1/20/26

Pause for Prayer: WEDNESDAY 1/21



 

 

 

 

  

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NIGHT PRAYER: Tuesday 1/20


When someone pushes my buttons, Lord,
    when a brother or sister gets under my skin;
when, try as I might, I find no worth
    in someone's existence;
when I'm tempted to curse and even to hate,
   a person whose values, deeds and ideas, 
      are directly opposed to my own;
 
when I'm just at a loss to discern or to see
   what you find to love in my enemy...
 
It's then I must stop and look at myself:
    at the missteps and false starts I try to forget;     
    at all of my broken, dysfunctional parts
        and the story that's made me the person I am; 
    at my self-admiration, my ego and pride;
    at the truth I avoid, withhold and deny; 
    at my sins and transgressions and character flaws;
    at my arrogant smugness and cocky conceit;
    at my cover-ups, half-truths and outright lies;
    at my self-indulgence and careless neglect
        of those whose needs are much greater than mine;
    at my reckless pursuit of the bling I envy
        and my foolish desire for things I don't need;
    at my apathetic lack of concern
        for what deserves my time and attention;
    at my lack of discretion, wisdom and prudence,
        restraint and caution - and common sense; 
    at my wasting the treasure, the talent and time
        you've offered me to share and enjoy;
    at the ways I ignore and miss and forget
        your grace and your peace in my life every day...
 
All of that, Lord, and still you love me,
    still find in my a reflection of the image divine
        in which I was made... 
 
You know all my sins, the big and the small,
    both public and private, present and past,
but you look upon me through your merciful eyes
    and you see the person you made me to be,
the man, the woman you call me to be,
    the person you know I want to be
        and who, by your grace, I'm becoming...
 
You know all my faults even better than I do,
    you know how I'll fall long before I stumble;
you know my weaknesses, flaws and failures
    and wait to be my healing and pardon,
        my strength, my power, my hope...
 
You see right me through me, 
    you don't miss a thing,
and still you love me for who I am:
    a sinful child you freely pardon;
    a broken child you mend and heal;    
    a forgotten child you call by name;
    a lonely child you hold with love;
    a wild child you tame with patience;
    a foolish child you understand;
    a lost child you find and keep...
 
So, when someone pushes my buttons, Lord,
    when a brother or sister gets under my skin,
remind me of how much you love me,
    - with all of my faults and sins -
and help me to love my neighbor
    as I pray they might love me... 
 
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. 
 
I Have Loved You Michael Joncas
   
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1/19/26

Pause for Prayer: TUESDAY 1/20

I know so many folks who are losing hope:  finding it more and more difficult to trust that all is not lost, that things will turn around, that better days are coming, that help is on the way, that the Lord is at their side, that all is in God's hands and that all things shall be well...
 
So for these friends, I'm posting this prayer - with the hope they'll make it their own 
and find in their faith the hope they need today...

When I'm lost in the dark, Lord,
    give me hope of a new day's dawn...

In the midst of my distress,
    give me hope for serenity... 

When I feel trapped in my past,
    give me hope for all that's ahead...
 
When sadness overwhelms me,
    give me hope for the peace you promise...

When I'm lost in my confusion,
    give me hope for understanding...

When I'm feeling all alone,
    give me hope for real companionship...

When I'm lost in doubt and fear,
    give me hope and trust in faith...

When I fear there's no one there,
    give me hope for someone's helping hand...

When I'm at my weakest point, Lord,
    give me hope for strength and courage...
 
When war and terror threaten
    give me  hope for peace around the world... 

When it seems there's simply no way out,
    give me grace to hope for hope...

And when I'm feeling hopeless 
    help me find my hope in you, Lord,
         the source of all and every hope...
 
Amen. 
 
I Set My Hope by Matt Papa 

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When this life of trials tests my faith 
I set my hope on Jesus 
When the questions come and doubts remain 
I set my hope on Jesus 
For the deepest wounds that time won’t heal 
There’s a joy that runs still deeper 
There’s a truth that’s more than all I feel 
I set my hope on Jesus   
 
I set my hope on Jesus 
My rock, my only trust 
Who set His heart upon me first 
I set my hope on Jesus 
 
Though I falter in this war with sin 
I set my hope on Jesus 
When I fail the fight and sink within 
I set my hope on Jesus 
Though the shame would drown me in its sea 
And I dread the waves of justice 
I will cast my life on Calvary 
I set my hope on Jesus  
 
Though the world call me to leave my Lord 
I set my hope on Jesus 
Though it offer all its vain rewards 
I set my hope on Jesus 
Though this heart of mine is prone to stray 
Give me grace enough to finish ’
Till I worship on that final day 
I set my hope on Jesus 

  

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NIGHT PRAYER: Martin Luther King, Jr Day


 
On this Martin Luther King Day, 
    let's pray in the very words of the man we honor...


Most gracious and all wise God, 
   before whose face the generations rise and fall;
        Thou in whom we live, and move, and have our being:
We thank thee 
    for all of thy good and gracious gifts, 
    for life and for health; 
    for food and for raiment; 
    for the beauties of nature and human nature. 
 
We come before thee 
    painfully aware of our inadequacies and shortcomings. 
 
We realize that we stand surrounded 
    with the mountains of love 
and we deliberately dwell 
    in the valley of hate. 
 
We stand amid the forces of truth 
    and deliberately lie. 
 
We are forever offered the high road 
    and yet we choose to travel the low road. 
 
For these sins O God forgive us. 
Break the spell of that which blinds our minds. 
Purify our hearts that we may see thee. 
 
O God in these turbulent days 
    when fear and doubt are mounting high 
give us broad visions, penetrating eyes, 
    and the power of endurance. 
 
Help us to work with renewed vigor 
    for a warless world, 
    for a better distribution of wealth 
    and for a brother/sisterhood that transcends race or color.
 
 In the name and spirit of Jesus we pray. 
 
Amen.  
 
Shed a Little Light by James Taylor
 - performed by The Maccabeats / Naturally 7     
 
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Let us turn our thoughts todayTo Martin Luther KingAnd recognize that there are ties between usAll men and women living on the EarthTies of hope and loveSister and brotherhood
 
That we are bound togetherIn our desire to see the worldBecome a place in which our childrenCan grow free and strong
 
We are bound together by the taskThat stands before usAnd the road that lies aheadWe are bound, and we are bound
 
There's a feeling like the clenching of a fistThere's a hunger in the center of the chestThere's a passage through the darkness and the mistAnd though the body sleepsThe heart will never rest
 
Shed a little light, oh Lord So that we can see, oh yeahJust a little light, oh Lord. Want to stand it on upStand it on up, oh Lord Want to walk it on down 
Shed a little light, oh Lord 
 
Can't get no light from a dollar bill(Don't see me no light from a dollar bill)Don't give me no light from a TV screen, oh no, noWhen I open my eyes, I want to drink my fillFrom the well on the hillI know you know what I mean
 
Shed a little light, oh Lord So that we can see, oh yeahJust a little light, oh Lord Want to stand it on upStand it on up, oh Lord Want to walk it on down
Shed a little light, oh Lord 
So we can see
 
And there's a feeling like the clenching of a fistThere is a hunger in the center of the chest, oh noThere is a passage through the darkness and the mistAnd though the body sleepsThe heart will never rest
 
Let us turn our thoughts todayTo Martin Luther KingAnd recognize that there are ties between usAll men and women living on the EarthTies of hope and loveSister and brotherhood
   

  

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Three American cardinals speak out

Cardinals Cupich, McElroy and Tobin

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Three American cardinals (the archbishops of Chicago, Washington, and Newark) have issued a statement on charting a moral vision for American foreign policy.  Those who have been disappointed in the virtual silence of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops - and in the recent  statement from Bishop Robert Barron who sits on President Trump's Religious Liberty Commission - will be more than grateful for the vision these three cardinals propose.
 
Charting A Moral Vision 
   of American Foreign Policy
 
In 2026, the United States has entered into the most profound and searing debate about the moral foundation for America’s actions in the world since the end of the Cold War. The events in Venezuela, Ukraine and Greenland have raised basic questions about the use of military force and the meaning of peace. The sovereign rights of nations to self-determination appear all too fragile in a world of ever greater conflagrations. The balancing of national interest with the common good is being framed within starkly polarized terms. Our country’s moral role in confronting evil around the world, sustaining the right to life and human dignity, and supporting religious liberty are all under examination. And the building of just and sustainable peace, so crucial to humanity’s well-being now and in the future, is being reduced to partisan categories that encourage polarization and destructive policies. 
 
For all of these reasons, the contribution of Pope Leo in outlining a truly moral foundation for international relations to the Vatican diplomatic corps this month has provided us an enduring ethical compass for establishing the pathway for American foreign policy in the coming years. He stated: 
In our time, the weakness of multilateralism is a particular cause for concern at the international level. A diplomacy that promotes dialogue and seeks consensus among all parties is being replaced by a diplomacy based on force, by either individuals or groups of allies. War is back in vogue and a zeal for war is spreading. The principle established after the Second World War, which prohibited nations from using force to violate the borders of others, has been completely undermined. Peace is no longer sought as a gift and desirable good in itself, or in pursuit of “the establishment of the ordered universe willed by God with a more perfect form of justice among men and women.” Instead, peace is sought through weapons as a condition for asserting one’s own dominion.  
Pope Leo also reiterates Catholic teaching that “the protection of the right to life constitutes the indispensable foundation for every other human right” and that abortion and euthanasia are destructive of that right. He points to the need for international aid to safeguard the most central elements of human dignity, which are under assault because of the movement by wealthy nations to reduce or eliminate their contributions to humanitarian foreign assistance programs. Finally, the Holy Father points to the increasing violations of conscience and religious freedom in the name of an ideological or religious purity that crushes freedom itself. 
 
As pastors and citizens, we embrace this vision for the establishment of a genuinely moral foreign policy for our nation. We seek to build a truly just and lasting peace, that peace which Jesus proclaimed in the Gospel. We renounce war as an instrument for narrow national interests and proclaim that military action must be seen only as a last resort in extreme situations, not a normal instrument of national policy. We seek a foreign policy that respects and advances the right to human life, religious liberty, and the enhancement of human dignity throughout the world, especially through economic assistance. 
 
Our nation’s debate on the moral foundation for American policy is beset by polarization, partisanship, and narrow economic and social interests. Pope Leo has given us the prism through which to raise it to a much higher level. We will preach, teach, and advocate in the coming months to make that higher level possible. 
 
 Signed: 
Cardinal Blase J. Cupich, Archbishop of Chicago
Cardinal Robert W. McElroy, Archbishop of Washington
Cardinal Joseph W. Tobin, C.Ss.R., Archbishop of Newark
 

  

Monday Morning Offering: MLK Day

Morning Coffee: George Mendoza

A song to accompany today's Monday Morning Offering...

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We Shall Overcome by the 

  

By the power of your saving love, Lord,
help our nation overcome 
the bias that divides us, 
the bigotry bred by mistrust
and the pain that comes of prejudice...

Let us never for a moment 
pretend to love you - and at the same time
ignore, mistreat or abandon 
    our neighbors, brothers and sisters all, near and far,     
    one family, children of one Father,            
    one in Christ our brother,
    blessed by our diversity, yours in our humanity...

In the depths of our hearts, Lord, 
help us overcome 
    our racism, our prejudice and partiality,
    our bias and our bigotry,
    our narrow-minded thinking
    and all the ways we rush to judgment...
 
Help us overcome 
    our pride, our self-importance,
    our undeserved privileges and rights,
    our denial of what's fact, what's true,
    our careless disregard of others' pain and plight...

And, Lord, help us overcome the thought
    that we're above all this,
the temptation to believe
    that no such faults are ours...
 
Help us overcome 
    and move beyond the status quo
    and all that keeps us from real change;
free us from inertia's grip
    paralyzing progress  
    and keeping things the way they've always been... 
 
Help us overcome, Lord,
    what discriminates and segregates,
    separates and divides us,
    what keeps us from being one nation,
        indivisible, under your reign, 
        with liberty and equal justice - for all...

That's what we pray this morning, Lord,
and that's all we have to offer you:
    our plea that you help us do
        what we have not accomplished ourselves,
        what we cannot do on our own,
        what we cannot do apart from you
            and your blessing, your strength 
                and your grace...
 
Amen.

  

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1/18/26

Do you need to find peace in the midst of all that's going on?

Here's a video (above) of my homily for Sunday, January 18 and here's the gospel text I preached on - and the text of my homily follows.  I know that some folks skip the video and read the text - but if you want to hear the musical element in my homily, please take a look at the video!  (If a video doesn't appear above, click here!)

///////////////////////////// 

Well, if you're paying attention and have a halfway decent memory, you'll recall that last week's gospel also featured John the Baptist – and - what transpired when Jesus approached him at the Jordan River - and - how the Holy Spirit descended on him in the form of a dove.
 
Two weeks in a row - the same story. Seems early in the season to me for a rerun!
 
I was struggling on how to preach on this (since I already preached on John last week) until I was in my book group on Friday - and we were discussing all the discord and the turmoil in the news these days. And a friend at the table said, "I need a way to find peace in the midst of all of this."  I need a way to find peace in the midst of all this…
 
And as soon as he said that - I felt as if the Holy Spirit came down on ME - not in the form of a dove!
 
And I knew for certain what I was called to preach this weekend.
 
When I read or listen to the news these days, I find myself increasingly more troubled, confused, angry, exasperated, disappointed, hurt and helpless.   And it’s precisely then - in the midst of all that - that I need to look up and see John the Baptist, and Jesus approaching him, and I need to hear John announcing:
"Hey, everybody - look! Here comes Jesus - the Lamb of God. He's coming to take away the sin of the world. He's coming to relieve you of your troubles, anger, confusion, exasperation, your disappointment and hurt. He's coming to be the strength you look for when you feel so powerless.”
If I call myself a Christian- and I do.
If I name myself as one who follows Jesus - and I do.
If I believe that Jesus forgives MY sin - and - has the strength and power to take away the trouble, anger, confusion, exasperation, disappointment, and hurt that MY sin dumps in the laps, in the lives, in the hearts of those who feel powerless over MY words and deeds  --- then I might also look to Jesus, I might behold him (as John tells us). I might look to Jesus, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world in which I live.
 
Now, is all that little more than pious fluff?  Or does it have some real meaning, some nitty gritty IM-plications and APPlications - for my life and for yours?
 
Well, the answer to that question is this: John's announcement about Jesus is either everything or it's nothing. It's either true or it's false. It's either everything in my daily life and yours, or it's nothing – it’s pious fluff.
 
I'm not suggesting here - or more importantly, the gospel is not suggesting here - that if we believe in Jesus, then all our problems will go away. We don't believe that.
But we do believe is that the deepest peace we will ever know in the midst of this broken world - will be the peace we find in Jesus - while we are living in this broken world.
 
We believe that the deepest peace we will ever know will be found not in the present administration, nor in its alternative - but in Jesus.
 
We believe that the deepest peace we will ever know will be found not in the Constitution of the United States of America - but in Jesus.
 
We believe that the deepest peace we will ever know will be found not in any decisions of the Supreme Court - but in Jesus.
 
We believe that the deepest peace we will ever know will be found not in our trouble, anger, confusion, exasperation, disappointment and hurt. No, not there - but in Jesus.
 
Of course, finding our deepest peace in Jesus in no way relieves us of our responsibility, of our call as Christians to work for, to protect and defend, to ensure those civil laws and structures that guarantee and safeguard the dignity and rights of every human being on the face of the earth - without exception.
 
But while engaged in the struggle to achieve all of that - we Christians find our deepest peace, our ultimate peace, the peace we seek - only in Jesus -who is our peace and who is the way to the peace for which you and I hunger and thirst.
 
So, when we read or listen to the news these days and find ourselves feeling increasingly troubled, confused, angry, exasperated, disappointed, and hurt, and helpless - it's precisely then - in the midst of all of that - that we need to look up and see John the Baptist, and Jesus approaching him, and hear John announcing:
Hey, everybody, look! Here comes Jesus, the Lamb of God! He's coming to take away the sin of the world. He's coming to relieve us of our troubles, anger, and confusion, our exasperation, disappointment, and hurt. He's coming to be the strength we seek when, in our helplessness, we feel powerless. He’s coming with grace and peace from God, for all who call upon his name.
And that's why we pray, every time we come to Mass, just before communion:
Deliver us, Lord, from every evil. Graciously grant peace in our days that by the help of your mercy, we may be always free from sin and safe from all distress - as we await the blessed hope, the coming of our Savior, Jesus Christ - who is the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world. 
Or we could sing the same prayer…
 
In the morning when I rise
In the morning when I rise
In the morning, when I rise
Give me Jesus!
 
Give me Jesus, Give me Jesus!
You may have all this world
Give me Jesus…
 
Oh, and when the road is rough
Oh, and when my spirit's down
O and when I'm losing hope
Give me Jesus!
 
Yes, and when I come to die.
Oh, and when I come to die
Yes, and when I come to die
Give me Jesus!

 

  

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