comprendiendo que él no nos abandona después de la resurrección.

Con esta celebración de la Ascensión, tal vez, preguntamos: ¿Dónde está Jesucristo, entonces, en el cielo o en la tierra?  La respuesta es sencilla: en el cielo, por supuesto, pero también, dentro de cada uno de nosotros. Es lo mismo que ocurre en la Misa: mientras la hostia, el cuerpo y la sangre de Cristo, está fuera de nosotros, la vemos y la adoramos. Cuando  recibimos la eucaristía y comulgamos, no la vemos más, ha desaparecido, se ha hecho parte de nosotros. Dios no está en los sucesos materiales que suceden en el mundo, sino en el corazón de las personas que viven cada día como sus discípulos.

La presencia de Dios está en muchos lugares en el mundo: en su sagrada palabra, en los sacramentos, en la Iglesia, en nuestra comunidad, en los más pobres y débiles del mundo, en sus discípulos, en las acciones de amor y de misericordia que hacemos a nuestro prójimo. La ascensión no es la ausencia de Dios en la tierra o en nuestra vida, sino la presencia intensificada de Dios en nuestra vida diaria.

El monje el orden del Císter Bernardo de Claraval habló de tres venidas de Cristo. Cristo vino en su nacimiento en Nazaret. El vendrá de nuevo al final de los tiempos. Y él viene a nuestros corazones cada día en nuestro camino de fe. Cristo ascendió a los cielos, pero está siempre con nosotros en espíritu. Nuestra humanidad se realiza en Dios. Debemos recordar lo que Jesús nos proclamó al final del Evangelio de Mateo que escuchamos este domingo: «yo estaré con ustedes todos los días, hasta el fin del mundo.» (Mateo 28:20).

Todos nosotros, como discípulos de Cristo: los sacerdotes, los miembros de las comunidades religiosas, los diáconos, y todos los laicos también -  estamos llamados a vivir como testigos de la resurrección y ascensión de Jesús.  Es la llamada que tenemos hoy y que tenemos cada día en nuestro camino de fe.  

29 May 2026 - prayers of the faithful for Friday of the 8th week of ordinary time

Lord Jesus - you bring us your father’s love. 

Christ Jesus - you embody God’s justice. 

Lord Jesus - you bring us the truth of the Gospel. 

Priest: With faith and hope, we present our prayers to our heavenly Father: 

1. That we in the Church may see God in the people and events and experiences of our lives. 

2. That God will stir up into a flame the gift of the Spirit in our lives. 

3. For a greater sense of reverence and respect for God’s creation. 

4. For greater unity amongst all Christians. 

5. That we work together to promote a just and safe society. 

6. For our first responders, our veterans, and the men and women serving in the military. For peace throughout the world. 

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

Priest: We present our prayers through your son Jesus Christ, our Lord forever and ever. AMEN.

28 May 2026 - prayers of the faithful for Thursday of the 8th week in ordinary time

Lord Jesus - you are the living word of God. 

Christ Jesus - you bring us salvation. 

Lord Jesus - you are our redeemer. 

Priest: With faith and hope, we present our prayers to our heavenly Father: 

1. That we in the Church may grow in our awareness of Christ’s presence in our daily lives.  

2. For a renewal of God’s spirit that is present in our hearts. 

3. That God’s spirit may heal the wounds and the misunderstandings that exist in our lives. 

4. That our governmental leaders may use their offices and abilities to address the issues that burden society. 

5. For a greater love and respect for God’s creation. 

6. For our farmers and our gardeners. For good weather and a bountiful harvest. 

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

Priest: We present our prayers through your son Jesus Christ, our Lord forever and ever. AMEN.  

28 May 2026 - homily for Thursday of the 8th week of Ordinary time - 1 Peter 2:2-5, 9-12

The apostle Peter, who is credited as being the author of today’s first reading from first letter of Peter declares to us today:  “Once you were no people – now you are God’s people.  Once you lived with no mercy – now you live in the light of God’s mercy.”  Peter states that as aliens and sojourners in this world, we are to separate ourselves from earthly desires. Do we feel like aliens in this world? That is a strong word to use, isn’t it?  Or are see ourselves attached to the things of this world, identifying ourselves with the things of this world, so much so that they separate us from God and our journey of faith?

Today, as we hear this interesting reading from the first letter of Peter, we celebrate the feast day of a saint from South America who perhaps is not very well known here in the United States.   Mariana de Jesus de Paredes was born at Quito, Ecuador of noble Spanish parents. She was orphaned as a child. She then was raised by her older sister and her sister’s husband. Mariana was drawn to the Catholic faith as a child.  Later, under the guidance of a Jesuit priest confessor, she lived a consecrated life as a lay woman, practicing austerity in devoting her life to prayer and prophecy with little sleep and little food. An earthquake and an epidemic struck Quito in 1645. Mariana felt herself being called by God to offer herself as a sacrifice for the sins of the people of her city. When the epidemic began to subside, Mariana was stricken with illness and died on May 26th. She is known by the faithful as Mariana de Jesus or Mariana of Quito. She was canonized in 1950. She is the patron saint of the city of Quito. I remember arriving in Ecuador in May 1996 as a lay missionary with the Comboni Missionary religious order. I remember that on the first Sunday we were in the Ecuador, we went to Mass on her feast day.  I remember seeing many different religious sister in their habits attending Mass. It is a beautiful memory I have from my time in Ecuador, an experience which brought me here to the priesthood. I love the story of St Mariana de Jesus. In her faith and in her humility, she brought the mercy of God to the people of her hometown.  Her example of faith calls out to us today.  


24 May 2026 - homily for Pentecost - Acts 2:1-11 - John 20:19-23

This weekend, we celebrate Pentecost, the end of the holy season of Easter and the descent of the Holy Spirit upon Christ’s apostles and the Blessed Virgin Mary in Jerusalem, 50 days after Christ’s resurrection from the dead. A part of today’s reading from the 2nd chapter of Acts that we do not hear states that Peter’s preaching at this Pentecost event resulted in the conversion of 3,000 Jews to the Way of Jesus. Thus, our celebration of Pentecost is seen as the inauguration of the Church and its evangelization efforts in the world. 

Our celebration of Pentecost is also a celebration of Christian unity, with the people of different languages and cultures brought together and they are all able to understand one another. In a world where there are literally thousands upon thousands of Christian denominations and conflicts, wars, and violence in many different forms, we none-the-less are called to work toward Christian unity and peace and justice throughout the world. 

An important theme we hear throughout the readings today is that the gift of the Holy Spirit that we receive is to be shared with others. The message of the Spirit does not just stay in our own lives and our own hearts; the Spirit moves us to action and inspire us to share our faith and our gifts with others. In his first letter to the Corinthians, St Paul explains that the various spiritual gifts of the Holy Spirit that people receive enrich the Church, activating these gifts and charisms for the common good. They may take different forms like prophecy, teaching, administration, acts of charity, healing and speaking in tongues, and they may reside in different persons like apostles, prophets, teachers, and healers. We can see a lot of these gifts at work in the members of our parish. 

We can see the Holy Spirit at work in different ways in two saints whose feast day falls on Pentecost Sunday this year.  The first is the Venerable Bede, who was born in 673 in Northeast England near the city of Durham. As a young boy, he was sent to a Benedictine abbey to receive an eduction. He remained there his entire life as a monk and a priest. When he was 13 years old, his area of England was hit with the plague. Bede was one of the few who survived. In his own description of his life, he spent it studying scripture and theology and living as a Benedictine monk. But in an era when very few people in England could even read and write, Bede wrote or translated more than 40 books on topics as diverse as natural history, astronomy, poetry, and the lives of the martyrs. His most important work was The Ecclesiastical History of the English people, a history of the the English Church and the people of England, starting the Roman invasion in Britain and covering more than 800 years. I remember reading that book in a course on Western civilization in college. Bede died in the year 735. He was named venerable by the Church in 836, but was not canonized a saint until the year 1899, more than 1,000 years after his death. That same year, he was named a Doctor of the Church by Pope Leo XIII. The life that the Venerable Bede lived in early medieval England is so different from our lives in the modern world. Through the lens of Pentecost, we can see the Holy Spirit working in the life of the Venerable Bede, in his diligence and perseverance in living as a monk and in recording the history of his people when few people would have even thought of doing such a thing. 

I also want to mention Maria of Agreda, who died on this day in 1665 at her monastery in Spain. A sister of the order of the Immaculate Conception in the kingdom of Castile and Leon in Spain, she was an abbess, spiritual writer, mystic, and evangelizer. I don’t even know where to begin to start to describe the life of this remarkable woman. She entered the monastery at the age of 16. A few years later, in answer to her prayers to bring the Gospel message to others, she received the gift of bilocation, where she would enter dream-like trances and would bi-locate to areas in present day New Mexico and Texas bring the Gospel to the native Jumano people. After her bilocation visits ended, 50 of the native people arrived at a Franciscan monastery in 1629, saying that a lady in blue had catechized them in the Catholic faith for years, describing the Franciscan habit and blue cape that was worn by her order. They were requesting baptism in the Catholic Church. At the same time, Maria had told her superior in Spain of her bilocation missionary visits. Maria described more than 500 bilocation visits to these native people. After a time, her gift of bilocation stopped.  After her death in 1665, her apparition has been seen there in Texas and New Mexico on different occasions, including giving assistance to malaria victims in the mid-19th century. She was reportedly seen there as recently as the 1940s. If that was not enough, she wrote an important theological and mystical book on the Blessed Mother entitled The Mystical City of God, which Mel Gibson used as inspiration for his movie The Passion of the Christ. Her writings also influenced of acceptance of Mary’s immaculate conception for many important Church leaders, which influenced it being declared dogma in 1854. She also was a trusted spiritual advisor for King Philip IV of Spain. The story of Maria of Agreda, the Lady in Blue, has fascinated me in recent years. I hope to visit her monastery one day in my visits to Spain. Her fervent faith and love of God and desire to evangelize others captivates me and inspire me in my service as a priest. Unbelievably, Maria of Agreda has not been declared a saint, though her cause for sainthood is being proposed by some groups. She had been declared venerable by Pope Clement X soon after her death. 

I mention these two remarkable people of faith, Maria of Agreda and the Venerable Bede in conjunction with our celebration of Pentecost, because it shows how the Holy Spirit can work in our lives in remarkable ways. Not just in huge, earth shattering ways, but in the everyday moments of our lives as well. May we feel the presence of the Holy Spirit accompanying us on our journey as we celebrate Pentecost this weekend. 

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

27 May 2026 - homily for Wednesday of the 8th week in Ordinary Time - 1 Peter 1:18-25

Today, we hear from the first letter of Peter. In great wisdom, this reading asserts that our salvation was paid for us not by things of the world such as gold or silver, but rather by the blood of Christ.  We have our new life in Christ not in the perishable things of this world, but in things that are eternal and divine. While we see things in this world that are beautiful and that catch our eye, it is the word of God that endures forever. That is where we are called to put our faith and trust.  

We have heard about this a lot about engaging the world in a “new evangelization” in recent years.  Back in the late 6th century, Pope Gregory the Great felt the call to bring the Gospel to the Anglo Saxons of Great Britain. They had not yet been converted to the Christian faith. Pope Gregory sent a man named Augustine to head a group of 40 monks to evangelize the Anglo Saxons. When I think of monks, I don’t think of them going off to mission territory and evangelizing the people there.  Augustine heard about the ferocity of the Anglo Saxons. He wanted to turn back and abandon the mission. Gregory would not allow them to turn back.  Augustine met great success in establishing 3 different mission dioceses and founding the cathedral seat in Canterbury, where his remains were buried upon his death 7 years after arriving in England. God may also be calling us out of our own comfort zone to evangelize others with the Gospel message.