2/3/26



Lord...
 
Be with me, stay with me,
close by my side... 

Speak to me, hear me
and answer my prayer...

Lead me and guide me
along the right path...

Show me each day
what you want me to do...
 
Calm my anger 
and heal my resentment... 
 
Stand as a guard
at the door of my lips...
 
Give me the grace
to make wise decisions...
 
Save me from harm,
from temptation and sin...
 
Hold me and mold me
as you'd have me be...
 
Fill me with hope
when worry consumes me...
 
Grant me the courage
to speak what is true...

Keep me at peace
with all those I know...
 
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.
 
Be With Me, Lord by Marty Haugen 
 
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Be with me, Lord, when I am in trouble,
     be with me, Lord, I pray!

You who dwell in the shelter of the Lord most high,
who abide in the shadow of our God,
say to the Lord,  "My refuge and fortress,
the God in whom I trust!"

Be with me, Lord...

No evil shall befall you, no pain come near,
for the angels stand close by your side
guarding you always and bearing you gently,
watching over your life.

Be with me, Lord...

Those who cling to the Lord live secure in God's love
lifted high those who trust in God's name
Call on your Lord who will never forsake you,
God will bring you salvation and joy.

Be with me, Lord...

  

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Pause for Prayer: TUESDAY 2/3

  
Snow is God's reminder of what grace looks like.
It doesn't pick and choose where it will fall:
    it covers everything... 
 
Especially now, Lord, 
    in the middle of winter 
        when it's snowing all around us... 
 
Especially now, when,
    at every twist and turn,
        the snow is piled high...
 
Especially now, when
    the brilliant silver-blue
        fills our senses with your beauty...
 
Especially now, remind us
    how you blanket us with grace, Lord,
        how you cover us with mercy...
 
How your grace falls from the heavens
    down on us and all our neighbors,
        on our country and the world... 
 
How we're snowed in by your kindness, 
    not by flakes and not by flurries
        but in drifts of your compassion,
            your mercy and your grace...
 
Amen. 
  

2/2/26

NIGHT PRAYER: Monday 2/2

Today is the Feast of the Presentation of Jesus in the Temple.  Today's gospel tells the story of Mary and Joseph presenting the child Jesus in the temple, as was Jewish law, and their encounter with Simeon and Anna who greet the child as the "light that shines" in darkness and shadows of every human being. You can read the story here

On the dark days, Lord,
   when thick clouds shade my heart,
      shine your guiding light upon my steps...

 Be the light that burns within me,
   in my corners of confusion...

Be the light upon my path
   to show the way when I am lost...

Be a light to search me out
   when I'm huddled in the shadows...
   
Draw me out of my own darkness
   to the light your presence brings...

Be the midday sun and share with me
  the warmth of your embrace...

Be the moon's light in my night sky,
   aglow in all my dreams...

Be a light of truth and wisdom
   in my random, foolish thoughts....

Be my light of hope and trust, Lord,
   when sadness fills my soul...

And when I choose the darkness, Lord, 
    or close my eyes in fear
then shine your light upon me
    with your mercy, grace and peace...

Brighten the darkness around me, Lord,
   illumine the darkness within me;
shine through the darkness that hides me,
   burn in the darkness that chills me;
shimmer in shadows that dull me,
   gleam in the shade that shrouds me;
pierce the darkness that clouds my hope
    and warm me with rays of grace...

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.
 
About tonight's song...  The Liturgy of the Hours is the church's daily prayer and the last "hour" each night always includes the Canticle of Simeon, found in today's gospel.  That canticle is preceded by and concludes with an antiphon - which is also the last stanza in each of my daily Night Prayer posts here on my blog.  Here's a beautiful setting of Simeon's song, composed by Steve Warner, an old friend from my days at Notre Dame.
 
Canticle of Simeon by Steven Warner
 
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Protect us, Lord, as we stay awake,
watch over us as we sleep
that awake, we may keep watch with Christ
and asleep, rest in his peace...

Lord, now you let your servant go in peace,
your word has been fulfilled
my own eyes have seen the salvation
which you have prepared in the sight of every people:
a light to reveal you to the nations
and the glory of your people Israel

Glory be to the Father and to the Son
and to the Holy Spirit
as it was in the beginning, is now
and will be forever.  Amen.

Protect us, Lord, as we stay awake,
watch over us as we sleep
as awake, we may keep watch with Christ
and asleep, rest in his peace...

  

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Lenten Pocket Crosses!


This will be the 15th year that I've had small Lenten pocket crosses made to send to my readers.  Each year, the cross is engraved with a few words, usually from scripture.  (There's no charge for receiving a cross - you just need to send me a self-addressed stamped envelope (3 first class stamps!)  Here are some samples from the past:

 I'm about to order this year's crosses - but I'm not sure about what words to have engraved on them...

I'd be happy to receive your suggestions! 

Just leave a comment on this post with your idea.  As you can see above, 3 lines is the maximum!

 I need to order these crosses soon - Ash Wednesday is February 18! - so don't delay in sending a suggested text. 

  

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Monday Morning Offering: 2/2

Image: George Mendoza


Good morning, good God!

I'm stuck on Saint Paul's words from yesterday's mass: that I'm wise by no one's standards - human or divine and that those I count as foolish - may be wise beyond my dreams...

Foolishly, I sometimes think - I know it all! And you, Lord, know so well - I don’t!

Keep me from the pretense that I know more than most - at least much more than anyone around me...

Keep me from thinking I know it all - and have nothing left to learn...

Keep me from thinking I know enough - especially when I hardly know enough to just get by...

Keep me from thinking I know myself so well - when I'm often such an easy mark 
for my own self-deceit...

Keep me from thinking and over-thinking: too much, too often and all to no avail...

Keep me from thinking that others don't think... open my mind to others' thoughts, Lord...
  
Keep me from self-doubt and thinking all my thoughts are foolish - but help me know when they are!
 
Keep me from thinking you’d ever fail to forgive my foolish thoughts and ideas and plans...

Keep me from thinking I know better than you, Lord, the difference between what's true, what's false... what good, what's bad... what's right, what's wrong...

Keep me from always thinking: The worst will happen!  And help me always to hope for the best…

Keep me from thinking, Lord, that you don't understand - you who dwell in the depths of my heart...

Keep me from thinking I can do it alone - especially when I need all the help I can get…

Keep me from thinking it's always my fault - and help me to trust in the good that I do...
     
Keep me from thinking I know all there is to know  - about you and your love…

And keep me from thinking there's ever a moment when you're not thinking of me...
 
Such is my prayer for wisdom, Lord, offered this Monday morning: make me wise in your ways - in your word and your truth -  in all that I say and do...

Amen.

  

  

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2/1/26

Could it be? A prayer of hope...

Candler School of Theology alumna Ingrid Arneson Rasmussen (seen above being arrested) is lead pastor of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in south Minneapolis, the epicenter of recent ICE raids and protests. She and fellow clergy have been active on the scene, bearing witness through ministering to those in the fray, accompanying those detained, observing, praying, and nonviolently resisting. 
 
She and nearly 100 other faith leaders were arrested last week during a peaceful demonstration at the Minneapolis airport. She recently offered this prayer at a community service.
 
Attentive One,
we come to you as weary people,
laid low by the grinding weight of federal occupation.
Even before a word is on our lips, O Lord,
you know it completely.
The disappearances, you know.
The cries of those left behind, you know.
The school grounds turned battlefields, you know.
The truth-tellers dragged from their cars, you know.
The grief met with teargas and flashbangs, you know.
 
If we’re honest,
some days it feels as though
all we are doing
is holding our breath
and wondering what we are to make of this moment.
 
Could it be, Holy One,
that even in the face of utter cruelty
something is waiting to be born—
like the moment when the seed,
planted in fertile ground,
is summoned forth—
by sun and water and grit—
to become something no regime can stop?
 
Could it be that this is the moment,
in the shadow of helicopters that circle day and night,
when compassion and courage,
empathy and wisdom,
understanding and LOVE
are finally given hospitable conditions
to change, to grow, to live?
 
Could it be that this is the moment
when that tender green,
that brilliant green,
pushes up through fear and ICE—
as if to signal
that nothing—
no mask, no order, no convoy—
will stand in the way of
abundant life
emerging?
 
Renewing Spirit,
we want to believe this is the moment.
But we need you to fill the spaces
of our disbelief and doubt.
We need you to bridge the chasm
between peacekeeping and peacemaking.
We need you to uproot the cynicism
that quietly feeds brutality. 
And from detention cell to Signal chat,
we need you to bind your people together again.
 
Living Spirit,
the truth is that you can already see
a new world,
one we have not yet known.
May this be the moment, God of All,
when we catch a glimpse
of that world arising.

  

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NIGHT PRAYER: Sunday 2/1


On Sundays, Night Prayer will focus on an element from the day's celebration of Mass. This evening we'll continue to pray with Matthew's account (chapter 5) of Jesus' Sermon on the Mount where he gives us the Beatitudes as a template for Christian life. This passage immediately brought to mind John Becker's setting of this text as "Lead Me, Lord," exquisitely arranged in the widget below by Mark Hayes.  There's a line in Becker's refrain which comes later in Matthew's gospel (chapter 7) where Jesus counsels us to follow the narrow path to life forever.  This evening, I invite you to pray first with the song and then to reflect on the prayer that follows it...

Lead Me, Lord by John Becker
  arranged by Mark Hayes
     published by Hope Publishing Company
 
If a widget doesn't appear below, click here! 
 
 

Blessed are the poor in spirit, longing for their Lord,
for God's coming kingdom shall be theirs.
Blessed are the sorrowing, for they shall be consoled,
and the meek shall come to rule the world.

Lead me, Lord, lead me, Lord, by the light of truth
to seek and to find the narrow way.
Be my way; be my truth; be my life, my Lord,
and lead me, Lord, today.

Blessed are the merciful, for mercy shall be theirs,
and the pure in heart shall see their God.
Blest are they whose hunger only holiness can fill,
for I say they shall be satisfied.

Blest are they who through their lifetimes sow the seeds of peace;
all will call them children of the Lord.
Blest are you, though persecuted in your holy life
for in heaven, great is your reward.

NIGHT PRAYER
 
"By the narrow way..."

That's the way I need to go, Lord,
and I do need you to lead me
to seek and to find - the narrow way...

I'm so easily led down wider paths,
roads with broad, undefined shoulders:
lots of room for weaving back and forth
and waffling on decisions, choices
and changes to be made...

The wider path is looser, less constricting,
leaving me free to follow the latest fad,
the crowd's lead or whatever whim or fancy
might currently amuse me...

Multiple lanes on the road offer me
more room than I need,
more sway than is wise,
more chance of losing my way...

It's the narrow way, Lord,
the path you chart for me,
that focuses my goals and desires,
keeps me straight on the way that's mine,
protects me from making wrong turns
and leads me, always, closer to you,
to your word, your grace and your love...

So lead me, Lord, by the light of your truth,
lead me to seek and to find the narrow way.
Be my way; be my truth; be my life, my Lord,
and lead me, Lord, today...

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.
 
Listen again?
 
 
 

  

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Executive Orders - from Jesus

 

Above is the video of my homily from this morning, February 1.  Here are the three scriptures I preached on - and below you'll find the text of my homily.

 

Imagine if the question of granting immigrants and refugees entrance to our country - were actually as simple as the two sides in the current debate would suggest. 

One side, in the name of law, order, and economic fairness, wants to build walls to keep out the many - and to tighten the process by which the few might be welcomed in.

 

The other side, in the name of mercy, compassion, and justice would welcome all - and provide for their housing, health, and education.

 

What gets easily lost in this debate is the truth that law, justice, order, compassion, economic fairness, and mercy are not only (all of them) the proper categories to consider -- but indeed, each of them compliments, modifies, enhances, and enables the others.

 

The various categories proposed by each side in the debate do not stand in opposition to one another. In fact, considered together, they provide a firm basis for making sound judgments and policy - both for immigrants and refugees, and, for those whose borders they seek to cross.

 

And these are categories that can be considered by anyone in puzzling out today's crisis: anyone with a sense of justice and a spirit of humane good will - anyone.

 

But what about us? We are not just anyone, you and I.  We go by the name Christian - and our faith in Christ draws us beyond the terms of blind justice. Our faith calls us to a sacrificial love deeper than simple neighborly concern.

 

While all of the categories I've mentioned are more than worthy of our attention - anyone's attention - we Christians follow Jesus, who introduces his own categories. In the gospel this morning, we heard Jesus preach what we call “the beatitudes” - the “blessed are those” sayings.

 

The beatitudes are the Lord's Executive Orders -  signed in the ink of his blood. And so they are our - marching orders - for living our lives as Christians. And those orders are these. You heard them.

• Blessed are the poor in spirit - for theirs is the kingdom.

• Blessed are they who mourn - they will be comforted.

• Blessed are the meek - they will inherit the land.

• Blessed are they who hunger and thirst for justice - they will be satisfied.

• Blessed are the merciful - for they will be shown mercy.

• Blessed the clean of heart - they will see God.

• Blessed are the peacemakers - they will be called children of God.

• Blessed are they who are falsely accused and persecuted for the sake of justice - for they will have the first places in the kingdom of heaven.

 

Now, let's not - even for a moment - suggest that Jesus meant all of this only in some spiritual way. Look at his language here: his categories, his nitty-gritty vocabulary: poverty; loss and comfort; rights to the ownership of land; hunger for justice; thirst for mercy; persecution; false testimony; the hard work of making peace

 

That's the real stuff. It's not pious fluff.

 

Nor should we - even for a moment - pretend that the beatitudes are legislative solutions to the pain and problems of our time.

 

Well, then, what IS Jesus saying when he preaches like this?

 

What he's doing is shaping and molding and orienting our hearts to provide a firm foundation on which we might stand. He's giving us his perspective on life's realities - the perspective from which we are called to reflect on, to discern, respond to the issues of our day and the burdens our neighbors carry.

 

Christians are those who begin their deliberation on the news of the day - not with the text of the Constitution - as worthy a text as that is. Christians begin with the word of Jesus and begin by bringing that word to bear on the grittiest of life's circumstances.

 

Now, like the chosen people in today's first scripture, we are called to be that faithful remnant: those who hold onto, who announce and live, the wisdom and the truth of God's Word - in a society that may speak a different language, a society, a culture that may define reality by different standards.

 

Neither can we be like the Corinthians, the folks Paul addressed in today's second scripture. We can't be those who simply subscribe to the conventional wisdom. We're called to be those who first consult the wisdom of Jesus - and lean on his word as the standard for our moral decision making.

 

I can't tell you where that wisdom will lead you - or how it will shape your words and deeds, your choices, your decisions. All I can tell you, and what I'm commissioned, what I'm bound to tell you - is that for us Christians, the only beginning place is the wisdom, the truth, the word of Jesus. We can't skip over it or run through it quickly to other categories. We're called to be the people who take Jesus seriously - take him seriously when he turns upside down and inside out all the things that we presume.

 

Jesus says it's the poor who are blessed. It's the meek to whom the land belongs. It's the hungry and thirsty who should be satisfied first. It's to those who are persecuted and falsely accused - for acting mercifully and working for peace - it's to them that the kingdom of God belongs.

 

It's not easy.

It's hard.

It demands personal sacrifice to take on the mind and heart of Jesus.

 

As we think through the complex issues of our day, we certainly need the Lord's own help in even trying to do this. And I believe it's the kind of help that comes from prayer. So in that spirit, I'm going to invite you to pray with me here. If it helps, you might close your eyes…

 

What have we to offer you, Lord?

How shall we pray?

• Shall we lift up our hands in angry gestures?

• Shall we send up prayers laced with vulgarity?

• Shall we hate those who disagree with us? Shall we hate those you love - regardless of where they stand?

• Shall we bless your name on Sunday and curse our opponent on Monday? • Shall we open our hearts to you on the Sabbath - and the rest of the week, close them to those in need?

• Shall we pretend to give you the glory while we swagger in our pride?

• Shall we pray for relief and deny it to others?

• Shall we put our faith in human persons, political opinions, in the power of wealth and institutions - forgetting that only you can save us?

 

So help us, Lord, help us to pray what you would have us pray…

 

Help us to pray for the mending of a divided America;

• for the healing of our nation's soul;

for the calming of our country's spirit;

for justice done as you would have it;

for freedom tempered with sacrifice;

for liberty crowned with self-restraint;

for compassion in those who govern us and in our own hearts too;

for integrity in our words and deeds;

for the courage of our convictions;

for solidarity with all, and for hearts wide open to serve your tired, your poor, your huddled masses, yearning to breathe free.

 

Help us, Lord, to be instruments of your peace and channels of your mercy.

Help us to be, to become people after your own heart.

Help us to be those who are blessed, those who rejoice, who are glad - those whose reward will be great in heaven.

 

Help us, Lord, to pray.

 

Amen.

   

  

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