Sir James Thornhill, Paul Preaching in the Areopagus, Royal Academy of Arts, London, 1729-31
Apr. 30: Wednesday of the Sixth Week of Easter
Apr. 29: Tuesday of the Sixth Week of Easter
Nicolas Tournier, St. Paul, Musée des Augustins, Toulouse, 1625-26
Readings for Mass
First Reading: Acts 16:22-34
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 138:1-2, 2-3, 7-8
Gospel: John 16:5-11
"Believe on the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved (NRSV, Acts 16:31)."
Let us pray.
Father, we thank you for the gift of your divine life that you offer to every human being in every time and place. This same one gift is made manifest in our Lord Jesus Christ who is the Word made flesh. While we rejoice in our knowledge and open acceptance of him, may we recognize as well the many who say "yes," to your gift without being able explicitly to express their faith in words. Everyone who gives himself in love, can only do so because of your life, Father, that you share through the Word now made flesh in Jesus, our Lord.
Father, your saints are many and often those outside the visible bounds of your Church, and even those who through confusion seem to deny your very existence, lead exemplary lives that bear witness to your divine sharing with us.
May we all grow in your life and share it with one another.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Apr. 28: Monday of the Sixth Week of Easter
Apr. 27: Sixth Sunday of Easter, Cycle A
Anonymous Russian Master, The Apostles Peter and John the Theologian(detail from The Appearance of the Mother of God to Venerable Sergius of Radonezh), late 18th cent.
Readings for Mass
First Reading: Acts 8:5-8, 14-17
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 66:1-3, 4-5, 6-7, 16, 20
Second Reading: First Peter 3:15-18
Gospel: John 14:15-21
Then Peter and John laid their hands on them, and they received the Holy Spirit (Acts 8:17).
Let us pray.
As with the people of Samaria, we rejoice for the Philips in our lives who bring to the surface the good news of salvation, perhaps long hidden in the depths of our consciousness, and who baptize us; and for the Peters and Johns who make us aware of the Holy Spirit working in us.
Father, your truth is spoken to us once and for all in every moment by your Word dwelling within us even from the womb, the same Word who challenges us in every situation to accept your divine life in the Holy Spirit. Because of the limitations of our created being, hemmed in as it is by space and time, and weighed down by the sin or the world and our own sinfulness, we often find it so difficult to grasp our true relationship with you.
As we are grateful for those, our sisters and brothers, and most significantly our Lord Jesus Christ, the Word now made flesh, who awaken in us an awareness of who we really are and what we are called to be, may we also, Father, join with them in sensitizing others around us so that they too may see clearly and recognize their true nature and calling.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Apr. 26: Saturday of the Fifth Week of Easter
Modern Mosaic, Vision Telling Paul to Come Over to Macedonia, Veroia (ancient Berea), Greece
Readings for Mass
First Reading: Acts 16:1-10
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 100:1-2, 3, 5
Gospel: John 15:18-21
During the night Paul had a vision: there stood a man of Macedonia pleading with him and saying, “Come over to Macedonia and help us (NRSV, Act 14:9).”
Let us pray.
Father, in every situation in which we as human beings find ourselves, if we are sensitive to your one Word spoken to us, we realize that you are calling us forth, out of the limitations of the present moment, to grow in your life. Abraham sensed himself called to leave his home in Mesopotamia in search of you. The Israelites were called out of slavery in Egypt. Paul was called forth continually to preach your gospel to all peoples.
Father, sensitive to the inevitable inadequacy of our present situation, may we be always ready to respond to your call to move forward from where we are, to let go of our past, indeed our sins and our selfishness, to grow in your life and to give ourselves ever more fully to the service of our sisters and brothers.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Apr. 25: Feast of St. Mark, evangelist
Readings for Mass
First Reading: First Peter 5:5-14
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 89:2-3, 6-7, 16-17
Gospel: Mark 16:15-20
And they went out and proclaimed the good news everywhere, while the Lord worked with them and confirmed the message by the signs that accompanied it (NRSV, Mk 16:20).
Father, when Barnabas traveled to Antioch, we read that a large number came to believe because Barnabas was a good man filled with the Holy Spirit and faith. When we accept your gift of life, Father, always offered us through the Word dwelling within us, we are transformed. Your life fills us with great power that cannot help but radiate out from us to others.
Your Word is the only mediator, Father, between you and us but the life and power that we receive from you through him can influence others to say “yes” to you through the Word as we have done.
If there is only one mediator, Father, you enable us through him to share in that mediation.
As the Lord Jesus worked signs and wonder during his life on earth, so we too are called, and indeed empowered, to work signs and wonders among one another.
May we ever be responsive to our calling that, like Jesus, we too may effectively proclaim the coming of the kingdom to our sisters and brothers.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Apr. 24: Thursday of the Fifth Week of Easter
Readings for Mass
First Reading: Acts 15:7-21
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 96:1-2, 2-3, 10
Gospel: John 15:9-11
The whole assembly [gathered in Jerusalem] kept silence, and listened to Barnabas and Paul as they told of all the signs and wonders that God had done through them among the Gentiles (NRSV, Acts 15:12).
Let us pray.
Father, in every situation there is the possibility of growth in understanding of the same one Word spoken to us all at every moment and every place. It is to the Word living within us to whom we must listen most carefully. Because of our very nature as created beings, located in space and time, however, it is impossible for us to grasp all at once the truth, final and absolute, that is revealed to us. We are also hindered in this task by the sin of the world which presses down heavily upon us and of course by our own personal sinfulness.
Father, you offer your life to all humanity and everyone hears your word. Help us to be open to the understanding of others, those within your church, especially those in positions of leadership, but also others who have found you in different ways and even those of good will who seem to deny your very existence. All have their contribution to make and all must be heard.
May we, Father, through the Word in the Holy Spirit, continue to grow in our understanding of who you are and the life that you challenge us to lead. Yes, Father, may we seek understanding rather than final answers which are never really possible within history. May our conclusions always be tentative and subject to revision as we grow in you who are our final goal and who alone are absolute truth.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Apr. 23: Wednesday of the Fifth Week of Easter
The Vine and Branches, Beit Jala Latin Seminary, Jerusalem
Readings for Mass
First Reading: Acts 15:1-6
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 122:1-2, 3-4, 4-5
Gospel: John 15:1-8
Those who abide in me and I in them bear much fruit (NRSV, Jn 15:5a).”
Let us pray.
Father, there is only one life that you offer to share with all humanity. When we say “yes” in faith to the challenge of the Word, a “yes” always uttered in the power of the Holy Spirit, we become partakers of that one divine life. All become one with you, Father, through the Word, now made flesh in our Lord Jesus Christ.
Without a share in your life, Father, there is not one good thing that we can do. Love has its foundation in grace. With you, Father, all things are possible to us.
Christ is the vine and we are the branches. Through him may we accept your life, Father, and allow it to flow through us, and in and out among us, who are all one in you.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen
Apr. 22: Tuesday of the Fifth Week of Easter
Gustave Doré, Lucifer in Hell, Illustration for The Divine Comedy, 1861-68
Apr. 21: Monday of the Fifth Week of Easter
Jesus taking his departure and the coming of the Holy Spirit from Martin Luther, Hausspostilla vber die Sontags vnd der furnemesten Feste Euangelien, durch das gantze Jar
Readings for Mass
First Reading: Acts 14:5-18
Responsorial Psalm: Psalms 115:1-2, 3-4, 15-16
Gospel: John 14:21-26
"But the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you everything, and remind you of all that I have said to you (NRSV, John 14:26)."
Let us pray.
Father, with the resurrection of Jesus we realize that the Holy Spirit is given and not just from that moment. The Spirit is given in every time and place in the one act that is your Being. It is in the power of the Spirit, even in our mother's womb, that we are able, without language or logic, to say "yes" to the Word and thus, Father, to become your children.
May we ever be responsive to the gift of the Spirit that we may "remember" ever more fully the one Word that is spoken to us.
Father, we look forward to the celebration of the feast of the Holy Spirit. May we live that feast at every moment, ever accepting the Spirit more fully into our lives and growing in our understanding of what the Word teaches.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen
Apr. 20: Fifth Sunday of Easter, Cycle A
Brother Nicholas, The Stone Rejected Has Been Made into the Head of the Corner, Speculum Humanae Salvationis, Koninklijke Bibliotheek, The Hague, c.1450
Readings for Mass
First Reading: Acts 6:1-7
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 33:1-2, 4-5, 18-19
Second Reading: First Peter 2:4-9
Gospel: John 14:1-12
‘The stone that the builders rejected has become the very head of the corner (NRSV, 1 Pt 2:7b).’
Let us pray.
Father, the author of 1 Peter writes of Jesus as a stone, first rejected, then used as the cornerstone, not just any kind of stone, but rather a living stone which communicates life to all of the others stones of the building so that the whole building becomes alive.
Father, the first Christians were not yet much familiar with the dome which the Romans had only just invented. A dome is built upon scaffolding which holds all of the stones in place. Then finally a keystone is dropped into the open space in the apex of the dome. The keystone exerts pressure on the stones around it and they in turn on those around them and so on until finally all is held in place by the living forces unleashed by the keystone. The scaffolding, no longer needed, can be removed. The dome becomes alive through the forces distributed from the keystone.
Father, the first of your churches built with a dome is the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople. There the forces exerted by the dome press down upon the apexes of four arches upon which it rests and the pendentives uniting the arches and upon which the dome also rests. The forces continue right to the ground. The whole building becomes alive by the forces coming from the keystone.
Father, Christ, the Word made flesh, is the living cornerstone, yes, even the keystone, of the Church and indeed of the whole human family. It is through him that your life comes to all who will accept it and grow in it. May every one of us be ever responsive to this life-giving force.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Apr. 19: Saturday of the Fourth Week of Easter
Albrecht Dürer, Saint Philip the Apostle, Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence, 1516
Readings for Mass
First Reading: Acts 13:44-52
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 98:1, 2-3, 3-4
Gospel: John 14:7-14
Philip said to him, “Lord, show us the Father, and we will be satisfied.” Jesus said to him, “Have I been with you all this time, Philip, and you still do not know me? Whoever has seen me has seen the Father (NRSV, Jn 14:8-9a).”
Let us pray,
Father, we find you in a number of ways.
We can walk in your footprints, examining what you do in creation, learning about the craftsman from the work he does.
Mostly, we find you by looking inward, deep within ourselves where we always find your Word challenging us to grow in the Holy Spirit in whom we share your very life. Even when we reject you in sin, the Word remains present to us offering us your forgiveness and the renewed gift of your Holy Spirit.
And so we find you, Father, by looking outward at the world you create or inwards to the Word through whom you create everything that is.
If the Word always dwells within all of us, Father, we also find your Word in a way that is tangible and visible, for the Word has been made flesh in our Lord Jesus. Through Jesus, Father, we meet you in a human body, here among us, sharing our joys and sorrows and even passing through death with us.
And we do not forget, Father, that we also meet you in a tangible and visible way in your Church in the sacred actions you perform in our midst, the actions which we know as sacraments.
Father, there is no situation possible in which you are not present to us through your Word. May we ever be responsive to the gift of your life which you always offer to us.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Apr. 18: Friday of the 4th Week of easter
Apr 17: Thursday of the Fourth Week of Easter
Duccio di Buoninsegna, The Washing of Feet, Museo dell'Opera del Duomo, Siena, 1308-11
Apr 16: Wednesday of the Fourth Week of Easter
Apr. 15: Tuesday of the Fourth Week of Easter
Jean le Tavernier, St. Barnabas, Koninklijke Bibliotheek, The Hague, 1450-60
Readings for Mass
First Reading: Acts 11:19-26
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 87:1-3, 4-5, 6-7
Gospel: John 10:22-30
For Barnabas was a good man, full of the Holy Spirit and of faith. And a great many people were brought to the Lord (NRSV, Acts 11:24).
Let us pray.
Father, your life is mediated to us through the Word who dwells within every human being. All of us are called to participate in that mediation by sharing our lives with our sisters and brothers.
Barnabas went to Antioch proclaiming the good news of Jesus’ resurrection and many were moved openly to accept the Lord because they saw in Barnabas a man who was himself full of the Holy Spirit and of faith.
May we lead lives responsive to the gift of the Holy Spirit offered through the Word to all of us so that others will see your good works, Father, before their very eyes and thus come openly to proclaim their faith in you.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Apr. 14: Monday of the Fourth Week of Easter
Christoph Weigel, Peter's Vision, Biblia ectypa: Bildnussen auss Heiliger Schrifft Alt und Neuen Testaments, 1695
Father, may we always keep our minds open to understand more and more the one Word that you speak to us in every moment.
Apr. 13: Fourth Sunday of Easter, Cycle A
Apr. 12: Saturday of the Third Week of Easter
Masolino da Panicale, The Raising of Tabitha (detail), Cappella Brancacci, Santa Maria del Carmine, Florence, 1424-25
Let us pray.
Father, because of the sin of the world and our own personal selfishness and sin, death often seems like the undoing of human life. Father, beginning in the womb, when, through the Word, you offered us life, even a share in your own divine life in the Spirit, you called us to constant growth without end. Human life is an everlasting journey which does not end in death but only passes through death to further, perpetual growth in you.
The power that filled Jesus enabling him to pass through death in glory has also been offered to every one of us. Father, the stories of the raising of Lazarus by Jesus and of the raising of Tabitha by Peter are merely signs of the power and glory also available to us to share in the resurrection. In saying “yes” to your ever-offered gift of divine life may we begin, even now, in this world, to live resurrected lives.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Apr. 11: Friday of the Third Week of Easter
Caravaggio, The Conversion of St. Paul, Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome, 1600-01
First Reading: Acts 9:1-20
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 117:1, 2
Gospel: John 6:52-59
But the Lord said to Ananias, “Go, for he is an instrument whom I have chosen to bring my name before Gentiles and kings and before the people of Israel (NRSV, Acts 9:15).”
Let us pray.
Father, an apostle is one who has immediately experienced the risen Lord Jesus and has been sent to announce the good news to the others. Mary Magdalene may have been the first apostle; Paul claims that he is the last.Paul is important for us, Father, because he is the only apostle who has himself written about resurrection. Indeed, he is the first to write of all of those who have contributed to Christian scripture.
For Paul, and this is so important for us, Father, the resurrection is not resurrection merely of the spiritual principle, or soul. Jesus rose in his entirety, that is, also in the body. But, as Paul experienced it, the body was transformed into something beyond the physical, no longer subject to earthly forces. Jesus did not resurrect back into this earthly life but resurrected into the world to come, a destiny to which we are all called.
Father, Paul encountered Jesus on the road to Damascus in a way that changed his whole life. All of us, Father, in every time and place, experience the Word, now made flesh, at the depth of our being, closer than we are to ourselves, at every moment of our lives. May we be every responsive to this one Word spoken to all of humanity that we too may experience conversion in our lives, not merely on one particular occasion, but in every moment that we live, here in this world and into the next.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Apr. 10: Thursday of the Third Week of Easter
Rembrandt van Rijn, Baptism of the Eunuch, Museum Catherijneconvent, Utrecht, 1626
Readings for Mass
First Reading: Acts 8:26-40
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 66:8-9, 16-17, 20
Gospel: John 6:44-51
“How can I, unless someone guides me (NRSV, Acts 8:31a)?”
Let us pray.
Father, how gracious you are to all of us in every situation. At each moment, you reveal yourself to us through your one spoken Word, uttered to all in every place and time. You have as well given us your written Word passed down to us through the centuries. Your truth is contained in the wisdom of the ages shared by the whole human family. If this were not enough, in the fullness of time, the Word has become flesh in our Lord Jesus Christ, indeed truly the way, the truth and the life, come to teach, to comfort, to heal and even to die with us.
Father, our situation in life and history, the heavy burden of the sin of the world, and our own personal selfishness and sin, make it difficult fully to grasp your Word in every situation even though every moment, without fail, is always saving.
Your truth, Father, spoken to us all in the depth of our being through the Word, abounds throughout creation in ways we often least expect. May every one of us, Lord, come to a deeper understanding of who you are and what you challenge us to become. May we always encourage one another so that we may each one benefit from the truth revealed to all but only understood in part by any one of us. May each of us, in ways not always yet determined, share in mediating your Word to one another.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Apr. 9: Wednesday of the Third Week of Easter
Jesus said to them, “I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never be hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty (NRSV, Jn 6:35).”
Apr. 8: Tuesday of the Third Week of Easter
Bernardo Daddi, The Martyrdom of St. Stephen (detail), Santa Croce, Florence, 1324
Readings for Mass
First Reading: Acts 7:51--8:1
Responsorial Psalm: Palms 31:3-4, 6, 7, 8, 17, 21
Gospel: John 6:30-35
“Lord, do not hold this sin against them (NRSV, Acts 7:60a).”
Let us pray.
In the moment of his approaching death, Stephen called out to you, Father, begging forgiveness for those who were killing him. In Luke’s gospel, Jesus himself, begged for forgiveness for those putting him to death.
Father, I truly believe that you offer forgiveness to all of us for our sins, through the Word, even before we ask for it. All that is needed is that we turn away from the evil that we have done and once again freely accept your life into our own, even as we did in the power of the Spirit that first moment of our existence in our mother’s womb.
Father, as you offer us forgiveness and we accept it forgiving ourselves for what we have done, may we also, as Stephen did, turn to those who sin against us and pass on to them the forgiveness that we ourselves have received. To be forgiven is also to forgive in turn.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Apr.7: Monday of the Third Week of Easter
Paolo Uccello, The Disputation of St. Stephen, Duomo, Prato, 1435
Readings for Mass
First Reading: Acts 6:8-15
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 119:23-24, 26-27, 29-30
Gospel: John 6:22-29
And all who sat in the council looked intently at Stephen, and they saw that his face was like the face of an angel (NRSV, Acts 6:15).
Let us pray.
Father, divine power transfigured Jesus even in apparent ignominy and defeat. In Mark’s gospel, seeing the manner in which Jesus was dying, the pagan centurion at the foot of the cross came to believe: “Truly this man was God’s Son!” In John’s gospel, the last to be written, the power that came from Jesus is such that he is seen as resurrected already throughout his entire public ministry.
Stephen, one of the seven, ordained to “serve,” the first martyr for faith in Christ, was so full of grace and power that at his trial before the Sanhedrin his face shone like an angel.
Father, May I respond in such a way to the life which you always offer to me through the Word that I too may be changed, that others may come to believe your Word encouraged by everything that I say and indeed everything that I am.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Apr. 6: Third Sunday of Easter, Cycle A
Apr. 5: Saturday of the Second Week of Easter
Giovanni Battista Piazzetta:
St. Stephen, One of the Seven, Proto-martyr
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., late 1730s
Readings for Mass
First Reading: Deuteronomy 30:15-20
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 1:1-2, 3, 4, 6
Gospel: Luke 9:22-25
And the twelve called together the whole community of the disciples and said, “It is not right that we should neglect the word of God in order to wait on tables. Therefore, friends, select from among yourselves seven men of good standing, full of the Spirit and of wisdom, whom we may appoint to this task, while we, for our part, will devote ourselves to prayer and to serving the word (NRSV, Acts 6:2-4).”
Let us pray.
Father, in the course of the journey towards you who are our only true future, it is often the case that we unfortunately ignore the interests and well-being of some of our sisters and brothers journeying along with us. In the apostolic Church that was the case in Jerusalem with Christians of Hellenic origin. To address their needs Seven were appointed and ordained to serve them, those we often recognize today as the first deacons.
Father, we stand ready to accept further growth in your life through the Word always present to us, may we be ever conscious of those close to us and faraway that we may be always ready to share with them your life and whatever else they may need and encourage them on our common journey. Keep us conscious, Father, that every human being is loved by you and called to share in your life.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Apr. 4: Friday of the Second Week of Easter
Apr. 3: Thursday of the Second Week of Easter
Metropolitan John the Icon-Painter, Christ the Savior and Lifegiver, Museum of Macedonia, Skopje, 1384
Apr. 2: Wednesday of the Second Week of Easter
Apr. 1: Tuesday of the Second Week of Easter
Anonymous English Master, Christ and Nicodemus, British Library, London, c.1430