sacredheart
Thursday, June 11, 2026
Sunday, May 31, 2026
Trinity Sunday (2026-05-31)
Trinity Sunday 2026
1. From Reputation to Relationship
Today we celebrate Trinity Sunday, and we hear one of the most famous
biblical verses in all of Scripture:
"For God so loved the world that He gave His only Son, so that everyone
who believes in Him might not perish but might have eternal life." (John
3:16).
These words come from a longer conversation Jesus is having with a man named
Nicodemus.
Nicodemus was a respected Pharisee, a religious leader, sincere and
thoughtful, who wanted to understand who Jesus really was. He had heard about
Jesus. He knew Jesus' reputation. But he did not yet fully recognize who Jesus
was.
And sometimes we are not so different.
We approach God with our own expectations. We want God to fit our categories.
We want Him to confirm what we already think.
But Jesus leads Nicodemus beyond those expectations.
Jesus says:
"You must be born from above."
Nicodemus immediately interprets those words in an earthly way:
"How can a grown man enter his mother's womb again?"
He hears the words, but misses the deeper reality.
And that is part of the challenge of Trinity Sunday.
We can memorize doctrines. We can pray in the name of the Father, and of the
Son, and of the Holy Spirit. But the Trinity is not merely information about
God.
The Trinity is God inviting us into communion with Himself.
2. Learning to Recognize the Call
Sometimes recognizing a call is more difficult than we expect.
Many years ago, in the mid-1990s, I went to a restaurant and was handed one
of those wireless paging devices that would alert me when my table was ready.
At that time I had never seen such a thing before.
I brought it back to my seat and rested my hand on it.
A few minutes later it suddenly started vibrating violently.
For a split second I thought the room was moving. I wondered if there was an
earthquake or if something had happened to the chair.
Then I realized what was happening.
The device was calling me.
The signal had come in, but I did not yet understand what it meant.
In some ways, that is the spiritual life.
God is constantly calling us:
through Scripture,
through prayer,
through conscience,
through suffering,
through the sacraments,
and through other people.
But sometimes we do not recognize the signal.
Nicodemus hears Jesus speaking, but he does not yet understand what Jesus is
telling him.
The call has come in, but he is still learning how to respond.
And perhaps that is true for all of us.
3. God's Name and the Mystery Beyond the Name
That brings us to the first reading from Exodus.
Moses has returned to Mount Sinai after the disaster of the golden calf. The
people had grown impatient and turned toward an idol.
There God proclaims His name:
"A merciful and gracious God, slow to anger and rich in kindness and
fidelity."
This is one of the great moments of the Old Testament because God reveals
who He is.
And it reminds me of something that happens in many families and workplaces.
Have you ever had a parent call you by the wrong name?
Perhaps your mother wanted to call one child and accidentally said another
child's name first.
Or have you ever called one of your co-workers by the wrong name?
I do this all the time. Just ask the staff in the rectory.
Usually that does not happen because we have forgotten who the person is.
Quite the opposite.
It often happens because those people belong to the same circle of
friendship, familiarity, affection, and love.
The name matters because the relationship matters.
But the relationship is greater than the name.
Something similar is true in our relationship with God.
God reveals His name to Moses.
Jesus teaches us to call God "Father."
We are baptized in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Spirit.
These names truly reveal God.
But they do not exhaust Him.
God's revelation begins with words, but goes beyond words.
God is always greater than what we can fully understand.
That is why the Trinity is not simply a formula to memorize.
The Trinity is a mystery to enter.
4. A God Who Continues to Call
The people at Sinai did not fully understand God.
Nicodemus did not fully understand Jesus.
And we often do not fully understand God's work in our own lives.
Yet God continues calling.
This past week I celebrated another anniversary of my ordination as a
priest.
Over the years I have reflected often on what it means to be called.
Certainly there was study, formation, and preparation.
But vocation is deeper than preparation.
God calls us long before we fully understand what He is doing.
And that is true not only for priests.
Husbands and wives are called.
Parents are called.
Every Christian is called.
Discipleship is not a one-time response.
It is ongoing.
God never stops calling us toward Himself.
5. The Communion of the Holy Trinity
Ultimately, the Trinity is not a puzzle to solve.
The Trinity is the life of God into which we are invited.
As Saint Paul says:
"The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ,
and the love of God,
and the communion of the Holy Spirit be with all of you."
The Father calls us.
The Son saves us.
The Holy Spirit draws us into communion with the living God.
God never stops calling us beyond our sins.
Beyond our disappointments.
Beyond our wounds.
Beyond the limits we place on ourselves.
Calling us into the communion of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.
Why?
What is all of this for?
Who is it for?
Today we can hear the Gospel not only as a message to the world in general,
but personally:
"For God so loved YOU that He gave His only Son for you, so that you
might not perish but might have eternal life."
Monday, May 25, 2026
Mary Mother of the Church (2026-05-25)
Today, on the Monday after
Pentecost, the Church celebrates Mary, Mother of the Church.
That title is deeply connected to
Pentecost itself. Yesterday we celebrated the coming of the Holy Spirit and the
birth of the Church. Today the Church asks us to remember that Mary was there
at the Church’s beginning: present at the Cross, present among the apostles,
present in the Upper Room as the disciples waited together in prayer for the
coming of the Holy Spirit.
Mary is Mother of the Church because
she first gave flesh to Christ, the head of the Church, and because from the
Cross Jesus entrusted her to his disciples. Her motherhood did not end at
Bethlehem. It continues in the life of the Church.
The Acts of the Apostles tells us
that after the Ascension, the disciples gathered together “with one accord in
prayer,” and Mary was there among them. Before the Church went out into the
world, there was first prayer, waiting, unity, and silence before God.
That is important for us to remember
today because this year this feast falls on Memorial Day.
Memorial Day began as a day to
remember those who died in war. Over time it became a national remembrance for
all who gave their lives in service to the country. And one of the traditions
associated with Memorial Day is the national moment of silence observed at 3:00
this afternoon.
What is interesting is that the
moment of silence is meant to interrupt ordinary life. It comes in the middle
of the picnic, the baseball game, the family gathering, the long weekend. For a
brief moment, activity stops, and the nation is asked to remember sacrifice.
In some ways, the Church understands
that kind of interruption very well.
Christian prayer also interrupts
ordinary life. Silence interrupts noise. Prayer interrupts self-absorption.
Remembrance interrupts forgetfulness.
At the Cross, Mary stood in sorrow
and faith. In the Upper Room, Mary waited in prayer with the disciples. Her
silence was not emptiness. It was trust in God. It was fidelity. It was hope.
And the Church still learns from her
how to pray.
We live in a noisy world, a divided
world, a distracted world. Yet before Pentecost came upon the apostles, there
was first a community gathered together in prayer with Mary. Before the Church
spoke, the Church listened. Before the Church went out into the world, the
Church waited upon the Holy Spirit.
That is why silence can be holy.
Silence allows grief to become
prayer.
Silence allows memory to become gratitude.
Silence allows us to listen for God.
Today, as our nation remembers those
who died in sacrifice and service, we pray for them. We pray for all the
faithful departed. We pray for peace in the world. And we pray for unity in our
country and in the Church.
Mary, Mother of the Church, teaches
us that true unity is not created merely by politics or human effort alone.
Unity begins when people gather together before God in prayer.
And so today we ask her intercession
for the Church and for our nation:
that the Holy Spirit may bring peace where there is division,
hope where there is discouragement,
and deeper faith where there is fear.
May Mary, Mother of the Church, pray
for us and lead us always closer to her Son.
Sunday, May 24, 2026
Pentecost (2026-05-24)
🎧 [Listen to Homily: Audio]
📺 [Watch Mass: YouTube Video]
1.
Memorial Day and the Wounds We Remember
This weekend
our nation observes Memorial Day. Originally called “Decoration Day,” it began
after the Civil War as a time to decorate with flowers the graves of soldiers
who had died in battle. It was a way of remembering sacrifice, remembering
wounds, remembering lives given for others.
And perhaps
Memorial Day feels especially meaningful today because we also live in a
divided time. There is tension, anger, suspicion, and fear in many places in
our country and even within families. We hear many voices, many arguments, many
accusations. Yet on every coin and every dollar bill remains that ancient
phrase: E Pluribus Unum
— “Out of many, one.”
That hope
for unity is not only an American ideal. It is also deeply connected to
Pentecost.
Because
Pentecost is the moment when the Holy Spirit descends upon frightened disciples
and begins gathering divided humanity into one people in Christ.
And
significantly, Jesus does not begin Pentecost by hiding His wounds.
He shows
them.
The risen
Christ still bears the wounds of the Crucifixion. And then He says:
“Peace be
with you.”
That is
important.
Jesus does
not pretend suffering never happened.
He does not erase the wounds.
He transforms them.
And then He
gives His disciples a mission of mercy:
“Whose sins
you forgive are forgiven them.”
Pentecost is
about receiving mercy from God and then translating that mercy into the way we
treat one another.
2.
Text, Teaching, and Translation
Pentecost
can be understood with three words:
Text. Teaching. Translation.
First, there
is the text.
The text of
today’s Gospel is simple:
“Peace be
with you.”
“Receive the Holy Spirit.”
“Whose sins you forgive are forgiven.”
Then there
is the teaching.
Jesus shows
His hands and His side. The teaching is that mercy is not cheap. Mercy cost Him
something. Love required sacrifice. Forgiveness required courage.
And that
leads to the third movement:
translation.
The
disciples are now meant to translate God’s mercy into daily life.
Not merely
to admire mercy.
Not merely to discuss mercy.
But to practice mercy.
And that is
not easy.
Because
mercy requires courage.
The Church
has a word for that courage:
fortitude.
Fortitude is
the strength to pursue what is good even when it is difficult. Mercy often
requires fortitude because forgiving someone can feel risky. Showing compassion
can make us feel vulnerable. Giving another person a second chance may require
patience, prudence, and trust in God.
The Holy
Spirit gives us courage not only to receive mercy, but also to become
translators of mercy.
3.
Mercy Is Not Pretending Wrongdoing Never Happened
One evening
around nine o’clock at night, I was cleaning accumulated junk out of my car and
throwing things into the dumpster near our school building. A neighbor walking
nearby saw me and came over rather seriously and said:
“You know
that’s illegal.”
I answered
somewhat awkwardly:
“Well… I own
this place.”
Which of
course is not really true.
You own this place.
We all share responsibility for it.
But
afterward I appreciated what the man was doing. He was watching out for the
neighborhood. He cared about the community. He was trying to protect what
belonged to others.
In a strange
little way, it became a reminder that keeping God’s commandments also means
caring for one another and caring about how we behave even when nobody is
watching.
Mercy does
not eliminate responsibility.
Mercy does not pretend wrongdoing never happened.
That became
clearer to me in one of my first jobs after college.
A young man
had recently started working in our office. My boss explained that he had
gotten into serious trouble at college for creating fake identification cards
for friends. He had been suspended or expelled. His parents were deeply upset.
His future suddenly seemed uncertain.
But my boss
decided to give him work in our office for a while.
I remember
thinking how beautiful that was.
The
wrongdoing remained real.
The consequences remained real.
But the young man himself was not discarded.
Someone gave
him another chance.
That made a
deep impression on me because I thought:
“I hope that
if I ever need a second chance, someone might show mercy to me too.”
4.
The Courage to Translate Mercy
Then
recently, someone rang the rectory doorbell asking whether he could perform
court-ordered community service here at the parish. He had received a
driving-while-intoxicated charge in another state and needed twenty-four hours
of service.
At first, I
hesitated.
I felt busy.
I felt inconvenienced.
Part of me wanted to say no.
But I also
remembered that young man from years ago.
So before
deciding, I called the Archdiocese. I checked with our Safe Environment office.
I spoke with our school principal. We made sure everything would be safe and
appropriate.
And
gradually I realized:
this was an opportunity to practice mercy responsibly.
Mercy does
not mean calling evil good.
Mercy does not ignore prudence.
Mercy does not abandon truth.
But mercy
does mean believing that people are more than the worst thing they have ever
done.
That takes
courage.
Sometimes it
is easier to discard people the way we discard old objects.
To throw away relationships.
To throw away patience.
To throw away forgiveness.
But the Holy
Spirit does not discard people.
Pentecost
teaches us that God continues working within wounded and imperfect human
beings.
And perhaps
one of the greatest signs of the Holy Spirit is when someone chooses not
bitterness, not revenge, not permanent condemnation — but mercy.
5.
Pentecost and the Courage to Forgive
Today Jesus
breathes the Holy Spirit upon His disciples.
The
frightened apostles become courageous apostles.
And one of
the first gifts He gives them is the power to forgive sins.
Why?
Because
forgiveness is one of the bravest things a human being can do.
It takes
courage to seek forgiveness.
It takes courage to admit wrongdoing.
It takes courage to give another person a second chance.
It takes courage to believe that grace can still change hearts.
And maybe
that is the message we most need today.
In divided
families.
In divided communities.
In a divided nation.
The Holy
Spirit gives us the courage to translate mercy into life.
So that out
of many, we may become one.
Sunday, May 17, 2026
Infinity and Beyond (Ascension, 2026-05-17)
🎧 [Listen to Homily: Audio]
📺 [Watch Mass: YouTube Video]
1. “Why Are
You Standing There Looking at the Sky?”
This Sunday
is the Ascension of the Lord. In the Acts of the Apostles, the disciples stood looking
into the sky, watching Jesus disappear into the clouds. Do you perceive in them
some confusion and sadness? Jesus had risen from the dead, spent time with them
again, spoken words of peace to them—and now He seems to be leaving.
Then the
angels ask them:
“Why are you standing there looking at the
sky?”
In other
words: do not remain frozen. Do not stay trapped in fear or uncertainty. Go
forward.
The
Ascension is not really about Jesus abandoning His disciples. It is about Jesus
preparing them—and us—for a deeper kind of presence. Christ ascends to the
Father, but He does not stop loving, guiding, or strengthening His people.
Through the Holy Spirit, His presence now reaches every time and every place.
The
Ascension is not the end of the story. It is the beginning of the Church’s
mission and the beginning of a new hope.
2. Toy
Story and the Fear of Being Forgotten
There’s a
movie that touches on some of these same fears and hopes. Many of you have
probably seen Toy Story.
The original movie came out in 1995 with Woody, Buzz Lightyear, and the other
toys belonging to a boy named Andy.
At first
glance, it’s simply a funny animated film about toys coming to life. But
underneath the humor, the toys struggle with very human fears.
Their
biggest fear is this:
What if
I’m forgotten?
The toys
worry about being replaced, ignored, or left behind. They wonder whether they
still matter. And honestly, those fears are not only for toys. Human beings
struggle with them too.
Sometimes we
fear:
·
that
we are not important,
·
that
someone else will replace us,
·
that
we are alone,
·
or
that our lives do not have a real purpose.
In today’s
Gospel, the disciples could have felt something similar. Jesus is ascending. He
is no longer physically standing beside them. Perhaps they wonder:
What
happens now? Are we alone?
But the
message of the Ascension is this:
Christ
does not abandon His people.
He ascends
not to leave us behind, but to lead us forward.
3. “To
Infinity and Beyond”
One of the
beautiful themes in Toy
Story is identity. Buzz Lightyear famously says:
“To infinity
and beyond!”
It’s a funny
line, but it also points toward something true about the human heart. We were
made for more than this world alone. We were made for eternity. We were made
for communion with God.
But here’s
the important lesson: Buzz cannot reach “infinity and beyond” by himself.
Neither can we.
We do not
reach eternal life through our own strength alone. We need God’s grace. We need
the help of the Holy Spirit. We need one another. We need the Church.
That is
exactly what the Ascension prepares us for.
Jesus
ascends to the Father, but before He goes, He gives His disciples a mission:
“Go into the
whole world and proclaim the Gospel.”
Notice
something important. The disciples are not told to remain standing there
staring upward. They are sent outward.
The
Christian life is not about escaping the world. It is about living in the world
with hope.
4. God’s
Grace Heals the Past
Part of
Christian hope involves learning how to see our past differently. Many people
either try to erase the past or remain trapped in it. But the spiritual life
asks something different of us. We are called not to erase our past, but to
place it into God’s hands.
Through
prayer, repentance, and reflection, God can heal memories that still hurt us.
He can redeem failures that still burden us. He can even use painful moments to
deepen compassion and wisdom within us.
The apostles
themselves had painful memories. Peter remembered denying Jesus. The others
remembered running away in fear during the Passion. Yet Jesus did not abandon
them because of their weakness. Instead, He entrusted them with His mission.
That is
grace.
Sometimes
people think holiness means never failing. But holiness is really about
allowing God to keep working in us, even after weakness, fear, or
disappointment.
5. We All
Have a Purpose
That is also
one of the lessons in Toy
Story. Woody and Buzz spend much of the movie competing and
fighting with each other. They are jealous, insecure, and frustrated. But
eventually they learn to work together. They begin to recognize that their
purpose is greater than their rivalry.
The
Christian life works the same way. We are not meant to live in constant
comparison with others. We do not need to panic about whether someone else is
smarter, more successful, or more talented. God has given each person a
vocation and a purpose.
You may not
know yet what your future will look like. You may not know your future career,
your future family, or the path your life will take. But you already have a
purpose today:
·
to
love God,
·
to
love your family,
·
to
forgive,
·
to
grow in holiness,
·
and
to become the person God created you to be.
And we do
not live that purpose alone.
The
Ascension reminds us that Christ still reigns. He still guides His Church. He
still intercedes for us. He still pours out the Holy Spirit upon His people.
That means
our future is not empty or meaningless.
Our future
is anchored in Christ.
6. Go
Forward with Hope
The
disciples eventually stopped staring into the sky because they realized
something important: Jesus was still with them, though in a new way. His
presence would continue through the Holy Spirit, through the Eucharist, through
the Church, and through the mission He entrusted to them.
And so the
Ascension calls us to move forward with hope.
Not hope
based on wishful thinking.
Not hope
based on pretending life is easy.
But hope
rooted in the victory of Jesus Christ.
Because
Christ has ascended into Heaven, we know that suffering and death do not have
the final word. Jesus has gone before us to prepare a place for us. He opens
the Father’s house to humanity.
So when life
feels uncertain, when we feel forgotten, when we worry about the future, we
remember this:
Christ has
not abandoned us.
He remains with
us and strengthens us.
And His
grace carries us forward—to infinity and beyond.
Come, Holy
Spirit. Amen.
Sunday, May 10, 2026
Not Leaving. Staying (2026-05-10, Easter 6th Sun)
🎧 [Listen to Homily: Audio]
📺 [Watch Mass: YouTube Video]
1.
“I Will Not Leave You Orphaned”
In today’s
Gospel, Jesus says:
“I will not
leave you orphaned; I am coming to you.”
Those are
deeply personal words.
Jesus speaks
them at the Last Supper, on the night before his Passion, when the disciples
are anxious and afraid because they know suffering is coming. Separation is
coming. Their world is about to change.
And Jesus
does not say to them:
“You are on your own.”
Nor does he
merely say:
“Be confident in yourselves.”
Instead, he
says:
Whatever
comes, we do not face it alone.
Whatever lies ahead, Christ does not ask us to face it by ourselves.
“I will not
leave you orphaned.”
That is the
promise.
The Holy
Spirit—the Advocate, the Consoler, the Spirit of Truth—is the fulfillment of
that promise. The Holy Spirit is not merely a feeling or vague inspiration. The
Holy Spirit is the abiding presence of God with us and within us.
And on this
Mother’s Day weekend, we recall that Jesus speaks here with the language of a
parent.
A loving
mother or father not only gives life, but continues to accompany the child with
prayer, sacrifice, encouragement, and love.
A loving
parent says:
“I will come looking for you if you are in trouble.”
“I will stand behind you when you are discouraged.”
“I will not abandon you when you are afraid.”
2.
The Love That Does Not Abandon
Now this
does not mean parents are perfect.
As we grow
older, many of us can probably think of things our parents could have done
differently. I certainly can.
But at the
same time, I also look back with gratitude for what my parents did do for me—and even
some of the things they didn’t
do for me.
Sometimes we
can thank our parents for what they did not do:
for not solving every problem,
for not always telling us exactly what to do,
for allowing us to struggle while continuing to pray for us,
for allowing us to grow.
But they
were present.
And now,
looking back, I can see that through their patience, sacrifice, encouragement,
and love, God was caring for me through them.
Not because
parents are the Holy Spirit.
They are not.
But because
mothers and fathers can become instruments of the Holy Spirit—signs of the
faithful love of the Father who says:
“I will not
leave you orphaned.”
And perhaps
that is why Mother’s Day touches people so deeply.
Whether our
mothers are living or deceased, whether our relationships were easy or
complicated, we recognize something sacred in the love that continues to care,
continues to pray, and continues to look out for us.
And the Lord
does the same thing with us.
Jesus says:
“I am coming
to you.”
Not:
“Come find me if you can.”
But:
“I am coming to you.”
3.
The Holy Spirit in the Midst of Suffering
Now
sometimes people hear promises like this and wonder:
if God is with us, then why is there still suffering?
Why illness?
Why tragedy?
Why death?
Pope
Benedict XVI once reflected that the deepest question is not simply why God
allows suffering and death. The deeper question is:
What will our response be?
Because very
often, it is precisely in moments of sorrow and tragedy that the love of God
becomes most visible.
We see it
when families gather around someone who is sick.
We see it when people sacrifice themselves for another person.
We see it when someone remains faithful through grief.
We see it when people forgive, comfort, encourage, and persevere.
Sometimes we
even see someone who is suffering deeply continue to care lovingly for another
person who is struggling even more.
In other
words, we often see the Holy Spirit most clearly not by escaping suffering, but
by the way love appears in the midst of suffering.
The Holy
Spirit does not promise that we will never experience pain.
The Spirit
promises that suffering and death will not have the final word.
4.
Saint Marianne of Molokai
It is
fitting on Mother’s Day weekend to remember Saint Marianne Cope, who worked
alongside the much more widely known Saint Damien of Molokai.
Most people
know Father Damien because he gave his life serving people suffering from
leprosy on the island of Molokai in the Hawaiian islands in the Pacific Ocean.
But in the
1800s, Molokai was not known as a place of tourism or beauty. It was known as a
leper colony—a place where people suffering from leprosy were isolated,
abandoned, and often separated from their families.
And Sister
Marianne Cope did not abandon them.
Unlike
Father Damien, who went to Molokai as a young missionary priest, Marianne was
already well established in religious life. She was respected, experienced,
secure in her vocation, and a leader in her religious community.
But at the
age of 45, she left all of that behind to go and serve people whom society had
largely rejected and forgotten.
The people
on Molokai were not officially orphans, but in many ways they had been treated
like orphans.
They were
isolated.
Rejected.
Feared.
Separated from family.
Often left without dignity or hope.
And Sister
Marianne remained with them.
She helped
organize hospitals and schools.
She cared for children.
She formed choirs.
She helped restore dignity to people who felt forgotten.
She reminded suffering people that they were still loved by God.
In other
words, she lived the words of today’s Gospel:
“I will not
leave you orphaned.”
5.
Consumed by Love
The Church
often speaks about the Holy Spirit through images of wind and fire.
At
Pentecost, the Spirit comes as a strong driving wind and tongues of fire.
And
recently, I was reminded of that in a very concrete way.
Every year
in the Church, we renew the sacred oils used in the sacraments. There was some
remaining chrism oil from a previous celebration that needed to be disposed of
properly. Since it is sacred oil, it is traditionally burned or buried.
So I wiped
the remaining chrism oil into a paper towel and brought it outside.
I put a
match to it.
And
honestly, I was surprised.
That one
small flame caught quickly, and the oil-soaked paper towel burned steadily and
beautifully until the entire towel had been consumed.
And I stood
there thinking:
that is what the Holy Spirit is meant to do in us.
That same
chrism oil is placed upon us at Baptism.
At Confirmation.
At Ordination.
The Holy
Spirit is meant to burn within us—not destructively, but as the fire of divine
love.
The fire
that purifies.
The fire that strengthens.
The fire that gives light.
The fire that enables us to give ourselves completely to God.
And perhaps
that is what happened in the life of Saint Marianne Cope.
She was
consumed in love.
Not
dramatically.
Not loudly.
But faithfully.
Holiness
often looks like that.
Remaining
faithful when we are tired.
Sacrificing quietly for others.
Continuing to hope when life becomes heavy.
Refusing to abandon another person.
And
sometimes all it takes is one small spark:
a small prayer,
a small act of charity,
a small act of forgiveness,
a small return to God.
The Holy
Spirit can work powerfully even through what seems very small.
And that is
the great promise of today’s Gospel.
We are not
abandoned.
We are not orphaned.
We are not alone.
The Advocate
remains with us.
And Christ
still comes looking for us.
Still caring for us.
Still refusing to leave us orphaned.
Sunday, May 3, 2026
Troubled Hearts and a Promise
🎧 [Listen to Homily: Audio]
📺 [Watch Mass: YouTube Video]
5th Sunday of Easter —
1. Troubled Hearts and a Promise
When
Jesus speaks in today’s Gospel, the apostles are unsettled.
They
sense something is changing.
They know he is leaving.
And they are
troubled.
So
Jesus says: “Do not let your hearts be
troubled. Believe in God, believe also
in me.”
And
then he gives them a promise: “I go to
prepare a place for you… so that where I am, you also may be.”
That
is good news. But here’s the problem: they don’t really receive it—not at first.
And
that can happen to us.
2. The Message That Was Misplaced
Earlier
this week, something unusual happened at the rectory.
Several
of us received an email from someone we know at the Archdiocese—someone who
regularly sends important messages.
But
this time, it didn’t show up in the inbox.
It
went straight to the spam folder.
Now
you know what that means.
Spam
is where suspicious messages go.
Messages you’re told not to trust or open.
So
at first glance, it looked like something to ignore.
But
something didn’t seem right.
So
we called her.
“Did
you send this?”
She
said, “Yes—it’s real.”
And
it turned out, it was a real message—
something we needed to act on.
But
the system filtered it out.
Why?
Because
it was sent to many people.
It didn’t seem personal enough.
So
it was treated as something to ignore.
We
almost missed it completely.
3. How We Filter the Gospel
And
that’s when it struck me:
We
can do the same thing with the Gospel.
Jesus
speaks clearly:
- forgive your
enemies
- do not let your
hearts be troubled
And
most of us agree with that—in general.
But
when it becomes personal?
That’s
where the filtering happens.
“Forgive
your enemies…”
That’s a good idea—but this situation is different.
“Do
not let your hearts be troubled…”
That sounds nice—but I have real worries.
And
little by little,
we don’t actually delete the Gospel—
we
just leave it in the spam folder, unread.
Not
because it isn’t true,
but because we don’t fully receive it.
4. Why We Need Others
And
here’s something important.
The
only reason we found that email
was because one person saw it and said,
“This might matter.”
That
matters.
Because
in the Christian life,
we don’t come to faith alone.
We
need others:
- to be witnesses
to us,
- to help us
recognize what is true,
- to walk with us
as we try to live it out.
Sometimes
the very thing troubling us
is something we need to say out loud.
And
that’s why the Church gives us the sacrament of confession.
Not
just to list sins,
but to speak honestly,
to be heard,
and to hear the truth spoken back to us.
To
be reminded:
this is real.
God is present.
Don’t ignore Him.
That’s
why, in Acts, the apostles say:
“We
will devote ourselves to prayer and to the ministry of the word.”
Because
the Word of God must not be neglected.
It
must not be filtered out.
5. A Real-Life Example
Let
me give you a real-life example.
Over
the past few years, my siblings and I
have been helping my father with his affairs.
That
includes difficult conversations.
Conversations
like:
“Dad…
what happens when you’re not here?”
“What’s
the plan for this? For that?”
No
one wants to start there.
But
they are necessary.
And
to his credit, my father has been open.
Sometimes
he says, “That’s enough for today.”
And we stop.
But
we come back to it.
Because
it’s real.
Because
life doesn’t last forever.
And love requires responsibility.
6. Two Ways to Respond
I
remember a friend of mine whose father was dying.
His
father would say similar things.
And
my friend said:
“I
think he’s being too dramatic.”
But
he wasn’t being dramatic.
He
was being realistic.
7. The Gospel Is Reality
And
that’s the point.
Jesus
is not being dramatic in today’s Gospel.
When
he says:
“I
go to prepare a place for you…”
He
is telling the truth.
There
is a life beyond this world.
There
is a place prepared.
There
is a future with God.
The
question is not whether the message is real.
The
question is:
Will
we receive it?
Or will we filter it out?
8. Conclusion: Receive the Message
So
today, Jesus speaks directly to you:
“Do
not let your hearts be troubled.
Believe in me.”
Where
have I been filtering this out?
Where have you been filtering this out?
The
message is real.
The place is prepared.
And
Jesus is not trying to take anything from you—
he
is reaching out so that you may know
his love has always been there,
and
calling you personally
to believe,
to follow,
and to come home.