Sunday, June 28, 2026

28 June 2026 - lost and found

 

Today's Readings
(Audio)

Whoever loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me,
and whoever loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me;

No one loved his mother more than did Jesus himself. Jesus was not suggesting that family was unimportant. After all, he invented the idea of human family. He himself decided to be born into a human family, under the authority of his parents, honoring them according to the very commandment that he himself first gave to Moses on Mount Sinai. Indeed well functioning families seemed so fundamental to the very fabric of society that one would seem to neglect the institution at his own peril. Nevertheless even family, when not ordered to God, can become an obstacle. It can actually become antagonistic to the good plans God had for the world. Mary and Jesus both easily could have preferred their life together to his sorrowful and difficult mission. They could have chosen to place this family bond of theirs at the center of their lives rather than placing God first. But Mary chose to love her son more than herself, to the degree that she desired for him what he desired for himself, even though it proved to be the cross. And Jesus chose faithfulness to his own divine identity, obedience to his heavenly Father, even over his most beloved bond with his earthly mother.

and whoever does not take up his cross
and follow after me is not worthy of me.


We too must choose to place Jesus first in all things. Good things in our lives will remain good to the degree that they are open and ordered to Jesus and his mission. They will become idols to the degree that we refuse to allow God to be involved and insist on being the ultimate arbiters of our own decisions about them. It doesn't matter how good and incorruptible anything seems to be. It only has its goodness from God and is eventually revealed to be empty when we refuse to surrender it to him. All the more, then, must we reject things which are not in any sense good, and this for the sake of Jesus. It is not enough to merely reject bad things because they are bad. We will wind up like an empty house that is now swept, clean, and inviting for the return of "seven other spirits more evil than itself" (see Matthew 12:45). But when we reject vice and sin for the sake of Jesus he himself fills the emptiness left by their absence. 

Whoever finds his life will lose it,
and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.


Life is obviously a good thing, a prerequisite for pretty much anything else. But if we prefer even our very lives to God they quickly go off the rails. We lose our freedom to follow him, not only when our lives are on the line, but even when they are threatened in lesser ways that still evoke the fear, rooted in death, that we all have as mortal beings. When we seek life in a limited and relative way there is a degree to which we may hope to seek and actually find it. But if we insist too strongly on seeking life at any cost we will quickly discover diminishing returns. We will never achieve such a perfect guarantee of life independent of God as to be satisfactory to our fear stricken egos. But that does not mean that we are called to take a hostile attitude toward ourselves. The idea is more that we not focus excessively on ourselves, to the degree that we could even lose ourselves without noticing, because we are too caught up in the larger story God is telling. We could lose our lives for his sake. If we finally achieve that level of detachment, it will be then that we truly find ourselves and possess ourselves without danger.

Whoever receives you receives me,
and whoever receives me receives the one who sent me.

When we stop seeking ourselves first we become free to receive others. We are not so closed and self-directed as to reject them outright, not so preoccupied with our own stuff that we can't really listen sympathetic to their stories. We've probably all had the experience of talking with someone who could only listen impatiently waiting for his next turn to speak. But when we seek Jesus first, we can actually find his presence in all of those whom we are called to receive. Any hospitality we show or charity we offer can be done as for Jesus himself. By contrast, when we still choose to put ourselves first we don't really have the freedom to open ourselves to others. There is always a element of selfishness, however hidden, even in those acts of our that appear to be the most altruistic.

And whoever gives only a cup of cold water
to one of these little ones to drink
because the little one is a disciple—
amen, I say to you, he will surely not lose his reward.


At first, when we hear the Gospel summons to take up our cross we think it may be an impossibly high bar. Perhaps we remember the quote of Bonhoeffer, who wrote, "When Christ calls a man, he bids him come and die". And yet today's Gospel passage goes on to show us that the bar is not in fact so very high. We worry that if we don't get everything exactly right as disciples, if there is any residual selfishness in us, that we risk losing our lives entirely. But the call is not about immediate perfection. It is more about our fundamental orientation. Jesus makes it clear that the one who commits himself to him, even through acts that are almost embarrassingly insignificant, "will surely not lose his reward". He is able to work through every small act of surrender we make, drawing us ever deeper into his own heart.

Newsboys - Lead Me To The Cross

 

Saturday, June 27, 2026

27 June 2026 - belief > barriers

Today's Readings
(Audio)

He said to him, “I will come and cure him.”

The Catholic Commentary of Sacred Scripture suggests that "Jesus acknowledges the boldness of the centurion's request in his response, which is better translated as an exclamatory question: "Shall I come and cure him?" With the emphatic "I," it is as if Jesus is saying, "Shall I, a Jew, come to your home?"" ¹. This provides context for the response of the centurion, who said "Lord, I am not worthy to have you enter under my roof; only say the word and my servant will be healed". It wasn't just polite humility being displayed by the centurion, nor a mere formality. Jesus suggested a real potential barrier that perhaps ought to have prevented him from granting the centurion's request. In a way not entirely dissimilar to how leprosy should have kept him separated from lepers, that fact of this person being a Gentile seemed to suggest an insurmountable obstacle to the healing power of Jesus.

For I too am a man subject to authority,
with soldiers subject to me.
And I say to one, ‘Go,’ and he goes;
and to another, ‘Come here,’ and he comes;
and to my slave, ‘Do this,’ and he does it.”


The centurion's faith invited Jesus to surmount a barrier which was in fact only apparent and not absolute. If he had a limited belief about Jesus, that he needed to be physically present in order to perform the healing, that belief might have limited what Jesus was able to do in his case. Further, he might well have believed such a thing about Jesus if he had simply thought he was one more in the mold of human healers. Even when such people had real gifts those gifts had limits. It was not something one could take for granted that the power of a healer could transcend time and space. But the centurion recognized some kind of analogy between his own authority as a military leader, which was, in a weaker way, able to bridge the barrier of distance, with that of the words of Jesus. It was just that while the centurion commanded soldiers, Jesus commanded nature, and reality itself. And this was something he could have known in no other way than through faith.

Amen, I say to you, in no one in Israel have I found such faith.
I say to you, many will come from the east and the west,
and will recline with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
at the banquet in the Kingdom of heaven


Just as the barrier of leprosy was not able to stand against the power of Jesus released through faith neither was the division between Gentile and Jew. His healing power would be available, not to those born of a specific lineage, but to all who believed. Jesus had the power to transcend such barriers because he had the power to heal the problems that were at the root which made them necessary in the first place. But in general, it did not happen automatically. Nor was it possible on the basis of presumption. It took humility to even recognize the need for the faith necessary to let Jesus work.

And at that very hour his servant was healed. Jesus entered the house of Peter,
and saw his mother-in-law lying in bed with a fever.
He touched her hand, the fever left her,
and she rose and waited on him.


The inclusion of the story about the healing of Peter's mother-in-law in today's Gospel reading is informative in that it seemed that this time Jesus took the initiative. It was not always necessary for a dramatic request and display of faith on the part of those in need. Once they had put their faith in Jesus and became his followers he would take care of those who were his own, and even surprise them with the blessings he unleashed in their lives. We should of course continue to bring our needs to Jesus as his disciples, just as did the crowds. But it is reassuring to know that we don't have to iterate an exhaustive list. It doesn't ultimately come down to us, or even to our ability to know what to want or ask. After all, that is exactly the promise we have, more than all we can ask or imagine (see Ephesians 3:20).

 1) The Gospel of Matthew (Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture): (A Catholic Bible Commentary on the New Testament by Trusted Catholic Biblical Scholars - CCSS) by Curtis Mitch, Edward Sri

Graham Kendrick - We Believe

 

Friday, June 26, 2026

26 June 2026 - reintegration

Today's Readings
(Audio)

Moses, who came down from Mount Sinai, gave a law that was rigorous in its demands that insisted on the separation of those with leprosy from the people, and for obvious reasons. It wasn't a failure of compassion on his part. All that the law could do to stem corruption was to isolate it and push it away from public life. It mitigated the risk of contagion but could not offer a cure. 

When Jesus came down from the mountain, great crowds followed him.
And then a leper approached, did him homage, and said,
“Lord, if you wish, you can make me clean.”

Jesus was like a new Moses, but one who could actually treat the root causes of things for which Moses could only address the symptoms. His words had power, not just in a legal sense, but even over the workings of nature. But it was clear that no one had authority over him. His power was untamed and unpredictable. He was Lord, in the same sense as the Lord God himself, and therefore worthy of homage. One could not automatically assume he would do something miraculous in any given case. But his compassion for those who were like sheep without a shepherd was obvious. There was good reason for the leper to hope that he would want to heal him. After all, the Lord God would desire to see creation functioning according to his original intention, not marred by sin, sickness, and death. Whether he dealt with it immediately or eventually he certainly found it intolerable to let a disease like leprosy have the last word.

He stretched out his hand, touched him, and said,
“I will do it.  Be made clean.”


Jesus by no means needed to touch the leper to heal him. In other instances he healed from a distance at the power of his word. But in order for the leper to truly be healed of everything entailed by his disease this touch of Jesus was necessary. Otherwise, his body might have regained integrity but his heart would still have been wounded, not fully able to be reintegrated into the life of the community. The touch of Jesus healed his sense of himself as one defined by his illness. It had previously seemed to be an insurmountable barrier between himself and others. But Jesus overcame it and set him on a path to return to the worshiping community

Then Jesus said to him, “See that you tell no one,
but go show yourself to the priest,
and offer the gift that Moses prescribed;
that will be proof for them.”

In addition to this historical healing of a leper we can also learn from the event as a metaphor for sin and forgiveness. What Moses could not do because of the hardness of the people's hearts Jesus would accomplish by giving us new hearts, renewed by the Holy Spirit. He would not just address the external manifestations of sin with rules but would actually heal the problem from its root in the center of our beings. More and more we would cease to choose or even desire sinful things. But perhaps greater still, we can come to learn by his healing touch that we are lovable, something that our sinfulness causes us to doubt and disbelieve. Who would love one so twisted and fallen as we? Jesus proves that he does by his willingness to touch us. It is on this basis that we have the emotional and spiritual resources to participate in the life of the community. It isn't about us, so much as what he has done within us.

May my tongue cleave to my palate
if I remember you not,
If I place not Jerusalem
ahead of my joy.

Matisyahu - Jerusalem

 

Thursday, June 25, 2026

25 June 2026 - firm foundations?

 

Today's Readings
(Audio)

Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’
will enter the Kingdom of heaven,
but only the one who does the will of my Father in heaven.


It is not enough to claim to be Christians, we must live as Christians. We can't plead our case to the judge on the last day merely in virtue of our knowledge of the name of Jesus. It is disingenuous to plead his name after a life lived in opposition to his teachings.

Many will say to me on that day,
‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name?
Did we not drive out demons in your name?
Did we not do mighty deeds in your name?’


Jesus can do mighty deeds through anyone, but it does not necessarily mean his heart has been converted. We can't assume that the miraculous things we witness are happening because of us, since they may sometimes also happen through us in spite of us. In fact, it is fortunate that Jesus can use us to reach out to others despite our weaknesses and failings, since we continue to deal with such things throughout every stage of spiritual growth. So neither the presence nor absence of miracles are indicative of our progress. It is also the case that although we may be beset by weakness until our last breath this is not the basis on which we be disqualified. It is rather about how we respond. Do we engage with Jesus through a sincere personal relationship in which we allow him to transform us and our lives? And do we continue to return to that relationship as the fundamental center of our lives even when we do stumble and fall?

Everyone who listens to these words of mine and acts on them
will be like a wise man who built his house on rock.
The rain fell, the floods came,
and the winds blew and buffeted the house.

The contrast Jesus makes is between listening and acting and listening without a response. When we hear this parable it might at first seem that it would all come down to the type of house that we build. But in fact the foundation is far more important. Thus, even if there are architectural issues, problems with the materials, or failures along the way in the build process, we can still survive the challenges we face if we remain truly rooted in Jesus himself. On the other hand, it doesn't much matter how sturdy a house one builds upon the sand. It does not have the foundations necessary to survive real world weather conditions. 

We might be worried that Jesus implies that surviving storms depends on our success as disciples, that our acting on his words implies we do so perfectly and consistently. But much more important is the foundations on which we fall back. When we build well on a sturdy foundation that which is well built will endure. The weather of life will strip away that which is too weak or distorted. The edifice will continue to rise as long as we continue to return to Jesus as the basis on which we build. Acting on his words is thus more about our priorities and our faithfulness than any specific success or failure. 

The rain fell, the floods came,
and the winds blew and buffeted the house.
And it collapsed and was completely ruined.

One consequence of this parable of the wise and foolish builders is we can look at our lives and see the degree to which negative circumstances unsettle us as a kind of litmus test. We can notice ourselves becoming disturbed and ask if there is a way we could be more surrendered to him, some way we could have been more rooted in his words. But the structure that is rising on the foundation of his word is never complete while this life lasts. And yet, we should see progress, progress toward becoming the living stones we are meant to be.

you yourselves like living stones are being built up as a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ
(see First Peter 2:5).

Phil Wickham - What An Awesome God

 

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

24 June 2026 - his name

Today's Readings
(Audio)

When they came on the eighth day to circumcise the child,
they were going to call him Zechariah after his father,
but his mother said in reply,
“No. He will be called John.”


At first, Zechariah had been unable to trust the revelation of the angel and speak in agreement with the revealed plan of God for him, resulting in him losing his ability to speak until the episode in today's Gospel. Somehow it was this very imposition of silence that created the conditions in a faithful response could take shape. In a way, he represented the whole human race, reiterating our doubts over and against God's desire to set us free. But in silence we can no longer fill the noise with the repetition of our own ideas and what we believe we know. We are open to the voice of God speaking something new into our lives and the world. And hopefully we can eventually express our own assent to that new thing, just as did Zechariah. No longer tied to the curse of past infidelity, he wrote in agreement with the new thing God was doing "John is his name". From there blessings were immediately unleashed, and with them his tongue was loosed. It was now safe for him to speak, since he was so overwhelmed with the goodness of God that he was too preoccupied to with it to even remember his former doubts.

Immediately his mouth was opened, his tongue freed,
and he spoke blessing God.


The clarity with which John's name pointed to the revelation of Gabriel, and therefore to the new thing God was doing in the world, was a clarity that defined the whole life and mission of the Baptist. He was utterly unambiguous about what he came to do, about the lamb of God to whom he pointed, the one's whose way he prepared. The typical human pattern would have been to take some of the credit oneself for one's greatness and popularity. But John insisted on decreasing that Jesus could increase. Like his father Zechariah's words, he would subside so that the true Word could be heard and recognized. He possessed a supernatural fixation and focus on the core of his mission that must have been highly compelling to those who encountered him. 

We know that outside of the Kingdom there were none born of woman who are greater than John the Baptist. But this was not in virtue of any great miracles or other mighty deeds that he accomplished. It was all based on his faithfulness to the mission entrusted to him by God, his willingness to become less rather than more. He was willing to set the stage for the one whose coming mattered most and then step aside when he arrived. We who are within the Kingdom of Jesus are called to a similar kind of greatness. It might not be fantastical or flashy. But it must be faithful and focused on the person of Jesus himself. We still live in a world that insists on repeating its own doubts and despair as though they were a prophecy or an incantation. But we have something new to say, and genuine hope to offer. May we, like Zechariah, learn to agree with the word of God. And then may we, like John, live it to the fullest.

CeCe Winans - Goodness Of God

 

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

23 June 2026 - sharing the treasure?


Today's Readings
(Audio)

Do not give what is holy to dogs, or throw your pearls before swine,
lest they trample them underfoot, and turn and tear you to pieces.


We should not give that which is most precious to those unwilling or unable to appreciate it. Neither we nor they will benefit from such a transaction. These moments will be clear to us because our audience, while hungry, will not be specifically interested in the holiness or value of what we want to offer. In order for us to even communicate our message in these cases will feel like a disservice to the truth of the Gospel. It is not just that our audience won't receive it a spirit of genuine openness and interest. Our presentation of it will reveal how we ourselves relate to it. If we are willing to throw it forth into a context where it is more likely to be misunderstood, criticized, and devoured, than appreciated it will imply that even we don't really care about it that much. We wouldn't treat something we found to be truly holy or beautiful in that way. Yet we know that those who at one moment come across as dogs or swine may in the future be able to receive like children from the family table. Obviously, perfection is never required. But it is the very desire for spiritual pearl of the Gospel itself that transforms us and gradually makes us capable of receiving it. And so, perhaps, we shouldn't be too quick to write people off as dogs or swine. Without throwing our pearls in their path recklessly we can still let them see the way they catch the light of the sun and see how they respond. Are they humanized by what they see and hear? Do they seem capable of a genuine response? In this case we should not hold back or hesitate to share our treasure.

Do to others whatever you would have them do to you.
This is the Law and the Prophets.


We want others to want the pearl of great price. But we don't want to put them in a situation where they further alienate themselves from its promise. And so we share what we have, not as a weapon with which to bludgeon them, but as a genuine treasure, insofar as they can receive it. If we were without the pearl ourselves we would want others to help us understand and appreciate its beauty so that we could receive it properly. Thus this is what we are called to do for others.

for the gate is wide and the road broad that leads to destruction,
and those who enter through it are many.
How narrow the gate and constricted the road that leads to life.
And those who find it are few.


There are almost infinite numbers of wrong answers to the question of how we ought to live. And although there are many ways of expressing it, there is ultimately only one right answer. Jesus himself is the only way to salvation. And so to find the narrow road we must respond to his invitation to follow him to the degree that we become aware of it. He himself is the way, the gate, the only name given under heaven by which we may be saved. It is by availing ourselves of the grace of his gift of the Holy Spirit we become the right shape to pass along the road and through the gate to life. The gate is Jesus-sized and the Spirit make us so much like him that we too can pass through it. We cannot follow the masses, for they may well be heading in the wrong directions. This story is not a Choose You Own Adventure. But the conclusion of such stories usually fails to satisfy. We are merely secondary coauthors of a story that God is writing. And his stories are always more beautiful than anything we could come up with ourselves.

Dan Schutte - I Found The Treasure

Monday, June 22, 2026

22 June 2026 - lest ye be judged

Today's Readings
(Audio)

Why do you notice the splinter in your brother’s eye,
but do not perceive the wooden beam in your own eye?


It would seem that we often indulge in judging others in order to divert attention from ourselves, both our own attention and that of others. We point out others' faults both to make them look bad our ourselves morally superior. Look at us, we seem to say, here on the moral high ground. We often pretend that our criticism is practical, as though it could somehow actually move the needle to address those things with which we find fault. But the fact of the matter is that we don't often have the clarity to provide meaningful assistance. Our eye is still too occluded with our own distorted sinful tendencies. 

How can you say to your brother,
‘Let me remove that splinter from your eye,’
while the wooden beam is in your eye?


We are meant to want to remove the splinter from the eye of our brother, but on the basis of a more selfless and enlightened motivation. This is possible if self-reflection and repentence are consistent practices in our own lives. When we do notice issues in the lives of others we ought to ask ourselves the reason we are concerned. Are they triggering something, threatening us somehow, or causing us to feel annoyed? Or is it rather that in the context or our relationship with them we feel that fraternal correction is necessary? Without such a relationship, either that of a fellow disciple, or with someone in one's charge, what is the point of expressing our judgment? Sometimes we may need to help clarify both our own thinking about public figures and that of those with whom we share life. But this doesn't extend very far. It probably never extends to the latest celebrity gossip.

The idea is that we will eventually see clearly enough to remove the splinter from our brother's eye. But this is only possible when we judge others in the way we want to be judged, and measure out only what we would want measured out to us. This is similar to the parable of the unforgiving servant. We can't expect to receive the leniency that we desperately need unless we are willing to offer it to others generously. We need to become like Jesus himself, who loved us too much to leave the boards in our eyes, but to remove them took the whole burden on himself first before offering to share his yoke and help transform us.

Vineyard Worship Featuring Kate Cooke - Refiner's Fire