Thursday, July 31, 2025
Gordon Hayward - Butler Star and NBA Star converts to Catholicism!
Monday, July 7, 2025
Saint Paul's Greatest Failure - Homily for the 14th Sunday in Ordinary Time, 2025
Saint Paul’s Greatest
Failure as a Preacher
I would like to preach about Saint Paul’s greatest failure
as a preacher, how he learned from it, and what the implications are for us
today.
About halfway through the Acts of the Apostles, it talks
about how Saint Paul went to Athens. And
he is walking around Athens getting ready for his opportunity to address the
philosophers in Athens. Saint Paul sees
all these different altars around town just off to the side of the roads. There was an altar to Zeus, and candles and
incense being lit at the altar by devotees of Zeus. Maybe several hundred yards down the road,
there was an altar to Aphrodite, with a statue of Aphrodite on it, and candles
and incense being burned to honor her.
Saint Paul, at some point during his walk around Athens
comes across an altar, as the inscription says, to “an unknown god” with no
statue on it.
Later that day, then, when Saint Paul gets his chance to
speak to the people of Athens, he shares the experience of his walk through
town and says “As I walked through your town, I came across an altar to an
unknown god. That is the god that I serve.” And the people of Athens are completely
unimpressed and say “we should like to hear more about this from you some
other time” which means exactly what it does 2,000 years later – “we could
care less.”
The Acts of the Apostles says after this, Saint Paul went to
Corinth.
And when we read Saint Paul’s first letter to the
Corinthians, it is clear, right from the very start, that he has learned two
HIGHLY valuable lessons from his Athens failure. In Chapter 1 Saint Paul writes “Jews
demand signs and Greeks look for wisdom, but we
proclaim Christ crucified.”
And in Chapter 2 Saint Paul says “When I came to you,
brothers, proclaiming the mystery of God, I did not come with
sublimity of words or of wisdom. For I resolved to know nothing while I was
with you except Jesus Christ, and him crucified”
In Athens, Saint Paul did not mention the Name of Jesus, and
he did not mention suffering.
In our Gospel today, when Jesus sends out the 72, they come
back saying “Jesus, at the mention of your NAME, demons tremble. In the Mass, and everywhere, when we hear the
name of Jesus mentioned, we are to bow our heads. If we hear someone take the name of Jesus in vain,
we should charitably correct them, and ask them not to take the name of Jesus
in vain.
So, getting to our 2nd reading today, Saint Paul
says “may I never boast, except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ”
The lesson, it seems to me, is clear. When we are talking to people, we should be
mentioning the name of Jesus, and we should be talking about the power of the Cross; the power of suffering and offering our suffering up, and how that helps others
and ourselves. We should be, as Saint
Paul says elsewhere, “boasting in our weaknesses” (2 Corinthians 12:9)
Let us never fail to mention Jesus’ Name when trying to spread
the Good News of the Gospel with Joy, and may others see in us a joy in the
midst of the various sufferings, big and small, that we encounter each
day. As St. Paul learns, those are the 2
things that will attract other people to also follow Jesus Christ.
Friday, July 4, 2025
Mass for July 4th, 2025
The Catholic Church has a special Mass for the United States every July 4th. I prayed the Mass this morning. The Collect (opening prayer) was especially poignant:
Father of all nations and ages,
we recall the day when our country
claimed its place among the family of nations;
for what has been achieved we give you thanks,
for the work that still remains we ask your help,
and as you have called us from many peoples to be one nation,
grant that, under your providence,
our country may share your blessings
with all the peoples of the earth.
Through our lord Jesus Christ, your son,
who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the holy spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.