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Catholic Preaching

Catholic Preaching

Father Roger Landry

Father Roger J. Landry is a priest of the Diocese of Fall River, Massachusetts, who works for the Holy See’s Permanent Observer Mission to the United Nations in New York.

1698 - Investing Wisely God’s Gifts, 33rd Wednesday (II), November 20, 2024
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  • 1698 - Investing Wisely God’s Gifts, 33rd Wednesday (II), November 20, 2024

    Fr. Roger J. Landry
    Columbia Catholic Ministry, Notre Dame Church, Manhattan
    Wednesday of the 33rd Week in Ordinary Time, Year II
    November 20, 2024
    Rev 4:1-11, Ps 150, Lk 19:11-28
     
    To listen to an audio recording of this homily, please click below: 
    https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/catholicpreaching/11.20.24_Homily_1.mp3
     
    The following points were attempted in the homily: 

    * Today in the Gospel we have the Parable of the Coins (or Minas), which is similar to that of the more famous Parable of the Talents we read in St. Matthew’s Gospel. The main difference between the two is in this Parable, everyone gets the same investment on the part of the Lord. One servant multiplies the gold coin by 10, another by 5, seven we don’t know about, and the tenth buries it. Whereas with the Parable of the Talents, we can often focus on how many talents we have relative to others, “each according to his ability,” today’s Parable has us focus on the fact that the greatest gifts we’ve received, we have to a large degree received equally with others: the gift of our life, the gift of time, the gift of redemption, the gift of God’s word, the gift of the Sacraments, the gift of prayer, the gift of so many opportunities for charity. How are we investing these? Are we bearing great dividends from them? How are we planning to invest the gift of this day, of this Mass, for loving God and others? We all know that there are some people who really profit from these common gifts and others who place them in handkerchiefs. Most of us would probably give the Lord somewhere between numbers 1 and 10 in return of his investment. But the Lord today wants to teach each of us how to bear great dividends.
    * Before we move on, let’s first handle a couple of things for the setting of the Parable. The first is about life in general. Jesus told the people the Parable “because he was near Jerusalem and they thought that the Kingdom of God would appear there immediately.” The Parable of the Coins was given to help people know why the Kingdom of God wasn’t going to appear immediately, or, rather, how the Kingdom-among-them, as it awaits fulfillment, is a place in which people are advancing or growing the kingdom by investing the King’s gifts. How important this point is for us to grasp: that the time we have is a time of investing for the Kingdom! The second introductory point concerns the setting of the story, which involves history known very well to Jesus’ listeners but not to people today. Jesus was employing the well-known story of how after King Herod the Great’s death — the Herod who sought to kill him as an infant — Herod’s kingdom was divided into three parts, but each needed to go to Rome to be confirmed by the emperor in the kingship. The king of Judah, Herod Archelaus, went to Rome, but the people sent a delegation saying that they didn’t want him as king. The emperor confirmed him without the title king — he named him tetrarch — and upon the return, Archelaus executed those who didn’t want him to be king. In this month of November, in which we meditate on death and judgment and as we prepare for the Solemnity of Christ the King on Sunday, there’s a functional spiritual equivalent for those who don’t want to accept Christ as King. He doesn’t punish or slay them because in one sense he doesn’t have to: they’re already spiritually dead because they’re not drawing their life from him.
    * Let’s get into the heart of the Parable and what Jesus is teaching. Jesus gives each of the ten servants a treasure of a gold coin. The coin is actually a Mina, which is one-sixtieth of a Talent. Since a talent was 6,000 days wages, a Mina is 100 days wages or a third of a year’s salary. For someone making $30,000 a year about $10,000: not an enormous sum but substantial enough.

    Wed, 20 Nov 2024 - 19min
  • 1697 - Walking and Climbing With Jesus Dressed In White, 33rd Tuesday (II), November 19, 2024

    Fr. Roger J. Landry
    Columbia Catholic Ministry, Notre Dame Church, Manhattan
    Tuesday of the 33rd Week in Ordinary Time, Year II
    November 19, 2024
    Rev 3:1-6.14-22; Ps 15, Lk 19:1-10
     
    To listen to an audio recording of today’s homily, please click below: 
    https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/catholicpreaching/11.19.24_Homily_1.mp3
     
    The following points were attempted in the homily: 

    * Today in the readings, we are able to focus on the heart of Jesus’ interactions with us, the meaning of the incarnation, his public ministry, his passion, his death, resurrection and beyond.  It can be summed up by two phrases at the end of the Gospel and first reading respectively: “The Son of Man has come to seek and to save what was lost” and “I stand at the door and knock.” Those words of Jesus at the end of his interaction with Zacchaeus and the crowds and after his address to the Seven Churches of the Asian diaspora help us to grasp God’s great desire to save us in his mercy. He knocks, he invites, he wants to seat us on his throne and share with us the victory of his triumph over sin and death. Let’s enter into these readings and learn the lessons God wants us to capture.
    * The Lord’s merciful desire to save was on full display in the Gospel with Zacchaeus. His love for sinners was so profound that he literally went to the deepest place on earth in search of perhaps the greatest public sinner of that city, to reconcile him to the Father. Jesus went to Jericho, the lowest city on the planet — 853 feet below sea level — to find Zacchaeus, who was not just one of a bunch of tax-collectors loathsome to the Jewish authorities, but the chief tax collector of the region, which was the equivalent of the don of the mafia. He conspired with the Romans to rip off his own fellow Jews through the crooked Roman tax system. Jesus had promised that he, the Good Shepherd, would leave the ninety-nine sheep in his fold to search out and save one lost sheep, and this is what he did, leaving the crowds behind and entering alone with Zacchaeus into his home and into his life. He called Zacchaeus, his lost sheep, by name and heaven rejoiced on that day more for him than for all the others. So, too, today and everyday, Jesus takes the initiative of knocking at the door of our souls, asking for entry, coming to us wherever we are, no matter the depths to which we’ve sunk, no matter the fact that perhaps everyone else around us might despise us. Jesus never abandons us. To the extent that we repent of whatever sins we’ve committed and accept Jesus’ gracious invitation by “welcoming him with delight,” we, too, like Zacchaeus, can have salvation come to us.
    * The diminutive Zacchaeus’ climbing of the tree, moreover, is more than merely an interesting detail. The text tells us that he was trying to see Jesus, but couldn’t because of the crowd, so he ran ahead and climbed a tree along Jesus’ route in order to be able to see him. We, too, often cannot see the Lord because other people get in the way. They block our sight in various ways. We’re often too small of stature to see over such obstacles, and, unfortunately, too often others are too selfish, distracted, sinful, judgmental or out-of-it, to do anything to help us and bring us into the presence of the Lord. Like a little child, however, Zacchaeus climbs a tree to see the Lord. Such an act could have led to great mockery for a middle-aged public figure. But Zacchaeus didn’t care. He wanted to see the Lord and no obstacle was going to stop him. His example challenges each of us to consider the extent to which we go, the trees or obstacles we’ll climb, in order to see Jesus more clearly. In our prayer, we regularly “leave the ground,” separating ourselves from the crowds, to go to Jesus, to behold him,

    Tue, 19 Nov 2024 - 20min
  • 1696 - Seeing with Fresh Eyes of Love, 33rd Monday (II), November 18, 2024

    Fr. Roger J. Landry
    Columbia Catholic Ministry, Notre Dame Church, Manhattan
    Monday of the 33rd Week in Ordinary Time, Year II
    Memorial of St. Rose Philippine Duchesne
    November 18, 2024
    Rev 1:1-4.2:1-5, Ps 1, Lk 18:35-43
     
    To listen to an audio recording of today’s homily, please click below: 
    https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/catholicpreaching/11.18.24_Homily_1.mp3
     
    The following points were attempted in today’s homily: 

    * On Saturday Jesus gave us the parable of the importune woman bothering the unjust judge in order to convey to us the necessity of “praying always without losing heart.” Immediately thereafter is the Parable of the Pharisee and the Publican — which the Church strangely doesn’t give us to ponder today, perhaps we meditate upon it on Saturday of third week of Lent each year — which shows us of the importance of humbly begging the Lord for mercy. Today we encounter the living illustration of what Jesus was teaching about persevering, faithful, humble prayer for mercy in the blind man by the side of the road whom St. Mark in his version of the same scene identifies as Bartimaeus.
    * As rabbis were accustomed to do on their three-times-per-year pilgrimages to Jerusalem for the major feasts, Jesus was teaching the crowds along the journey. Bartimaeus was sitting by the roadside begging. He heard the commotion of the crowd and asked what was happening. Upon being informed that “Jesus of Nazareth was passing by,” he immediately began to cry out, “Jesus, Son of David, have pity on me!” He had doubtless heard of Jesus’ reputation for working miracles in Galilee to the north and was responding in faith. The fact that he called him “Son of David” was a sign he believed Jesus was the Messiah. But his cries for Jesus were annoying those who were trying to hear Jesus’ teaching. So the first people in the group rebuked him and told him to shut his trap. But that only led him to cry out all the more, “Son of David, have pity on me!” The word St. Luke uses means basically an animal cry, something coming deep from his woundedness.
    * Jesus stopped and ordered that Bartimaeus be brought to him. For Jesus, caring for this man was more important than whatever else he was teaching at that moment. Likely, it was also a “coincidental” opportunity for him put flesh on his parables by showing how God responds to persistent, faithful, humble prayer for compassion. Jesus asked Bartimaeus, “What do you want me to do for you?,” and Bartimaeus said, “Lord, please let me see!” To some degree, Bartimaeus was already seeing by faith but he wanted to see Jesus with physical eyes so that he would be able to do exactly what he did once cured, to “follow him, giving glory to God.” He saw something with inner eyes, but was asking to see more. Jesus replied, “Have sight; your faith has saved you.”
    * This cry of Bartimaeus is one of the most beautiful and frequent Christian aspirations: Domine, ut videam!, “Lord, I want to see.” It’s a beautiful response to Jesus’ perennial question to us in prayer, “What do you want me to do for you?” If Jesus were to ask many of us that question, many might waste his attention on lesser things, asking for him to return us to the shape we were in at 21, or to resolve a particular issue, or other relatively small stuff. Every day, however, we should ask the Lord for the gift to see, for the grace to see what we don’t see, to see things as they really are, the way he sees them. We should beseech the grace to see him and to see ourselves aright. We should ask for the grace to recognize him in the Holy Eucharist, in Confession, in prayer, in others, in the various events of the day, and especially in the beatific vision. He won’t allow us to see everything, because then we wouldn’t have the grace to live by faith,

    Mon, 18 Nov 2024 - 23min
  • 1695 - Following the Lord Along the Path of Life, 33rd Sunday (B), November 17, 2024

    Fr. Roger J. Landry
    Columbia Catholic Ministries, Notre Dame Church, Manhattan
    33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B
    Eighth World Day of the Poor
    November 17, 2024
    Dan 12:1-3, Ps 16, Heb 10:10-14.18, Mk 13:24-32
     
    To listen to an audio recording of today’s homily, please click below: 
    https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/catholicpreaching/11.17.24_CCM_Homily_1.mp3
     
    The following text guided the homily: 

    * Youth, and particularly university years, is a time in which we are constantly shifting focus from the present to the future, from the short to long term, from the things of today to those of tomorrow. We quickly pass from concentrating on exams, papers, meetings, competitions and plans for tonight to thinking about next summer’s internships, jobs, careers and vocations, possible marriages, children, and beyond. November is the month in which the Church wants us to go from the ephemeral and evanescent to the everlasting and eternal, not in the sense of daydreaming about or dreading the future, but in the sense of deriving direction from the future to help us chart our path in the here-and-now. In the eleventh month of the year, the Church always ponders what are called the “four last things” — death, judgment, heaven and hell — so that we, aware of what’s coming, can start wisely orienting our whole life right now to these inevitabilities in a similar way to how, if we know what the essay questions will be on a final exam, we can start preparing to ace it.
    * In tonight’s Gospel, Jesus speaks to us in apocalyptic language about the end of the world, when he says the sun will be darkened, the moon will not give light, the stars will fall from the sky and the heavens will be shaken. Those will be for many, he says, days of “tribulation,” the fulfillment of what the Prophet Daniel in tonight’s first reading says will be a “time unsurpassed in distress since nations began.” But in the midst of those frightening images, there is a way to choose to remain in peace. Jesus says that then we will “see the Son of Man coming in the clouds with great power and glory,” that the angels will gather the elect, and that even though heaven and earth will pass away, his words will not pass away, inviting us to build our life on him and the words of eternal life he gives us. The ones who do, Daniel says, “will “live forever,” and will “shine brightly like the splendor of the firmament” and “like the stars forever.” These are the ones, as Psalm 16 teaches us today, who make the Lord their “allotted portion” and their “cup,” conscious that he will hold fast their lot. These are the ones who keep the Lord ever before them, knowing that with him at their right hand, they will not be disturbed, their heart will be glad, their soul rejoice, and their body abide in confidence, because they know he will not abandon them, but instead show them the path to life, to fullness of joy, to delights forever at his right hand. So in the midst of all that will pass away in the future, at an hour that no one knows except God the Father, Jesus and his Church are urging us wisely to choose right what will not pass away, and to follow Jesus confidently along the path of life he desires to show us.
    * In graphic language, Jesus is urging us to make practical the truth we proclaim every Sunday in our profession of faith: “He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead.” Does that rock solid reality fill us with joy or fill us with fright? Are we ready, to use the words of tonight’s Alleluia verse, through vigilance and prayer to “stand before the Son of Man” or, rather, would we seek to run away? If angels were to come in vast numbers right now to announce that the end of the world were coming tonight, would most people — would you and I — jump up and down in jubilati...

    Sun, 17 Nov 2024 - 30min
  • 1694 - Bringing Fire Everywhere: Radiating the Love of Christ in the Missions, 2024 National Conference of The Pontifical Mission Societies, November 16, 2024

    Fr. Roger J. Landry
    National Director
    National Conference of the Pontifical Mission Societies USA
    San Juan, Puerto Rico
    November 16, 2024
     
    To listen to an audio recording of the keynote address to the Diocesan Directors of The Pontifical Mission Societies, please click below: 
    https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/catholicpreaching/11.16.24_TPMS_Keynote_1.mp3
     
    The following text guided the keynote: 
    Dear Diocesan Directors, Dear Fellow Missionaries,
    It’s a joy for me to be with you during these days of the 2024 National Conference and to meet and to get to know some of you last night and earlier today. I thank you for all of your dedication and hard work. You are the essential link between the global mission of the Church, the 196 dioceses and the 17,000 parishes in the United States. You are the ones primarily responsible for advancing the holy work of promoting missionary identity, spirit, prayer and involvement among Catholics in your dioceses. I express my deep appreciation to you for this consequential work.
    I also thank you for your patience and perseverance during this transitional period in the national office. I know it has been a challenging time for everyone involved in our common mission. I hope to be able to bring some long-term stability and to spur ongoing renewal, as together we continue to implement the Strategic Plan and the Task Force Recommendations that many of you had key roles in formulating. I would like to thank Father Anthony Andreassi, the interim National Director, for having a steady hand on the rudder during this time of transition as well as to the national staff, who have kept their hands to the plow looking ahead and laboring diligently through it all. One of my bedrock passages in Sacred Scripture is Romans 8:28, omnia in bonum, by which St. Paul reminds us that “all things work out for the good for those who love God.” I look forward to seeing how God will prove that truth once again. I look forward as well to earning your trust as the new national director, to strengthening and expanding the good we do, and to addressing together and systematically the various issues that to one degree or another get in the way of our common work.
    I’m excited to begin full-time as national director in January. There’s obviously much work that awaits.
    The Appointment As National Director
    When I was approached last Spring by Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the chairman of the TPMS board, and asked to consider becoming one of three candidates that the board might propose to the Vatican as new national director, I told him that I have long had a great love and passion for the Missions and am always open to do what the Church might ask of me. But I expressed a concern about what a possible appointment might mean for my work as Catholic chaplain at Columbia. I’m the founding chaplain of a bold new approach to campus ministry called the Thomas Merton Institute for Catholic Life, just two years old. I told him that I thought that should I chosen, especially while I was leading the Seton Route of the 65-day National Eucharistic Pilgrimage, and asked to start in the Fall, it would be a shock to Columbia students already reeling from campus events whom I would not be able to care for adequately on the road. I told him that I thought it would likewise very difficult to begin a national search for a successor on short notice. I told him that my main concern, however, was missionary. I already had many students — there would eventually be 30 — signed up in the Fall for the intense four-month OCIA class I teach every semester and I told him I was troubled that they might fall through the cracks if an interim chaplain were appointed. Some of them were Jewish and had already gone through the difficult conversations with family members.

    Sun, 17 Nov 2024 - 58min
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