The created world listens to the voice of its Creator. When we listen to the voice of God we find that peace we long for, even in the midst of the storms of life.
The parables of Jesus about the Kingdom of God require that we have humility and faith, and that we become men and women of prayer. Jesus wants us to enter fully into the Kingdom of God and to bear great fruit!
God calls us to much more than return to Paradise. He calls us to share in His own Divine life and to share in the glory of the risen Christ. He heals us of the wound of original sin and calls us to build up those around us.
Jesus fulfills the animal sacrifices of the Old Covenant by sharing in our life, offering His body and Blood on the cross, and giving us Himself as a meal in the Blessed Sacrament of the Eucharist.
God wants to pour the Holy Spirit into our hearts like honey, His sweetness and gentle new life. Through prayer we expand our hearts and purify them to receive this great gift.
Jesus teaches us that we do not belong to the world anymore than He does, but also that "God so loved the world that he gave his only son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life." Christians are called to live dif
God's love is unconditional, but to be friends with God necessitates that we love. By loving those around us enough to share Christ with them, we truly fulfill the commandment of love.
Creation and the redemption are the fruits of the communion of the Father, Son and the Holy Spirit. Jesus, in His image of the vine and the branches, invites us to likewise bear fruit in communion with Him. The Eucharist is the Sacrament of J
Are you saved? In the Catholic vision of salvation, we are touched by Christ personally and socially, spiritually and physically, historically and in a transcendent way. Jesus, the Good Shepherd, comes to us to bring us this salvation.
The kerygma or core Gospel message has the power to change and transform the world. How are we receiving it and is it changing our lives in this Easter season?
The Divine Mercy comes to us from the pierced side of Christ. Out of His side flows blood and water, washing away our sins in the waters of baptism and strengthening us in the Blessed Sacrament of the Eucharist. Thus God provides for us all t
St. Paul urges us to "put on the whole armor of God." When we do so we can win the battle for virtue, the battle for prayer and the battle against spiritual apathy.
Christ, in our Gospel this weekend, introduces us to the paradox of the cross. It is the seed that dies and is buried in the ground that bears much fruit. How are we called to unite ourselves more completely to His cross and so share in the f
God calls us to a covenant relationship in Christ, giving us His own body and blood in the Eucharist and offering Himself as the new and eternal covenant.
Jesus Christ gives us Himself in the Blessed Sacrament of the Eucharist. As a meal and a sacrifice, the Eucharist is the source and summit of the Christian faith.
The Church celebrates the Paschal Mystery-the suffering and death and the resurrection of Christ-as a single and life-giving event. Wherever we are experiencing the cross in our lives at this time, God is drawing us ever more deeply into the g
God calls us to an intimate, loving relationship with Him in Christ. We are invited into friendship with God. When we strain or even break that friendship, Jesus Christ can restore it and heal us by His mercy and grace. What a gift, to hav
In the Gospel this weekend Jesus teaches with great authority and by His own power casts out the unclean spirit. Christ gives His authority to the Church to teach and drive away evil. How are we able to grow and thrive in our Christian life t
Christ is the perfect Messenger, who preaches the total and complete message of the Gospel and offers us the opportunity to encounter God and be transformed.