4/26/26

Do you need some peaceful time today?

 
Need a break?  A little respite? A few peaceful moments?
On this Good Shepherd Sunday, spend some time with Sir John Rutter's setting of Psalm 23.  This music never fails to heal my heart, settle my soul and lift my spirits...  (If a video doesn't appear above, click here!)
 
The Lord is my shepherd,
Therefore can I lack nothing,
He shall feed me in a green pasture
And lead me forth beside the waters of comfort,

He shall convert my soul,
And bring me forth in the paths of righteousness,
For his name's sake,

Yea, though I walk through the
Valley of the shadow of death,
I will fear no evil,
For thou art with me,
Thy rod and thy staff comfort me,

Thou shalt prepare a table before me
Against them that trouble me,
Thou hast anointed my head with oil,
And my cup shall be full,

But thy loving kindness and mercy
Shall follow me all the days of my life,
And I will dwell In the house of the Lord, forever.    

 

 

  

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4/25/26

Pause for Prayer: SUNDAY 4/26

Good Shepherd by Duncan Grant
 
Today, the Fourth Sunday of Easter,
   is Good Shepherd Sunday...

Good Shepherd of us all,
I thank you today for all the good shepherds in my life
and for all the ways you've shepherded me
through their love, their watchful presence,
their devotion and protection...

I thank you for my parents, my first shepherds;
I thank you for their protection, for the shelter of their love,
and for all they sacrificed
to help me grow...

I thank you for other shepherds in my family
and for all my friends
who comfort and challenge me,
who dry my tears and make me laugh,
who walk faithfully close by my side...

I thank you for all the shepherds
who taught me in school,
who counseled and directed me,
who shaped me and helped me to become
the person I am today...

I thank you for shepherds
whose names I don't know, who stand in harm's way
'round my town and 'round the world,
standing guard all day long to keep me safe,
keeping vigil while I sleep without a worry...

I thank you Lord, for the shepherds who care
for the sick and dying sheep among us,
who bind up wounds,
who bring comfort to those in pain,
who speed the path to health
or ease the path to end of days...

I thank you for the shepherds you've called home,
especially those gone much too soon,
whose gentle shepherd's crook I miss,
whose presence still abides within my heart...

I thank you for the shepherds, Lord,
who remember me in prayer,
lifting up my name and needs to you;
who keep me in the sheepfold of your grace, 
you, my gentle Shepherd,
Good Shepherd of us all...

Amen.

The Lord Is My Shepherd 

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



  

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I need constant supervision!


This is Good Shepherd Sunday in the Church around the world - and a special day in the community where I celebrate mass: Good Shepherd Parish!  At the beginning of mass I showed people my Good Shepherd tshirt - remarking that I most need the Good Shepherd's supervision - precisely when I'm thinking I don't need his supervision!
 
Here's a link to a video of my homily, based on John 10:1-10 and here's the text of my homily: 
 

When I look back on my own childhood. I see that I often took my parents' love for granted. I figured they were supposed to let me - and they did! As any child might, I didn't like everything my parents told me to do. And even less, I didn't like many of the things they told me I shouldn't or couldn't do. But even then, at some place deep inside, I believed, I trusted I knew that they loved me.

 

But I didn't realize, as a child, was how much they loved him.

 

I can see now that they often gladly went without - so that I and my siblings could have what we needed and wanted. I can see now how they spent their lives for me. I know now that my mother and father would have, without a moment's hesitation, put themselves between me and harm's way - without a thought for their own safety or welfare.

 

One of the reasons I see so much love in my own past is that I see it now - in the lives of families around me - and I recognize that love as the kind and depth of love I knew as a child.

 

(Unfortunately, sadly, some children aren't loved like this. And sometimes I see that, too. And I pray that others in their lives (besides their parents) will love them as unconditionally as good parents love their sons and daughters.)

 

But this no strings attached, self-sacrificing love parents give - is the kind of love Jesus has for each of us. And of course, Jesus’ love for us comes with no strings attached. His love never takes a break, never falters, never fails, never ends. In the total surrender of his own life, Jesus put himself between us and harm's way when he laid down his life for us on the Cross. And that's the message of the good shepherd in today's gospel.

 

But we need to know a little bit about shepherds and sheepfolds - if we're gonna get that message. (The Pharisees didn't get in the gospel. Let's hope that we can do better than the Pharisees!)

 

A sheepfold is a large enclosure - sometimes a stone wall, sometimes made of bushes, planted to “hedge in” a large pen - where sheep are gathered to spend the night, protected from thieves who might come down and take the sheep away - or beasts of prey who might attack the sheep. Sheepfolds like this are still in use in the Middle East - and in the United Kingdom.

 

So, the shepherd leads the sheep into the fold at night - and out in the morning - through a simple opening in the wall or the hedge.  But back in the day, in Jesus' time, there was no gate at the opening of the wall of the sheepfold. So once the sheep were safely gathered in at night, the shepherd would lie down on the ground, stretching his body across the opening so that the sheep could not stray out, and no thief or wolf could gain entrance, under the cover of darkness. 

 

Now, let's listen again to the words of Jesus: 
 

    And he said, 

        "I am the gate for the sheep.

        Whoever enters through me will be saved,

          and will come in and go out 

            and find pasture."

 

The shepherd, in the fields with his flock, becomes the sheepfold's gate, providing safe haven for the sheep and protecting them from harm.

 

Jesus, the shepherd - who loves us as a father and mother love their child - Jesus is not only WILLING to lay down his life for those he loves and keeps - he has indeed DONE that. Jesus has done that.

 

Perhaps the reason I may have missed the depths of my parents' love for me was that they provided so well for me, protected me so securely, that I never saw or knew the harm that was around me, that might befall me.

 

Perhaps as a child, I failed to see how much I was loved because I didn't see how much I needed to be loved, how much I needed to be protected.

 

Sometimes, I'm like that with the Lord's love, too. I don't see - or I refuse to see - that evil, like a thief, waits to rob me, even now, of what innocence I can still claim. Of what honesty and purity are still mine. Of the faithfulness and sincerity that have shaped and continue to shape the person I am.

 

I very much need the Lord's protective love - whether I recognize the dangers around me or not. And the less aware I am of my need for God's love - the more vulnerable am to what might harm me.

 

• Ours is not a culture in which the individual takes kindly or easily to being shepherded. 

• We resist being told what to do, where we can or cannot go. 

• Bumper stickers tell us to question authority. 

• We like to be known as rugged individuals who can take care of ourselves.

 

But when we disdain what we dismiss as “herd mentality,” we might run the risk of separating ourselves from the flock, tended by Jesus, whom we celebrate today as our shepherd, our shep-HERD.

 

Perhaps some, or even all of that, explains why, in the last month or so, so many have criticized our shepherd, Pope Leo. Some seem surprised - taken aback - that Leo speaks and acts like – Jesus!  That as pope, he stands as a shepherd whose heart's desire is to care for, to shelter, guide and guard the flock entrusted to his care.

 

Should we be surprised that Pope Leo comes at life from the perspective of the gospel? Actually carrying in his hand a shepherd's crook, a shepherd's staff? He walks around with that. We miss that.

 

Should we be surprised when Leo, like a wise shepherd, addresses the moral issues of right and wrong, life and death, war, and peace, freedom and justice?

 

That he critiques those structures and policies that threaten creation and humanity… that endanger the fold and the flock, entrusted to his care.

 

Should we be surprised when he speaks with a simple shepherd's wisdom -a wisdom that counters the folly of human pride?

 

Should we be surprised that Leo calls us to live by a measure of love, whose sign is the Cross of Jesus who laid down his life for his flock.

 

Our sanctuary here is like a sheepfold. And right now, a lot of the sheep have gathered here for prayer.

 

But the shepherd was not at the gate, not at the front door, he was not at the side door. Rather, our shepherd is right in the middle: his image on the cross, and his voice, the one we hear when he calls us, in the words of scripture.

 

Here at the altar, once again, Jesus lays down his life for us: now - in the prayer and sacrifice of this table, where we find our pasture, our sheepfold – where we are nourished by the life of our Shepherd.

 

The Good Shepherd loves you -and me - Loves all of us, his flock.

 

The Lord is our shepherd, and yes: we all need constant supervision!

 

  

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NIGHT PRAYER: Saturday 4/25

Slow me down, Lord, 
    close my eyes
       and open my heart to your presence...

You're here with me right now, Lord,
   wanting to spend time with me, 

   ready to hear me out,
   waiting to whisper a word of peace...

Slow me down, Lord, 
    close my eyes
       and open my heart to your presence...

You're here with me right now,
   wanting to strengthen me,
   ready to encourage me,
   waiting to console me...

Slow me down, Lord, 
    close my eyes
       and open my heart to your presence...

You're here with me right now,
   waiting to calm me down,
   ready to lift me up,
   wanting to help me get through the night...

Slow me down, Lord, 
    close my eyes
       and open my heart to your presence...

You're here with me right now,
   wanting to hold me,
   ready to guide me,
   waiting to lead me...

Slow me down, Lord, 
    close my eyes
       and open my heart to your presence...

You're here with me right now:
   waiting, ready and wanting
      to help me be present to you;
   waiting, ready and wanting 
       to hear and hold the prayer of my heart
    waiting, ready and wanting
       to stay by my side 'til a new day dawns...

Slow me down, Lord, 
    close my eyes
       and open my heart to your presence...
 
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.
 
Here's a very creative version of the very familiar
Psalm 23 - just right for this evening's prayer... 

Slow Me Down, Lord by The Porter's Gate

If a widget doesn't appear below, click here!
 
 
 
O good shepherd, would you teach me how to rest  
I’m rushing on, will you make me to lie down  
Will you build a fold by the waters that refresh  
Will you call my name and lead me safely out?  
 
From my anxious drive to labor on and on  
From the restless grind that has put my mind to sleep  
Will you call me back and gently slow me down  
Will you show me now what to lose and what to keep  
 
O Good Shepherd, O Good friend, 
    slow me down, slow me down
O Good Shepherd, O Good friend, 
    slow me down, slow me down   
 
When my table’s bent with only greed and gold  
And my grasping hands are afraid you won’t provide  
Will you pour the wine that loosens up my hold  
Set your table here with what truly satisfies  
 
O Good Shepherd, O Good friend, 
    slow me down, slow me down
O Good Shepherd, O Good friend, 
    slow me down, slow me down  
 
On the busy streets trying to make myself a name  
If the work is yours, there is nothing I can claim  
Will you lead me home to the pastures of your peace  
And the house is yours, I’m sitting at your feet
 
O Good Shepherd, O Good friend, 
    slow me down, slow me down
O Good Shepherd, O Good friend, 
    slow me down, slow me down   

  

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Pause for Prayer: SATURDAY 4/24


Pick me up, Lord,
and dust me off:
    polish my tarnished spots...

Give me a kick,
just where I need it,
    to get me going again...

Open my eyes
to see what's before me:
    now, in the moment, today...

Jump start my will
to do the right thing
    as fully as I may be able...

Breathe in my soul,
fill my heart to the brim
    with the peace and joy of your Spirit...

Grant me the grace
of a new brand new day,
    blessed by your wisdom and truth...

And stay with me, Lord,
hour by hour,
    step by step by my side...

And when day is done
I pray for good rest
    till you shake me awake in the morn...

Amen.

  

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What's a sheepfold?

Image by Andrew Leaney at The Lakeland Fells

Every year, the gospel on the Fourth Sunday of Easter is about the Good Shepherd.  This year's text is from John and mentions a sheepfold, like the one in the image above. 
 
A sheepfold is a stonewalled enclosure for protecting a herd of sheep from wild animal attacks in the night. Such structures are still in use today in the Middle East and in the UK.
 
In Jesus' day the entrance to a sheepfold was simply a break in the wall - no gate. Once the sheep had been gathered in for the night, the shepherd would lie down and stretch his body across the entrance - thus becoming the gate to the fold. 
 
 
Now let's listen to Jesus in this weekend's gospel:
 
    "Amen, I say to you,
        I am the gate for the sheep.
    All who came before me are thieves and robbers,
        but the sheep did not listen to them.
    I am the gate.
    Whoever enters through me will be saved
        and will come in and go out and find pasture..." 

Get it? 

  

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4/24/26

NIGHT PRAYER: Friday 4/24


On his recent trip to Africa, Pope Leo spoke these words (full text) in Equatorial Guinea:

No one is excluded from God’s love! Each of us, with our unique stories, mistakes and sufferings, remains precious in the Lord’s eyes. We can say this with certainty, because Jesus revealed it to us in every encounter, every gesture and every word. Even when he was arrested, condemned and put to death through no fault of his own, he loved us to the very end. In doing so, he showed us that he believed in the power of love to change even the hardest of hearts.
Reach out, Lord, 
    to soften the hardness in my heart,
    to melt the frost that chills my heart,
    to massage my stiff and rigid heart...
 
Reach deep, Lord, 
    to gently heal my wounded heart,
    speak wisdom to my foolish heart,
    breathe life into my listless heart...
 
Reach and reach again, Lord, 
    to mend my torn and tattered heart,
    to feed my thirsty, hungry heart,
    to fill my empty lonely heart 
        with mercy, love and peace... 
 
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. 
 
Change My Heart, O God by Eddie Espinosa
 
If a video doesn't appear below, click here!
 

  

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4/23/26

Pause for Prayer: FRIDAY 424


  
I believe, Lord, that your loving eye is upon me
   every moment of every day,
      morning, noon and night;
I believe  that you never blink, nap or nod,
   but rather, without fail, hold me in your sight...

I believe, Lord, that your ears are open to my prayer,
   to every word and thought and dream of mine
      - the good ones and the not so good;
I believe that nothing crosses my mind, stirs in my heart
   - not a word leaves my lips - 
without your knowing it and, 
    in your own good way and time, 
        attending to it...

I believe, Lord, that your heart is open to mine: 24/7/365,
    that not a beat of my heart goes unnoticed by yours:
       that every flutter, murmur and skip of my heart
         echoes in yours - and is lovingly heard...

I trust your attention to all of my needs, Lord,
    even when I wonder and worry 
        that you've taken a break
            or forgotten my name 
                or grown tired of all my prayers...

I trust your response to my worries and fears
   - even when silence is the answer you give.
In your silence I trust that I'm not left alone,
   that I'm patiently held in your mystery of love
    'til your word, 'til your wisdom,
         'til your breath whispers softly,
            "I'm with you, you are not alone..."


I trust in your care when you answer my prayer:
    "not now..."  or  "not yet..." or even just "no..."
It's then I pray for the patience to wait
    to watch  for the ways you'll help me get through, 
        get by and survive the stress of each day
            and the loneliness of those long nights...

I trust that you see, Lord, and much more than I,
   that your vision is keener than mine;
that you see all my troubles - just as they are -
    discerning and sorting the small from the large
      the real from the ones  I imagine...
 
I trust you'll be with me today, O Lord:
   that not for a moment will you leave my side,
   that at every turn you'll be watching my step,
        guarding and guiding my way...

I trust that each word, every thought, all my prayers
      will make its way to the depths of your heart;
that even in silence your love will abide
   in the mystery, the promise, 
       the gift your gift of your peace...

Amen.

  

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