Sunday, March 1, 2026

Transfiguration. Annual Appeal (2026-03-01, Lent 2nd Sunday)

__  Click here for Audio of Homily__ 

__  Click here for Mass on You Tube channel _

[v.4]    2026-March-1, Lent 2nd Sunday  ●● _ Genesis 12:1-4a ●● _ Psalm  ●● _  2 Timothy 1:8b-10 ●●  +Matthew 17:1-9 ●●       

The Gospel of the Transfiguration we have just heard is mysterious—but it is good news. Our Savior Jesus who would one day be crucified on Mount Calvary is revealed in glory on this mountain where he is transfigured. The disciples are given hope before the Cross – and shown that suffering does not have the final word. Jesus is truly the Son of God, and He will be raised in glory.

This hope strengthens us. And that hope takes concrete form in how we care for one another.

I am Father Jim Ferry, Pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes, and I invite you to join me in supporting the 2026 Annual Appeal of the Archdiocese of Newark.

I am grateful for the way the Lord works through you—quietly and faithfully. Our parish is a reminder that God’s grace often moves through humility and generosity that does not seek attention.

Today, I ask for your financial support of the 2026 Annual Appeal. I have made my gift, and I invite you to prayerfully consider making yours.

Jesus tells us, “You are the light of the world.” Light does not exist for itself. It exists so that others can see. It guides and brings hope.

That is what your generosity does.

Here at Our Lady of Lourdes, your giving ensures that the sacraments remain accessible—from Baptism through Confirmation, Marriage, and the Anointing of the Sick. Regardless of a family’s ability to pay, we welcome children and families for religious education and sacramental preparation. You sustain worship, pastoral care, and the daily life of our parish.

The Annual Appeal extends that same spirit of mercy beyond our parish. It supports seminary education and the formation of future priests. Years ago, gifts like yours helped support me in the seminary, as well as Father Jim Chern and Father Bob Suszko. We remain grateful.

Your support also strengthens college and university student campus ministry, provides Masses for the deaf and hearing-impaired, and sustains Catholic Charities, which offers food, shelter, job training, education, and care to those most in need.

This kind of giving is often quiet—but it changes lives.

There is also a local benefit. Over the past ten years, our parish has received more than $200,000 in grants and assessment assistance through the Archdiocese. These funds helped with necessary building repairs, construction, and parish stability.

Catholic Charities also rents our school building at 100 Valley Way. The rent they pay provides more than half of our parish operating budget. The teachers and staff of Mount Carmel Guild Academy educate children with autism and special learning needs. When Catholic Charities is strong, our parish is strengthened.

Our parish goal for the 2026 Annual Appeal is $37,192. If we reach that goal by June 30, we will receive a $12,000 assessment savings that remains here to support parish life.

The Appeal is an invitation to begin again and to give generously. Every gift matters. Every act of mercy counts.

Together, may we continue to be a light for others—a parish where mercy is lived and hope is strengthened.

Thank you for your faith, your generosity, and your prayerful support. Please know of my prayers for you and your families.

Our Lady of Lourdes, pray for us.

And now, we will show the official three-minute video from the Archdiocese of Newark for this year’s Annual Appeal.

 

END OF MASS:

Before you leave today, I invite you to take a few moments to read the letter that is in your pew. It explains more clearly how the Annual Appeal supports both the wider Church and our own parish family here at Our Lady of Lourdes.

Your generosity does make a real difference. Because of your support, we have been able to remain financially stable, to care for our parish buildings responsibly, and to continue serving our community with confidence and hope.

If you have supported the Annual Appeal in the past, thank you. If you have never participated before, I invite you to consider joining in this year. Every gift, whatever the amount, helps us share the responsibility of sustaining our parish and supporting the mission of the Church.

Thank you again for your faith, your prayers, and your generosity.

 


Sunday, February 22, 2026

Fall and Rise. (2026-02-22, Lent 1st Sunday)

__  Click here for Audio of Homily__ 

__  Click here for Mass on You Tube channel _

 [v.2]  2026-February-22, 1st Sunday Lent ●● _ Genesis 2:7-9, 3:1-7 ●● _ Psalm 51 ●● _ Romans 5:12-19 ●●  +Matthew 4:1-11●●

Your Help is Needed!: As we begin Lent with prayer, fasting, and almsgiving, our Ash Wednesday collection is one concrete way we live that call together. 100% of this collection supports the future needs of Lourdes, to maintain and repair the buildings that serve our worship and parish life. I invite you to consider a gift. Please [click here for a detailed letter] in English and Spanish, and use the QR code in the attached letter if you wish to give online. Or, [CLICK HERE].

Homily Starts Here....

1. We Fall, We Rise — The Pattern of Lent

There is a story about someone who visited a monastery and asked the abbot, “What do the monks do all day?”

The abbot replied,
“We fall down. We get up. We fall down again. And we get up again.”

This is Lent.
This is the Christian life.

Adam fell.
David fell.
We fall.

But today, in the desert, Jesus does not fall.

And the question is: Why?


2. The First Temptation: Trust or Control

The first temptation seems almost harmless.

Jesus has been fasting for forty days. He is hungry. The devil says to Him,
“If you are the Son of God, command these stones to become bread.”

There is nothing sinful about bread.
There is nothing sinful about hunger.
There is nothing sinful about wanting relief.

In the Garden of Eden, the fruit was described as “good for food.”
Bread is good for food.

The problem is not the object.

The problem is this:
Will I trust God — or take matters into my own hands?

The devil does not tempt Jesus with something obviously evil. He tempts Him with something reasonable.

“You’re hungry. Fix it.”

And Jesus replies,
“Man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.”

Jesus is hungry — but He wants something more than bread.
He wants the Father’s will.


3. Original Sin: The Wound of Distrust

This is where the doctrine of original sin helps us.

Original sin is not just Adam’s mistake long ago. It is the wound we inherit — a weakness in trust, a tendency to grasp rather than receive, to control rather than surrender.

Adam and Eve did not want to rebel.
They wanted wisdom.
They wanted fullness.

But they did not trust God’s plan. They trusted what looked good in the moment — what they could measure and control. That wound — reaching for what is tangible instead of trusting what is true — still lives in us.

It explains why we struggle.
It explains why we reach for comfort.
It explains why we isolate ourselves.

It explains why we fall.

But it also prepares us to understand why we need grace.


4. David: When the Wound Becomes a Fall

Think of King David.

David did not fall in the heat of battle.
He fell when he stayed behind.

While his army was at war, David was alone on his rooftop — comfortable, idle, disconnected.

He saw Bathsheba.
He liked what he saw.
And he took her.

David did not wake up wanting to betray God.
But the wound of original sin — that weakness in trust — was still in him.

He grasped instead of receiving.
He fed a hunger the wrong way.
He turned a person into nourishment.

And it nearly destroyed him.

But David did not remain in isolation.

When confronted, he repented.
In Psalm 51 he cries out,
“Have mercy on me, O God…
Create in me a clean heart.”

David fell.
But he got up — not by his own strength — by grace.


5. Grace: Why We Can Rise Again

This is the difference between despair and hope.

If original sin were the end of the story, we would be stuck.

But it is not the end.

We are wounded — yes.
But we are not abandoned.

In Baptism, we are claimed.
In confession, we are restored.
In absolution, we are lifted up again.

We fall.
We get up.
Because grace lifts us.


6. Fasting: Not Proof, But Love

Lent is not a solitary self-improvement project.

It is not about proving something to God.

Sometimes in ordinary life we fast to get a result — before a blood test, before surgery, to improve our health numbers. We fast to prove something measurable.

But Lenten fasting is different.

It is not about proving our worth.
We already have worth.

It is about love.

In the past, Catholics used to say, “Offer it up.”

Offer your fast for someone who is hungry.
Offer your inconvenience for someone who is lonely.
Offer your sacrifice for someone who is suffering.

We believe suffering has value — not because pain is good, but because love is good.

A parent would rather suffer than see their child suffer.

We instinctively know that love is willing to bear pain for another.

When we fast in Lent, we are choosing small sacrifices in union with Christ — not to prove ourselves, but to grow in communion: communion with God, and communion with one another.


7. Fasting From Control: A Modern Desert

And fasting is not only about food.

I have realized that sometimes what I hunger for is accomplishment and control.

Part of my fasting is learning to stop working at a certain hour.
Part of my fasting is delegating instead of doing everything myself.
Part of my fasting is letting go of control.

That is uncomfortable.

It feels like hunger.

But that is the desert.

And we were never meant to walk it alone.

What helped me once overcome my dislike of studying was not suddenly liking it. It was going to the library — surrounding myself with others who were doing the same hard thing.

No one forced me.
But community strengthened my desire.

The monastery image matters:

We fall down.
We get up.
We fall down again.

Not “I,” but “we.”

Isolation weakens desire.
Communion strengthens it.

David fell in isolation.
Jesus stood firm in communion with the Father.


8. Jesus: Freedom Through Communion

Jesus is alone in the desert — but He is not isolated.

He remains in communion with the Father.

He refuses to turn stones into bread because He refuses to step outside that communion.

He wants the Father more than relief.
He wants obedience more than comfort.

Freedom is not satisfying every appetite.
Freedom is the strength to choose the good — even when it is uncomfortable.


9. Conclusion: Bread for the Journey

So this Lent, when you feel the small hungers —

for food,
for comfort,
for distraction,
for control —

ask yourself one question:

What do I truly want?

Original sin explains why we struggle to answer that.

Grace gives us the strength to answer it well.

Adam liked the fruit.
David liked the moment.

But neither truly wanted separation from God.

Jesus shows us another way.

He refuses the bread in the desert
so that He can become Bread for us.

He denies Himself
so that He can feed us with His very life.

And here is our hope:

Because He stood,
because He trusted,
because He obeyed,

we can rise again.

“Create in me a clean heart, O God.”

This is Lent.
We fall.
We rise.
Not alone — but together.

And the One who refused the bread in the desert
now feeds us with Himself
so that one day we may stand with Him forever.

[Version_02]  2026-February-22, 1st Sunday Lent

●● _ Genesis 2:7-9, 3:1-7 ●● _ Psalm 51 ●● _ Romans 5:12-19 ●●  +Matthew 4:1-11●●

1. We Fall, We Rise — The Pattern of Lent

There is a story about someone who visited a monastery and asked the abbot, “What do the monks do all day?”

The abbot replied,
“We fall down. We get up. We fall down again. And we get up again.”

This is Lent.
This is the Christian life.

Adam fell.
David fell.
We fall.

But today, in the desert, Jesus does not fall.

And the question is: Why?


2. The First Temptation: Trust or Control

The first temptation seems almost harmless.

Jesus has been fasting for forty days. He is hungry. The devil says to Him,
“If you are the Son of God, command these stones to become bread.”

There is nothing sinful about bread.
There is nothing sinful about hunger.
There is nothing sinful about wanting relief.

In the Garden of Eden, the fruit was described as “good for food.”
Bread is good for food.

The problem is not the object.

The problem is this:
Will I trust God — or take matters into my own hands?

The devil does not tempt Jesus with something obviously evil. He tempts Him with something reasonable.

“You’re hungry. Fix it.”

And Jesus replies,
“Man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.”

Jesus is hungry — but He wants something more than bread.
He wants the Father’s will.


3. Original Sin: The Wound of Distrust

This is where the doctrine of original sin helps us.

Original sin is not just Adam’s mistake long ago. It is the wound we inherit — a weakness in trust, a tendency to grasp rather than receive, to control rather than surrender.

Adam and Eve did not want to rebel.
They wanted wisdom.
They wanted fullness.

But they did not trust God’s plan. They trusted what looked good in the moment — what they could measure and control. That wound — reaching for what is tangible instead of trusting what is true — still lives in us.

It explains why we struggle.
It explains why we reach for comfort.
It explains why we isolate ourselves.

It explains why we fall.

But it also prepares us to understand why we need grace.


4. David: When the Wound Becomes a Fall

Think of King David.

David did not fall in the heat of battle.
He fell when he stayed behind.

While his army was at war, David was alone on his rooftop — comfortable, idle, disconnected.

He saw Bathsheba.
He liked what he saw.
And he took her.

David did not wake up wanting to betray God.
But the wound of original sin — that weakness in trust — was still in him.

He grasped instead of receiving.
He fed a hunger the wrong way.
He turned a person into nourishment.

And it nearly destroyed him.

But David did not remain in isolation.

When confronted, he repented.
In Psalm 51 he cries out,
“Have mercy on me, O God…
Create in me a clean heart.”

David fell.
But he got up — not by his own strength — by grace.


5. Grace: Why We Can Rise Again

This is the difference between despair and hope.

If original sin were the end of the story, we would be stuck.

But it is not the end.

We are wounded — yes.
But we are not abandoned.

In Baptism, we are claimed.
In confession, we are restored.
In absolution, we are lifted up again.

We fall.
We get up.
Because grace lifts us.


6. Fasting: Not Proof, But Love

Lent is not a solitary self-improvement project.

It is not about proving something to God.

Sometimes in ordinary life we fast to get a result — before a blood test, before surgery, to improve our health numbers. We fast to prove something measurable.

But Lenten fasting is different.

It is not about proving our worth.
We already have worth.

It is about love.

In the past, Catholics used to say, “Offer it up.”

Offer your fast for someone who is hungry.
Offer your inconvenience for someone who is lonely.
Offer your sacrifice for someone who is suffering.

We believe suffering has value — not because pain is good, but because love is good.

A parent would rather suffer than see their child suffer.

We instinctively know that love is willing to bear pain for another.

When we fast in Lent, we are choosing small sacrifices in union with Christ — not to prove ourselves, but to grow in communion: communion with God, and communion with one another.


7. Fasting From Control: A Modern Desert

And fasting is not only about food.

I have realized that sometimes what I hunger for is accomplishment and control.

Part of my fasting is learning to stop working at a certain hour.
Part of my fasting is delegating instead of doing everything myself.
Part of my fasting is letting go of control.

That is uncomfortable.

It feels like hunger.

But that is the desert.

And we were never meant to walk it alone.

What helped me once overcome my dislike of studying was not suddenly liking it. It was going to the library — surrounding myself with others who were doing the same hard thing.

No one forced me.
But community strengthened my desire.

The monastery image matters:

We fall down.
We get up.
We fall down again.

Not “I,” but “we.”

Isolation weakens desire.
Communion strengthens it.

David fell in isolation.
Jesus stood firm in communion with the Father.


8. Jesus: Freedom Through Communion

Jesus is alone in the desert — but He is not isolated.

He remains in communion with the Father.

He refuses to turn stones into bread because He refuses to step outside that communion.

He wants the Father more than relief.
He wants obedience more than comfort.

Freedom is not satisfying every appetite.
Freedom is the strength to choose the good — even when it is uncomfortable.


9. Conclusion: Bread for the Journey

So this Lent, when you feel the small hungers —

for food,
for comfort,
for distraction,
for control —

ask yourself one question:

What do I truly want?

Original sin explains why we struggle to answer that.

Grace gives us the strength to answer it well.

Adam liked the fruit.
David liked the moment.

But neither truly wanted separation from God.

Jesus shows us another way.

He refuses the bread in the desert
so that He can become Bread for us.

He denies Himself
so that He can feed us with His very life.

And here is our hope:

Because He stood,
because He trusted,
because He obeyed,

we can rise again.

“Create in me a clean heart, O God.”

This is Lent.
We fall.
We rise.
Not alone — but together.

And the One who refused the bread in the desert
now feeds us with Himself
so that one day we may stand with Him forever.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Ash Wednesday (2026-02-18)

__  Click here for Audio of Homily__ 

[ver_02, Ash Wednesday“Proportional. Purposeful. Penitential.”

Your Help is Needed!: As we begin Lent with prayer, fasting, and almsgiving, our Ash Wednesday collection is one concrete way we live that call together. 100% of this collection supports the future needs of Lourdes, to maintain and repair the buildings that serve our worship and parish life. I invite you to consider a gift. Please [click here for a detailed letter] in English and Spanish, and use the QR code in the attached letter if you wish to give online. Or, [CLICK HERE].

Today we begin Lent marked with ashes and marked with truth:

“Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.”

That reminder is not meant to petrify or terrify us.  It is meant to clarify us.
It strips away illusions—about control, importance, permanence—and brings us back to where discipleship always begins: honesty before God.

The Church gives us 3 simple practices for this season—fasting, prayer, and almsgiving—not as religious tasks, but as ways of shaping our discipleship: discipleship that is proportional, purposeful, and penitential.

Fasting: Proportional Discipleship

Jesus says, “When you fast, do not look gloomy like the hypocrites.”
In other words: don’t exaggerate it—and don’t avoid it either.

True fasting is proportional. It fits the person, the season, and the goal.

Bernadette of Lourdes understood this. She did not dramatize her suffering or defend herself loudly when she was doubted. She told the truth—quietly and consistently. Her response was measured, but it was real.

We often lose that sense of proportion or magnitude or degree. A small hurt becomes a major offense. A criticism becomes a lasting grievance. Or we do the opposite—we dismiss something that actually deserves attention.

Lenten fasting retrains us. Sometimes it means fasting from noise and reaction before we speak. Other times it means fasting from our need to be right so we can truly listen—to a child, a spouse, a coworker, someone entrusted to us.

That is proportional discipleship: not doing too much for show, not doing too little out of comfort—but preparing ourselves in proportion to the love required.

Prayer: Purposeful Discipleship

Jesus then says, “When you pray, go into your room and shut the door.”
Prayer is not about performance. It is about direction.

Purposeful discipleship asks not only what we are doing—but why.

There is a line often attributed to Mark Twain: The two most important days in your life are the day you are born and the day you discover why.

Prayer keeps us connected to the why.

Bernadette never sought attention or recognition. Through questioning and pressure, she stayed anchored to her purpose: prayer, obedience, fidelity.

Lent is a good time to ask:
Why am I fasting?
Why am I trying again?
Why do I want to change?

If the reason has grown blurry—or if our practices feel mechanical—this is the moment to ask God to help us remember the reason.

Even Jesus’ prayer in Gethsemane was purposeful: “Father… not my will, but yours be done.”
Purposeful prayer doesn’t just ask what to do—it surrenders to why we are doing it.

Almsgiving: Penitential Discipleship

Finally, Jesus speaks of almsgiving or charitable giving being done in secret.

Penitential discipleship does not draw attention to itself.
It gives itself away.

At Lourdes, Mary called for prayer and penance—not spectacle. Bernadette’s sacrifices were hidden, united to Christ, not advertised.

Real almsgiving costs us something. It empties us—of time, comfort, resources, control. And often, no one notices.

But that is precisely the point. Christ Himself “though he was rich, became poor for our sake.” Penitential giving joins us to Him. It loosens our grip and heals our hearts.

There is an image used after earthquakes: rescuers sometimes shut down all machinery and stand in silence, listening for voices beneath the rubble.

Lent does that for the soul.

In restraint, silence, and hidden generosity, God’s voice becomes audible again.

Jesus, faced with the woman caught in adultery, does not shout. He bends down. He writes in the dust. Calm. Truthful. Merciful. And ultimately penitential—because He will carry her sin, and ours, to the Cross.

Conclusion  à  Today, as ashes rest on our foreheads, we are reminded who we are—and whose we are.

This Lent, let us practice:

  • Fasting that is proportional
  • Prayer that is purposeful
  • Almsgiving that is penitential

Mary led Bernadette to prayer and penance. She leads us there still.

And in that quiet, hidden place with her Son, we find not just discipline—but healing that lasts.


Sunday, February 15, 2026

Beyond the Minimum (2026-02-15, 6th Sunday)

__  Click here for Audio of Homily__ 

__  Click here for Mass on You Tube channel _

[v.5]  2026-February-15, 6th Sunday of Year A,  ●● _ Sirach 15:15-20 ●● _ Psalm 119 ●● __1 Corinthians 2:6-10 ●● _ +Matthew 5:17-37 _●●   “Beyond the Minimum”

A few years ago — more than a few, actually — when I was in college, I got a summer job that paid more than minimum wage. To give you an idea of how long ago this was, minimum wage at the time was about four dollars an hour, and I found a job paying almost eight dollars an hour.

I was very pleased. I was earning more than the minimum.

In the Bible, though, the word wage or wages does not just mean money. It refers to a reward — sometimes a reward for good deeds, sometimes the consequence of wrongdoing. Saint Paul says, “The wages of sin is death.” In other words, our choices have outcomes.

But here is the hope: even in our mistakes, even in our sins, those moments can become occasions of grace — if we allow God to work through them and in us.

In today’s Gospel, Jesus refuses to let us live at the level of the minimum — not minimum wage, not minimum worship, not minimum effort in the spiritual life.

“You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not kill.’
But I say to you, whoever is angry with his brother or sister will be liable to judgment.”

“You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not commit adultery.’
But I say to you, whoever looks at another person with lust in his heart has already committed adultery.”

These are high standards. More than the minimum. Jesus moves the law from external behavior to the interior life. He calls us beyond simply avoiding serious sin. He calls us to a transformed heart.

I would like to reflect on this in three ways:  contemplation, consumption, and commitment.


1. Contemplation

Right now, you are contemplating. You are praying. You are here at Mass.

But Jesus reminds us that before we come to the altar, before we offer our gift, before we receive Holy Communion, we are called to reconciliation.

“If you bring your gift to the altar and there recall that your brother or sister has something against you, go first and be reconciled.”

We understand this in family life. If you are going to Thanksgiving dinner or Christmas dinner, isn’t it better to make peace before you sit down at the table? If there is tension, if there is a broken relationship, the meal is not the same.

In the same way, we are called to make peace with God and with one another. The Sacrament of Penance allows us to do that. As Psalm 51 says, “A humble, contrite heart, O God, you will not spurn.”

And this brings me back to that summer job.

I was working as a banquet waiter at a large hotel. We were under the spotlight during those dinners — everything visible, everything noticeable. We were given very specific instructions about what to do and when to do it.

One evening, the instructions went in one ear and out the other. During the dinner, my boss came up to me and said, “You’re not supposed to be here right now.”

Actually, I already knew it. As soon as I saw him walking toward me, I knew I had made a mistake.

But what stayed with me all these years was this: he did not embarrass me publicly. He did not correct me in front of everyone. He took me aside and corrected me one-on-one. Then it was over.

If he had embarrassed me in front of my coworkers, I would have felt humiliated. But he respected me. That made a lasting impression on me.

Years later, I realized that the real reward — the real wage — of that summer was not the extra pay. It was that lesson. Even my mistake became something that formed me.

That is how God works. He corrects us, but He does not humiliate us. He convicts, but He does not crush. And even our errors can bear fruit when we allow Him to teach us.

That is contemplation — allowing God to work in the heart.


2. Consumption

Jesus also speaks about what we consume — what we allow into our hearts.

He moves adultery from the physical act to the gaze — to what we dwell upon interiorly.

We live in a world of constant images and information. Not everything we consume nourishes us. What we repeatedly look at shapes how we see other people.

If we fill our minds with images that reduce people to objects, we begin to see them that way. But if we guard our hearts, we begin to see others as whole persons — created in the image and likeness of God.

So I encourage parents, grandparents, and all adults: help young people manage what they consume. But also remember — they are watching what we consume.

If we are constantly on our phones, constantly distracted, constantly scrolling, we teach them that this is normal.

Purity and chastity are not about fear. They are about freedom. They are about seeing others as persons, not as objects.

Small choices matter. Turning off the phone. Turning off the computer. Looking away. Taking a break. These are not dramatic gestures — but they shape the heart.

Jesus calls us beyond the minimum here as well.


3. Commitment

Finally, Jesus says, “Let your yes mean yes, and your no mean no.”

This speaks directly to marriage — especially fitting around Valentine’s Day.

Marriage is beautiful. But it is also demanding. It requires forgiveness, sacrifice, and choosing the other person again and again.

Real love is proven not simply on Valentine’s Day, but on ordinary Tuesdays and Wednesdays and Thursdays.

Marriage reflects Christ’s faithful love for His Church. It is not something we walk away from simply because it becomes painful.

At the same time, we recognize that there are victims of divorce and separation — spouses who were abandoned, families who were wounded.

If this is part of your story, know that you are loved. You are not rejected. We as priests are called to walk with you, to listen to you, to help you discern a path forward, and whenever possible, to help you return to the sacraments.

No life is too complicated for God’s mercy.


Conclusion: Beyond the Minimum

This week we also remember Saint Bernadette of Lourdes.

By worldly standards, she had very little — she was poor, sick, and uneducated. But she gave what she had. She gave her trust. She gave her fidelity. She gave her “yes.”

She did not give the minimum.

The true wage — the true reward — of the Christian life is not money. It is a transformed heart.

Jesus calls us beyond the minimum — not to perfection overnight, but to steady growth in grace.

And when the call feels high, when the standard feels demanding, remember what Saint Paul tells us:

“I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.”

Not by our strength.
Not by willpower alone.
But through Christ.

He fulfills the law within us.
He strengthens what we offer.
And whatever we give Him in love, He can transform. 

Sunday, February 8, 2026

Salt. Light. Mercy (2026-02-08, 5th Sunday / Lourdes Feast)

__  Click here for Audio of Homily__ 

__  Click here for Mass on You Tube channel _

[v.62026-February-8, 5th Sunday of Year A, ●● Isaiah 58:7-10 ●● Psalm 112 ●● 1 Corinthians 2:1-5 ●● Matthew 5:13-16 ●●

Salt, Light, and Mercy

1. A Parish Feast and the Way God Works

This Sunday, as the parish of Our Lady of Lourdes, we observe our patronal feast at Mass. The official feast day is this Wednesday, February 11, but we celebrate it together today as a parish family.

Because Lourdes is not just a place on a map in France. It is a place where God shows us how He works:
quietly, patiently, and through those the world might overlook or ignore.

And this is spirit of today’s Gospel.


2. “You Are the Salt… You Are the Light”

Jesus says to His disciples:

“You are the salt of the earth.
You are the light of the world.”

He does not say, Try to become salt.
He does not say, Work hard so that one day you might be light.

He says: You are.

Jesus is giving us our identity before He gives us any tasks.

Salt, in the ancient world — and even today — preserves food. It protects what is good. And salt disappears into what it touches. Light does not exist for itself. Light exists so that others can see.

Salt and light do not draw attention to themselves.
They point beyond themselves.


3. The Beatitudes and True Happiness

This Gospel comes immediately after last Sunday’s Beatitudes.

“Blessed” can also be translated as happy.

Happy are the poor.
Happy are the merciful.
Happy are the humble.
Happy are those who seek peace.

God is not placing a burden on us. He is showing us a path to a life with meaning and direction.

This is how God changes hearts —
not through noise,
not through self-promotion,
but through faithful commitment lived day after day.


4. Lourdes and the Humility of Bernadette

In 1858, God did not choose a scholar, a priest, or a person of influence. He chose Bernadette — poor, often sick, and uneducated.

When Bernadette spoke of her visions, she did not say, I saw the Blessed Virgin Mary.
She did not say, I saw Our Lady of Lourdes.

She said simply, in her own language, “I saw a beautiful lady.” (petito damiselo)

Bernadette did not speak polished theological language. She repeated what she was given. She obeyed. She stayed faithful — even when she was doubted, dismissed, and misunderstood, even by those closest to her.

That is how God works.

Not through spectacle.
Not through self-promotion.
But through humility.


5. Quiet Fidelity and the Christian Measure of Greatness

Pope Benedict XVI once wrote that what truly counts in Christianity is not greatness imposed from the outside, but obedience and humility before God’s word. That is what lasts.

And the clearest example of that quiet fidelity in the Christian life is Baptism.


6. Baptism: Identity Before Achievement

Baptism is not dramatic.
It does not draw attention to itself.
It usually happens quietly — often when the person being baptized cannot speak for themselves.

Yet in Baptism, something decisive happens.

A person is claimed by Christ.
An identity is given before anything is achieved.
A light is entrusted before it is ever fully understood.

In Baptism, God says to us:

You are … this.
You are salt.
You are light.
You are Mine.

Baptism — and all the sacraments — give us direction, even when we lose our way.


7. Losing Direction and the Call to Re-Direction

** connection to Milano Cortina winter Olympics where athletes from all over the world need instruction where to go

There is a real-life story from the 2021 Tokyo Olympics that illustrates this.

A Jamaican runner realized on the day of his race that he had taken the wrong bus and was heading in the wrong direction. He could not fix the situation himself. So he stopped and asked for help.

A volunteer helped him get to the stadium on time. He warmed up. He raced. He won.

That volunteer helped him with no expectation of medals, recognition, or media attention.
She did not know he would win.
She did not know the story would ever be told.
It did not start out as a headline.

And that is often how faith — and mercy — work:  quietly, faithfully, without guarantees.

Faith often begins with the courage to stop, listen, and choose a new direction — and with someone willing to help without needing credit.


8. Mercy and the Possibility of Conversion

If we are honest, every one of us has been on the wrong bus at some point — spiritually, morally, relationally.

Sin (sinfulness), at its simplest, is being off target — going in the wrong direction.

And mercy does not pretend the mistake did not happen. Mercy does not deny the wrong that was done. Mercy makes turning around possible.

I can think of moments in my own life when mercy was shown to me — moments when I was clearly in the wrong. That mercy did not turn my wrong into a right, but it gave me the space to take responsibility and to change.

And so we might quietly pray:

Blessed are those who were merciful to me, a sinner.
Blessed are those who were merciful to you, a sinner.
And blessed are you when you are merciful to those who trespass against you.

Mercy does not deny the injury or misdirection.
Mercy does not dismiss the wrong.
But mercy believes that no one is finished — and that with God, hearts can be changed.


9. “Are You Lost? Come Inside.”

I once saw a church sign that said simply:

“Are you lost?  Do you need directions?
Come inside.”

That is not a judgment.
It is not a condemnation.
It is an invitation.

And it sounds very much like Lourdes.

Lourdes heals not because people are impressive, but because people are honest about their need.


10. What It Means to Be the Parish of Our Lady of Lourdes

And that is what we are called to be as the parish of Our Lady of Lourdes:

A place where people do not have to pretend they have it all together.
A place where mercy preserves what is good.
A place where light is lifted up — not to glorify ourselves, but to give glory to God.


11. Living as Salt and Light This Week

I pray we can ask ourselves:

Where am I being asked to be faithful?
Where might I need direction?
Who needs patience from me?
Who needs forgiveness?
Where do I need to ask for help?

Because salt works quietly.
Light works faithfully.
And God works through humble fidelity — beginning at the baptismal font, sustained by mercy, and guided always by His grace.


12. Closing Prayer

Let us ask Our Lady of Lourdes to teach us this way.

Pray for us, O Holy Mother of God,
that we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.

Our Lady of Lourdes, Pray for Us!