Posts Tagged 'god'

Homily – September 14th, 2025 – Exultation of the Holy Cross

In the first reading God instructs Moses to make a bronze serpent and to put it high on a pole for everyone to see. The gospel makes reference to this event by saying, “Just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up.” What are we to make of all this lifting up business and the snake? Personally, when I see a snake, I run in the opposite direction. These scripture ...

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Homily – August 31st, 2025 – 22nd Sunday of Ordinary Time

This may be overly simplistic, but I think there are three different ways of approaching and applying the Scriptures to our lives.

The first approach is to look at somebody’s attitude, behavior, or lifestyle and say, point blank to them, “You need to change.” This usually is a stance of superiority over and against someone who we deem as needing to “shape up!” Often times, what we’re saying underneath our breath is, “Your upsetting the status quo in my life. I ...

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Reflection – Seasion of Creation 2025 – Fr. Phil Mulligan

Alongside the four seasons in nature the Church also, as you know, marks time with seasons such as Lent, Easter, Ordinary Time, Advent, and Christmas. Not as well known is the Season of Creation celebrated annually and ecumenically from September 1st to October 4th, the Feast of St. Francis of Assisi. The first Season of Creation was celebrated starting from September 1, 1989, when Ecumenical Patriarch Dimitrios l proclaimed it as the Orthodox Day of Prayer for Creation. It has ...

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Homily – August 24th, 2025 – 21st Sunday in Ordinary Time

I had the privilege twice of visiting the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem. This church building is the scholars’ and archeologists’ best guess marking where they suspect Jesus was born. I was a little shocked on my first visit, as I entered Manger’s Square, the outside courtyard leading to the church, that the front door to the church wasn’t obvious. In fact, had the tour guide not pointed out where the door was, I don’t think I would have ...

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Homily – August 3rd, 2025 – 18th Sunday in Ordinary Time

These Scripture stories, if we spend even the shortest amount of time with them, will always name what’s going on in our personal lives or in the life of the world at large. For instance, as I approach my 60th birthday in November, I’m debating whether or not to start collecting my C.P.P. (Canadian Pension Plan) at 60 or postpone it a little longer. (I’m sure I’ll get all kinds of advice from you as soon as Mass is over!).

In ...

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Homily – July 27th, 2025 – 17th Sunday of Ordinary Time

This story, about the disciples asking Jesus to teach them how to pray, begins with an observation. It begins with noticing. The disciples observed Jesus, probably from a distance, as he prays. They knew that Jesus was drawing his life, his energy, from a source that sustained him in ways that they, themselves, were not being sustained. So, they figured the key must be prayer. And if prayer sustains Jesus, then maybe they should ask how it works, so that ...

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Homily – July 20th, 2025 – 16th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Like all gospel stories, this Mary and Martha story has many layers to it. Let’s pull back a few layers and see what it has to say to us. If it is the Word of God—the living Word of God–it should be as relevant now as it was 2000 years ago.

Layer one. I’ll just call it “Mary’s gutsy move.” Actually Mary doesn’t move at all; she sitting on her duff while Martha is doing all the work. There are two ...

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Homily – July 13th, 2025 – 15th Sunday of Ordinary Time

There is a spirituality for the first half of our lives and a spirituality for the second half of our lives. First half of life spirituality and second half of life spirituality are very different from each other, but both are necessary. Unfortunately, most of us Catholics—including us priests—continue to operate out of a first half of life spirituality even when it is no longer serving us well. We just keep trying the same old things over and over again ...

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Homily – June 15th, 2025 – Trinity Sunday

Before any of the great religions were established, including Christianity, there was wisdom. Cultures were guided by wisdom figures, guides, mentors—men and women who had been on some kind of spiritual journey themselves. These wisdom figures lived by a truth that was not only bigger than their little, individual truth, but also by a truth that was humbly passed on from generation to generation. Since there were no books or computers, wisdom was passed on verbally through stories but more ...

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Reflection – June 15th, 2025 – Trinity Sunday

The late Pope Francis, in my mind, will go down in history as one of the greatest popes ever. He was a prophet, no doubt. As with all prophets, Biblical or otherwise, they are only appreciated once they are long dead. While alive they are too disturbing to our comfortable lifestyles and ways of thinking. Prophets never fit into our neatly-constructed boxes, boxes that contain our never-changing set of certitudes and rules, the very things that nobody better call into ...

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