Thursday, May 28, 2026

The Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity - A Merciful and Gracious God_053126


Image Credit: http://aacciaio.hubpages.com/hub/The-Holy-Trinity-in-Christianity
 

 

Deacon Tom Writes,

“A Merciful and Gracious God

 

The Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity

 

In today’s reading from the Book of Exodus, God joins Moses on Mount Sinai and reveals some things about Himself. For instance, God tells Moses that He is “Lord”, that He is a merciful and gracious God”, and that He is, “…slow to anger and rich in kindness and mercy”. What an encounter on a mountaintop in the middle of the desert! And how does Moses respond? He petitions God to “come along in our company”. In other words, Moses wants God to be an abiding presence in the community and a source of pardon, peace, and forgiveness in the midst of His stiff-neck travelling companions.

 

This ancient text invites us to reflect on our own experience of God. For instance, do we see God as Our Lord? Do we acknowledge Him as a presence or a reality in our life? Do we feel as comfortable with God as we do a close friend, a trusted confidant, and life companion who always has our best interest at heart? Have we any personal experience that affirms that God is “merciful and gracious”? Can we speak first-hand about God’s pardon and forgiveness? If we are having trouble recalling any personal encounter with God, perhaps it’s time to offer up this prayer, “do come along in my company” personalizing that request Moses made of God during his encounter with the Almighty.

 

Just like the Israelites wandering in the desert, we too may be going through our own desert experience. The severity and the magnitude of the problems we face today have driven many people to despair. There are those who genuinely believe that a “merciful and gracious God” could not sit idly by and watch the wars, the natural disasters, the greed, and violence go on. Their choice is to cut God out of their lives and strike out on their own. This isn’t a phenomenon new to our times; Friedrich Nietzsche, the 19th century German philosopher, thought that God was the culprit for all of humanities problems giving rise to the expression “God is dead”. But the Christian reality is that God isn’t to blame for the conditions from which we suffer, but rather He is our help in times of need, just as Moses discovered way back when.  During times of crisis and uncertainty, when the Israelites were lost, hungry, homeless, and afraid, God reached out to them and offered to be their companion on the journey that we know as Salvation History. God is anything but dead, and He has never abandoned us. The truth is, we have abandoned God! But that doesn’t discourage the one who gave His only Begotten Son to save us. God is with us through all the twist and turns on our life’s journey and especially when we just ask Him to, “come along in our company.”

 

Enjoy the day!

Deacon Tom

 

 

Please Visit www.deaconspod.com where you will find contemporary conversations with several Paulist Deacon Affiliates and their guests exploring the treasures our Catholic faith has to offer to those on the threshold of our church… those thinking of joining our Catholic Community or walking away from it. 

OTHER RESOURCE

 

Recommended Reading: Falling Upward: a Spirituality for the Two Halves of Life by Fr. Richard Rohr seeks to help readers understand the tasks of the two halves of life and to show them that those who have fallen, failed, or "gone down" are the only ones who understand "up."

 

Recommended YouTube Video: Living in the Presence of God Day after Day, Part 2a with Fr. Thomas Keating who continues his discussion on the practice of Centering Prayer.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Pentecost Sunday - Let the Fire Fall_052426

                                                               


Deacon Tom Writes,
Let the Fire Fall

           

Today marks the Feast of Pentecost that celebrates the Holy Spirit’s presence in our church. In fact, Pentecost is considered the "birthday of the church”. The term "Pentecost" comes from the Greek word meaning "the 50th day". It is the day Christianity commemorates the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles, fifty days after Jesus’ resurrection.

 

Pentecost is not just a Christian feast. It is derived from a Hebrew celebration known as, Shavuot, which was held 50 days after Passover and was associated with the first harvest of grain in the spring, in other words, it is a sign of life, a sign or hope, a sign of renewal, ideas and expressions that perhaps have taken on greater significance given the state of worldly affairs. 

 

Pentecost continues to be very important in our Catholic Tradition (capital “T”) because of its identification with the Trinity where God is the Father who created all things; Jesus is the Redeemer of mankind; the Holy Spirit sanctifies all that the Father has brought into being and all that Jesus has redeemed.

 

The coming of the Holy Spirit into our world continues God’s presence among us. The Holy Spirit, our Advocate, our Helper, brings divine power to enable us to overcome our human weaknesses, our bigotries, our hatreds, our idolatries, rivalries, and jealousies. The Holy Spirit is our champion who awakens within us the divine qualities of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, and faithfulness. We call these attributes the “fruits of the Holy Spirit”. It is through these gifts that we ourselves are transformed and are thus able to cooperate with God in bringing about the transformation of the world into the Kingdom of God, a kingdom of peace and justice, a kingdom where Christ will reign forever over a new heaven and a new earth that we have been created to share.

 

Today, more so than perhaps ever before, we pray that the Spirit of God, the Advocate, our Helper, friend, and companion be with us to enlighten our minds and strengthen our hearts so that we may be instruments of God’s peace. We pray that our world may see the dawning of a new day that ushers in the Kingdom of God in its fullness.

 

Come Holy Spirit

Fill the hearts of your faithful

And kindle in them the fire of Your Love.

Send forth your Spirit

And they shall be created.

And You shall renew the face of the earth.

 

O, God, who by the light of the Holy Spirit,

did instruct the hearts of the faithful,

grant that by the same Holy Spirit we may be truly wise and ever rejoice in His consolations,

Through Christ Our Lord,

Amen.

                                                                                   

 

Enjoy the day!

Deacon Tom

 

Please Visit www.deaconspod.com where you will find contemporary conversations with several Paulist Deacon Affiliates and their guests exploring the treasures our Catholic faith has to offer to those on the threshold of our church… those thinking of joining our Catholic Community or walking away from it.

 

OTHER RESOURCE

 

Recommended Reading: Here and Now by Henri J.M. Nouwen is not a faint memory, but happening right here and now, spiritual living takes place in the present; the Spirit meets us in the ordinary. These inspirational reflections by Henri Nouwen succeed in convincing us that God’s presence is reliable.

 

 

Recommended YouTube Video: Living in the Presence of God - part 1b with Fr. Thomas Keating who discusses the practice of Centering Prayer.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

The Ascension of the Lord /Seventh Sunday of Easter_A_051726

 This weekend’s Liturgy is quite unique. Most dioceses in the U.S. have transferred the Feast of the Ascension to this coming weekend, May 16 -17. Other dioceses, mostly in Northeast, will celebrate the Liturgy for the Seventh Sunday of Easter, having celebrated Ascension Thursday several days ago. To accommodate readers in both areas, I have prepared a reflection on the readings for each of these liturgies beginning with the Ascension of the Lord followed by one for the Seventh Sunday of Easter.

 

 

Photo Credit: www.123rf.com/photo_31942799_ascension-of-christ

Deacon Tom Writes

Go, Make Disciples

 

The Ascension of the Lord, Year A

 

Today St. Matthew shares his account of the parting of Jesus Christ from his disciples. Matthew tells us that “…when they saw him, they worshiped, but they doubted. Yet, Jesus empowers them to “Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations…. Then he departed leaving his hand-picked understudies to spread the Good News throughout the world. What an awesome task! Insightful too is that the Jesus promises to remain with them until the end of the ages. So, in reality, Jesus is saying that he will be with them every step of the way as they follow his command to spread the Good News to all peoples. Looking back over these 2000 years since, while not without its dark moments, the church Christ had entrusted to Peter has been very successful in following the guidance of the Holy Spirit. Peter et al, the first messengers, did “Go into the whole world and proclaim the gospel to every creature”. This Holy Spirit whom Jesus sent, and the Apostles received, was the guiding Principle leading the church through its formative days and continues to do so today.

 

This effort to spread the Gospel message to all the nations was also intended, I believe, to bring about the “unity” Christ prayed for at the Last Supper... “Father, that they may be one, as you are one in me and I in you”. As St. Paul says elsewhere in his letter to the Ephesians, “There is one body and one spirit”.  EPH 4:4

 

As I reflect upon these readings for Ascension Thursday considering the state of the world around us, I ask “What chance do we have today of being .... “Of one body and one spirit” as Christ intended us to be? It seems that every aspect of our lives is a source of division...  one’s race, religion, ethnicity, culture, national origin, political affiliation, social class, etc., each serves as a distinction that more than ever is a source of friction or even conflict with others. How could we ever expect to “be of one mind” on anything let alone agree on the teaching of Jesus? What do you think would happen if a corporate CEO presented his executives, with a Business Plan he wanted them to implement, and they failed to achieve it. It wouldn’t be good for the management team is my experience.

 

Yet, when it comes to the practice of our faith, it is not just the leadership that fails. It is we the community of believers that has a large share in failing to achieve what Christ has asked his disciples. Why is that? Well, Christ’s teachings are quite clear. We are to love one another, forgive one another, not judge one another; we are to count all peoples as our neighbor; we are to feed the hungry, give drink to the thirsty, clothe the naked, bury the dead, counsel the ignorant. We are not to judge others, or gossip... “Let no evil talk come out of your mouths, but only what is useful for building up”. EPH 4:29. Yes, we know the teaching of Jesus. The difficulty is that we are not following them the way he taught them. We have decided who our neighbor is; we have made the decision who is worthy of our charity; we have used our speech to tear down and revile those who disagree with us. We have cast aside the teachings of Christ and are acting in accord with our lesser nature by choosing to Christ’s call to be one in him. The consequences of our choice, I believe, is visible in the disorder and chaos we see around us.

           

If we are to be faithful to Jesus’ call to unity, we must decide to choose to follow his teaching and see the world as he sees it: a world redeemed by his death and renewed by his resurrection; we need to do our part to build up the kingdom for which Jesus laid the foundation; we must persevere in doing what is right and listen to the Voice of Truth. If we are to be disciples worthy of the name “Christian” we must do as Christ taught us by putting aside all that divides us through our “dying to self”, through our “picking up our cross” and by our “following him”, choosing to be one with all our brothers and sisters in his Mystical Body.

 

Enjoy the Day!

Deacon Tom

 

 

 

 

 

Image Credit: www.123rf.com/photo_38788883_joy-written-in-the-sand

 

Deacon Tom Writes,

Sharing In Christ’s Joy

 

Seventh Sunday of Easter, Year A

 

In today’s gospel, Jesus tells us what eternal life is: it is to know the only true God, and the one whom you sent, Jesus Christ. As we know from elsewhere in Sacred Scripture, Jesus wants to share His joy with us “Completely.” The joy that He wants to share with us has its source in the words the Father gave Him and he, in turn, has… “given to them.”  But living those words, Jesus tells us, puts us at odds with the world, “I gave them your word, and the world hated them, because they do not belong to the world.” Jesus leaves little doubt about where our loyalties lie for His disciples.

 

It is natural for us to want to have as much joy in this life as we can get. How we find that “joy” is the essence of our spiritual journey. How often we confuse happiness with joy! Happiness depends upon our circumstances and the events that happen to us. I am happy when something good happens to me such as making a new friend, winning the lottery, or getting that new car or job, just as I may be sad when I have a reversal of good fortune. Happiness doesn’t last. We always need something else each tomorrow to renew our happiness. If we don’t find that special something new to enthrall us, very often we end up down in the dumps. Here in America, it seems that happiness is available for a price. At least that’s what Madison Avenue would have us believe. Isn’t that the message that advertisers are selling…You will be happy if you drive this kind of car, or if you wear this suit or go on this vacation…if you buy this or that?

 

Joy is something else completely. It is an interior state of being. Being joyful has nothing to do with my circumstances or what is happening in my life. Joy has REAL staying power. As a matter of fact, one can be full of joy while experiencing extreme hardships in life. The Perfect Joy of St. Francis was in serving God completely by renouncing all but the necessities of life. Most of us wouldn’t find the joy in that! I have encounter people with true joy in soup kitchens, lying in a hospice bed, mourning the loss of a loved one…The Anawim, God’s lowly, disenfranchised, poor, humble people who had nothing of this world’s treasures or comforts seemed to have found the secret to the perfect joy Christ intends for his disciples. Their joy rests completely in the awareness that God loves them.

 

Today we are invited to share Christ’s joy completely by listening to the “Word” and letting it take root in our hearts, elevating our love and service to one another. Let us grow deeper in our relationship with Christ so we can choose to live in that complete joy that only He can give and which lasts forever over the happiness of the world that never satisfies and always leaves us wanting for more.

 

Enjoy the Day!

Deacon Tom

 

 

Please Visit www.deaconspod.com where you will find contemporary conversations with several Paulist Deacon Affiliates and their guests exploring the treasures our Catholic faith has to offer to those on the threshold of our church… those thinking of joining our Catholic Community or walking away from it. 

 

OTHER RESOURCE

 

Recommended ReadingThe Human Condition: Contemplation and Transformation. One of the founders of the Centering Prayer movement, Thomas Keating offers a reflection on contemplative prayer, the human search for happiness and our need to explore the inner world. The spiritual search for God, he says, is also the search for us.

 

Recommended YouTube Video: Living in the Presence of God Fr. Thomas Keating discusses the title topic and the practice of Centering Prayer.

 

 

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Sixth Sunday of Easter_A_ - Our Reason To Be Hopeful_051026

 

Deacon Tom Writes

“Our Reason To Be Hopeful”

 

Sixth Sunday of Easter, Year A

 

Hope is such a resuscitating virtue. We cling to hope to keep our hearts beating in troubling times as if it were a life preserver and we were adrift in a stormy sea. Hope is what keeps people of faith going when their world is falling apart, when death steals a loved one or when relationships with someone you love grows cold. You see it in the faces and hear it in the voices of people who have lost everything when nature goes awry and devastates some locality as happens occasionally with those so called “Atmospheric Rivers” that have plagued California recently or those tornados that have devastated cities throughout the south. Grieved as they are, they inevitably talk about rebuilding not just their homes but also their lives. Hope is what gives them the courage to face a new day.

 

Hope fuels our dreams also. We hope to get into the college of our choice; we hope to get that perfect job or that promotion. We hope that one day we will meet the love of our life; we hope that a bad situation will be favorably resolved. We hope others will change their ways, their attitudes… or better yet, that we will change ours! No matter what we hope for, we are not likely to give up hope without a fight.

 

In today’s scripture, Peter advises us, “Always be ready to give an explanation to anyone who asks you for a reason for your hope.” Peter wants us to pay close attention to those things in which we place our hope…. and to be able to tell others why we hope in them. Key to Peter’s advice, however, is that the focal point for Christian hope is Christ. He is the fulfillment of all our hopes. Peter wants us to put our hope in noble things, “...treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor decay destroys, nor thieves break in and steal.” (Mt 6:20)

 

Yes, we hope for that new job, good things for our children, a good resolution to an illness or bad relationship…but our Christian hope seeks the ultimate goodness that comes from having Christ…. “As Lord in our hearts” (1 Pt 3:15as Peter says so well. With Christ as Lord of our hearts, our hope will turn to treasures, relationships, and loves that will last forever and provide us ample opportunity to share the reason for our hope with everyone.

 

Lastly, Happy Mother’s Day to all mothers, grandmothers, and those blessed to be great grandmothers who are shining examples of self-sacrifice, love and humility to their families and friends. God Bless them with much joy and happiness

 

Enjoy the day!

Deacon Tom

 

Please Visit www.deaconspod.com where you will find contemporary conversations with several Paulist Deacon Affiliates and their guests exploring the treasures our Catholic faith has to offer to those on the threshold of our church… those thinking of joining our Catholic Community or walking away from it. 

 

OTHER RESOURCE

 

Recommended Reading: Beginning to Pray by Metropolitan Anthony Bloom of Sourozh was a prominent writer and broadcaster on prayer and the Christian life, as well as the founder and leader of the Russian Orthodox Diocese of Sourozh. His classic book on prayer leads us into a deeper experience of the one we seek.

 

Recommended YouTube Video:  Beginning to Pray - Listen in to hear the wisdom of Bishop Bloom in this discussion on the book, “Beginning to Pray” and how we can have a richer prayer life that draws us closer to God.