3/21/26

Pause for Prayer: SUNDAY 3/22


 
Like a chick hatching from its shell
so springtime emerges,
    cracking through the last thin ice of winter,
    breaking through to daylight, 
    warming towards the vernal sun,  
        afresh, anew, alive...
 
In the same way, Lord,
tap on my hard shell 'til I emerge,
reborn this Lenten spring:
    once again alive in you, 
    quickened by your rising,
    anointed by your Spirit,
    and  filled to overflowing
    with the joy your glory brings... 

Amen. 

If a video doesn't appear below, click here!

 


  

SUBSCRIBE HERE!

  

NIGHT PRAYER: Saturday 3/21


Some people go to confession in Lent, especially as Easter draws near -- and even more people will not go to confession.  Whether we choose to go to the sacrament of reconciliation or not,  Lent is a time for all of us to stand before the Lord and review our lives, asking God's mercy and pardon for our sins.  Lent is the most excellent season for doing just this.  So, whether you're afraid to confess your sins - or - you think you have no sins to confess: let's all take some time to examine our lives, to acknowledge our sins and failings and to pray to the Lord for his mercy...

Help me to examine my life, Lord
    that I might name all the ways I stand in need 
        of your mercy, your grace and your pardon... 

- Do I love you, Lord? Do I worship you?  Do I pay more attention to false gods in my life (work, money, position, schedules, prestige, superstition, possessions) than I render to you, my one, true God? Do I make time every day to come to you in prayer?  Do I join the community on Sundays at mass?  Do I look and listen for how your Spirit moves in my life?   Do I make an effort to grow in my faith and in my knowledge of your Church and its teachings?  Do I thank you for all your gifts to me?  Am I careful not to use your name carelessly or crudely?  Do I reverence you in my thoughts, words and deeds?

- Do I love others, Lord?  Do I love the people I live with? the people I work with? the folks in my neighborhood, at my school, where I play? Have I abused anyone - physically, verbally, emotionally?  Do I speak unkindly to others - or about others?  Do I give my parents the love and respect they deserve?  Am I a good and faithful parent?  Am I good to my siblings? Am I faithful to my friends?  Do I reach out generously to the poor? Do I share my belongings with friends and family members?  Do I generously care for the needs of others before I take care of myself?   Do I invite other people into my group of friends?  Is there anyone or any group whom I exclude from my social circle? Do my prejudices and biases tempt me to excuse myself from loving some particular groups of people?  Do I reach out to those who are alone?  to those who are lonely? Do I respect and reverence human life in all its shapes and forms?

- Have I stolen, Lord?  Do I take what doesn’t belong to me?  Do I take things I haven’t paid for?  Have I damaged what belongs to others? Am I envious or jealous of what other people have?  Do I collect and hoard what I really don’t need while others go without life’s basic necessities?  Am I greedy or selfish?  Do I place too much importance on material goods?  Do I trust, Lord, that you will provide everything I truly need? Do I care for the earth as the common home I share with others? Do I abuse or waste what grows and nurtures, delights and refreshes, sustains and surprises all flora, fauna and humankind with your presence, beauty and glory? Do I work to protect and conserve all that nature provides for humankind?

- Do I tell the truth, Lord?  Do I stretch the truth?  Do I hide the truth?  Do I hide from the truth? Do I lie? Am I honest with you, Lord?  Am I honest with myself?  with my family?  with my coworkers and employers? with those I do business with? with my teachers and classmates?  with my friends and neighbors?  Am I fair in my dealings with others?   Do I object to injustice I see and work to make things right?  Do I cheat?  Do I take credit for work that’s not mine? Do I hold grudges or resentments? Do I gossip and spread rumors?  Do I contribute to damaging others’ reputations?  Do I forgive those who have hurt me?  Do I ask forgiveness of those whom I have hurt?  

- Do I take good care of my body, Lord?  Do I respect the gift of my body?  Do I eat a healthful diet?  Do I exercise in ways appropriate to my health and age? Do I get the rest I need? Have I abused my body with drugs, alcohol, food or medications? Have I respected my sexuality as a gift from you, Lord?  Have I respected the sexuality of other persons? Have I  been faithful to my spouse in thought, word and deed?  Have I taken advantage of another person for my own pleasure?  Do I take part in entertainment, web sites, conversations or jokes that fail to respect?

- Have I been faithful to my conscience, Lord? Do I work to form a conscience shaped by your word, your truth and your wisdom? Do I bring the gospel message to bear on my opinions? my politics? my attitudes? my voting?  Have I bowed to peer pressure and the “politically correct” rather than to you and your will for me?   Have I encouraged others to make poor choices or do what is wrong?

- Do I love you above all, Lord, with all my heart, all my soul, all my mind?  Do I love my neighbor as myself? Do I do what is just, love what is good and humbly walk by your side? Do I do to others as I would have them do to me?   Do I forgive others as you forgive me, Lord: freely and fully, with generous mercy?  

Whatever my faults, Lord,
    and however many my sins may be, 
when I come to you for your mercy,
    you're there, ready to meet me:         
        slow to anger, rich in kindness,
            loving and pardoning all...

Protect me, Lord, while I'm awake
    and watch over me while I sleep
that awake, I might keep watch with you
    and asleep, rest in your peace...
 
Amen.

Loving and Forgiving by Scott Soper
 
If the music widget below does not appear, click here! 



Loving and forgiving are you, 
O Lord; slow to anger, rich in kindness, 
loving and forgiving are you.  
 
1. All my being bless the Lord;  
bless the holy name of God.  
All my being bless the Lord,  
remembering the goodness of God.
 
2. God forgives us all our sins, 
healing those who live in pain,  
saving us from final death.  
God fills us with goodness and love.   
 
3. Good and gracious is the Lord,  
slow to anger, rich in love.  
God remembers not our sins;  
forgiving and loving is God. 

4. As heaven soars above the earth, 
so great the love of God for us. 
As far as east is from the west, 
the Lord takes our sins from us.
  

  

SUBSCRIBE HERE!

  

3/20/26

NIGHT PRAYER: Friday 3/20

 

For several years I've posted a weekly Lenten series on a selected topic.  This year, on the Fridays of Lent, I'll be featuring songs we sing to honor the Cross of Jesus. (Here are links to the first, second,  third, and fourth posts in this series.)  The very fact that we sing of the Cross on which Jesus died is a testimony to our faith and belief that in his suffering we find our healing and our life...  Tonight's selection is Michael Garrepy's stunning arrangement of Were You There? performed by Ensemble Altera.  This hymn takes us beyond the Cross to the Resurrection which reminds us that here in Lent we do not pretend that Christ hasn't risen from the dead - much less deny that it's our faith in his rising that helps us to grasp and understand the mystery of  the Cross...

I suggest you pray with the song first, and then move on to my Night Prayer...  
 
If a video doesn't appear below, click here!
 
 

Were you there when they crucified my Lord? 
 
Oh, sometimes it causes me to tremble, tremble, tremble.
Were you there when they crucified my Lord? 
 
Were you there when they nailed him to the tree? 
 
Were you there when they pierced him in the side?
 
Were you there when they laid him in the tomb? 
 
Were you there when he rose up from the dead?
 
Sometimes I feel like crying, "Glory, glory!" 
 
Where you there? Were you there? Were you there? 
 
Night Prayer 
 
Was I there, Lord?
Was I there when they crucified you?
    when they nailed you to a tree?
    when they pierced you in your side?
    when they laid you in the tomb?
 
No I wasn't there 2,000 years ago,
    not in person, not in the flesh,
    not in the crowds that witnessed 
        your suffering and death...
 
But I was there in my sinsLord...
 
I was there in the sins that I own:
    in my thoughts and ill will,
    in my prejudice and bias,
    in my willful, unyielding stubbornness,  
    in my bitter envy and jealousy,    
    in my over-blown self-estimation,
    in my cunning, conniving designs, 
    in my hard-hearted spite,
        resentments and grudges 
 - all of my sins were there, Lord
        and they hung you on your Cross...
 
I was there, too, in the sins I own
in the words that fall from the lips of my mouth:
    harsh, cutting and unkind words,
    half-truths and lies, gossip and rumors,
    epithets, put-downs and nasty digs,
    whispers, threats and false accusations, 
    curses and swears and expletives (not deleted),
    insults and slander, taunts and slurs
    and the silence I kept 
        when I could have, should have spoken up
 - all my sins were there, Lord
        and they pierced you in your side...
 
And I was there in the sins I own
in what I've done and failed to do:
    in my actions, deeds and slick maneuvers,
    in my foolish capers, stunts and larks,    
    in wishing ill or harm on my neighbor, 
    in betrayal, theft, cheating and fraud,
    in supporting what's evil, sinful and wrong,
    in seeking success whatever the cost, 
    in my unfair, unjust practices,    
    in sins of the flesh and sins of the soul
- all my sins were there, Lord
        and they laid you in the tomb...
 
I wasn't there in person, Lord,
   I wasn't there in the flesh,
I wasn't counted in the crowds
    that watched you suffer and die,
but I was thereLord, in my sins,
    I was there, Lord, when you died... 
 
So I pray that when my own time comes,
    you'll be there for me, Lord
        with your saving grace and mercy
to save me from my sins
    and raise me from the dead
        to the life you've won for me... 
 
And then, Lord, I'll cry "Glory!"
    I'll cry, "Glory to my God!" 
 
Protect me, Lord, while I'm awake
    and watch over me while I sleep
that awake, I might keep watch with you
    and asleep rest in your peace...

Amen. 
  
Would you like to pray with the song again? 
If a video doesn't appear below, click here! 
 
 

  

SUBSCRIBE HERE!

  

It's spring!


It's the first day of Spring! Also known as the vernal equinox, the spring equinox marks one of the two instances each year when our sun and the Earth's equator align. The spring equinox always falls on March 20 or 21 (occasionally on March 19 in a leap year).

We trust the signs of spring around us, that give us hope as we leave winter behind.  We expect the fulfillment of what is promised.  We hope in the beauty that waits, wrapped so tightly, until spring rains and the sun's warmth open and reveal what's hidden within.

Here are some "starters" for prayer this morning...

What signs of promise and hope are "budding" 
in my desire for more than what I have right now?

What moments of strength are budding in my heart
with courage to act, to hope, to dream again?

When winter weighs on me, 
do I look for those buds?  
do I hope to find them? 
do I expect to find them?

 
Even when I'm wrapped tightly 
in the folds of worry and fear,
God waits to open me, 
to reveal what's within me,
to draw forth more from me 
than I could ever dream of...

When I find buds of hope in my life,
do I trust God to bring them to blossom?

When spring stirs in my heart,
do I trust God to work within me,  
heart and soul, mind and body,
to bring forth the goodness, the truth, 
the best of who I am?
 
Lifting my face to the light of God's love
and my life to the dew of the Lord's anointing,
who knows what might spring to life within me,
how God might renew me
and refresh my trust and hope?
 
Where there are buds 
there is beauty waiting to bloom 
in my yard, in my hope, in my heart...
 
It's the first day of spring 
and as surely as nature stirs 
in the still chilled earth
so does the Lord stir within me
with the promise and pledge
of new life...

 Amen.

First Day of Spring by Secret Garden
 
If a video doesn't appear below, click here!
 

 

  

SUBSCRIBE HERE!

  

TODAY is a FRIDAY in LENT


 March 20
 is a FRIDAY in LENT 
 - a day of ABSTINENCE.

What does that mean?  

On the Fridays of Lent 
Catholics over 14 years of age
are expected to abstain from eating meat.
 
For more on this topic, 
check out this earlier post.
 
 Note: 
 Individual, personal health concerns and "doctor's orders" 
always take precedence over regulations 
for fast and abstinence!

  

SUBSCRIBE HERE!

  

3/19/26

Saint Joseph - and the counfounding mystery of my own life...


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
March 19 is the feast of Saint Joseph which falls in Lent but since everything we know about Joseph comes from the Christmas story, we find ourselves back at the circumstances surrounding the nativity of Jesus.
 
 Over 2,000 years ago, when Christ was about to be born, only Mary and Joseph knew the whole story of what was about to happen.... Can't you just imagine Mary asking, “Joseph… are you ready for this?”

We know there was at least one moment when Joseph was not ready for this: when he was ready only to quietly break off his betrothal to Mary - but then an angel spoke to him in a dream and said, “Joseph, be not afraid…”

Be not afraid – of what?  Be not afraid of taking Mary into his home as his wife? Of caring for a child he knew he had not fathered? 
 
Yes, all of that..  but so much more!  The angel was telling Joseph, "Be not afraid of how the mystery of God is weaving itself into your life, into your relationship with Mary and into your whole future. Be not afraid, Joseph, of how the mystery of God will touch your life, shape your life, turn your life around and stand it on its head!"

Like Joseph, all of us face times when God has allowed things to happen or has allowed things not to happen, that intimately touch, shape and turn our lives around in ways we never dreamed would happen, in ways we wish had never happened, in ways we prayed would never happen...

And in all of this the word to us is precisely the angel’s word to Joseph in his dream:
    "Be not afraid because in everything, 
and in all things 
- God is with you...”

"Joseph, are you ready for this?"
  To be ready is to renew our faith, our trust, in all the ways the mystery of God’s presence is weaving itself into our lives: touching and shaping and turning our lives around in ways we had never have imagined, dreamed or asked for.  And most of all, to be ready is to trust that God is with us in everything and in all things...

Take a moment today to imagine Joseph's doubts, his anticipation, his anger… his regrets, his fears, his wonder, his confusion, his awe… 
And, imagine yourself in Joseph's dream...  Imagine Joseph putting his fears aside and handing his troubles over to God...

Pause for Prayer
 
I come to you this day, Lord, with a heart 
    sometimes ready, sometimes not so ready,
        to trust you, follow you, love you...

My problems, my worries, my burdens
    sometimes loom larger than life 
and back me into corners where I feel alone 
    and I wonder where you've brought me,
        where you'll lead me - even if you're still with me...

Lord, my heart needs a dream, an angel, a message
    reminding me not to be afraid... 
 
Remind me as you reminded Joseph
    that with you I can face all things,
        accept all things, do all things,
            endure all things...

Especially when my life and my heart
    are spun around and upside down;
when my sense of direction fails me;
    when I fear the path I'm walking,
remind me then, Lord, not to be afraid,
    to trust you're by my side
and that with you I can be ready 
    for whatever comes my way...

I come today, Lord, with a heart 
    sometimes ready and sometimes not so ready,
 but ready or not, Lord 
    - here I come -
and here I am and here I stand
    in need of your love, in need of your grace, 
        today and every day of my life...
 
Saint Joseph, 
    pray for me and watch over me 
as you cared for Jesus 
    in your arms and in your home
        and in your heart.. 

Amen.

This song is about Joseph and his circumstances
but all of us might relate to this line in the refrain:
    "Father tell me where I fit into this plan of yours..."
 
Jsoeph's Song by Michael Card
 

If a widget doesn't appear below, click here!
 


How could it be, this baby in my arms 
Sleeping now, so peacefully 
The Son of God, the angel said 
How could it be?
 
Lord I know He's not my own 
Not of my flesh, not of my bone 
Still Father let this baby be 
Son of my love
 
Father tell me where I fit into this plan of yours 
How can a man be father to the Son of God 
Lord for all my life I've been a simple carpenter 
How can I raise a king, How can I raise a king ?
 
He looks so small, His face and hands so fair 
And when He cries the sun just seems to disappear 
But when He laughs it shines again 
How could it be? 
 
Father tell me where I fit into this plan of yours 
How can a man be father to the Son of God 
Lord for all my life I've been a simple carpenter 
How can I raise a king, How can I raise a king?

How could it be, this baby in my arms 
Sleeping now, so peacefully 
The Son of God, the angel said 
How could it be?

  

  

SUBSCRIBE HERE!

  

3/18/26

I'm feeling fine - and hope to feel even finer after a few days away!  Posting will be light meanwhile but I'll be back to my usual schedule sometime on Saturday!

 

 

 

  

SUBSCRIBE HERE!

  

Pause for Prayer: WEDNESDAY 3/18


  

SUBSCRIBE HERE!

  

3/17/26

NIGHT PRAYER: Tuesday 3/17


Tonight's prayer, the Patrick Compline, comes to us from the Nothumbria Community(The word Compline is derived from the Old French word complir: to complete or bring to an end)  This prayer combines lines from The Lorica of Saint Patrick (see this morning's Pause for Prayer - and tonight's song, below) with the verses of Psalm 16 - and ends with three beautiful blessings. 

In the name of the King of life;
in the name of the Christ of love;
in the name of the Holy Spirit:
    the Triune of my strength.

I love you, O Lord my strength.

The Lord is my rock,
    my fortress and my deliverer.
My God is my rock
    in whom I take refuge.

I will praise the Lord who counsels me;
    even at night my heart instructs me.

I have set the Lord always before me.
Because He is at my right hand,
    I shall not be shaken.

I place my soul and my body
    under your guarding this night, O Christ.
May your cross, this night be my shield.

Into Your hands I commend my spirit:
    redeem me, O Lord, the God of Truth.

The God of life with guarding hold you;
    the loving Christ with guarding fold you;
        the Holy Spirit, guarding, mold you;
    each night of life to aid, enfold you;
        each day and night of life uphold you.

May God shield me;
    may God fill me;
        may God keep me;
may God watch me;
    may God bring me
        to the nearness of His love.
 
The peace of the Father of joy,
    the peace of the Christ of hope,
        the peace of the Spirit of grace,
    the peace of every peace
        be mine throughout this night.

Amen.
 
This haunting musical setting of The Lorica is the work of Arvo Part.  Of the several versions I've posted today, this is my favorite: this composer knows how to reach my soul...
 
If a video doesn't appear below, click here! 
 
 
 
Christ with me, Christ before me, Christ behind me
Christ in me, Christ beneath me, Christ above me
Christ on my right, Christ on my left
Christ when I lie down, Christ when I sit down
Christ in me, Christ when I arise
Christ in the heart of everyone who thinks of me
Christ in the mouth of everyone who speaks of me
Christ in every eye that sees me
Christ in every ear that hears me
Christ with me

  

SUBSCRIBE HERE!