Friday, June 12, 2026

Thoughts on the Sacred Heart of Jesus



Sacred Heart


Each year on the Friday following the feast of Corpus Christi, before returning to “Ordinary Time,” the Church celebrates the Feast of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus.


Heart-language is powerful language. Simple phrases convey and capture meaning beyond verbal expression: a contrite heart, brave-hearted, with a heavy heart, heart- to-heart, a stony heart, a broken heart, cold-hearted, a divided heart, light-hearted, with one heart and mind, wearing one’s heart on one’s sleeve, hard-hearted, a passionate heart; cross my heart; know by heart; give my heart; heart filled with…; aching heart; clean heart. It’s rather amazing how dependent we are on heart-language to convey a great variety of human emotions and experiences.


I don’t know why I came at a young age to be fascinated by the image of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. It probably has something to do with my high school days at St. Louis U. High, where the engaging Sacred Heart image was ubiquitous. Over the years, that familiar image, that devotion, has seeped more deeply into my own heart, shaping my devotional life and spirituality.


Perhaps on retreat at White House you have prayed before the Sacred Heart statue which resides to the south of Snyder Hall. Or, perhaps you are aware of other places, including in your own home, where the image has found a place of honor. It is not easy to precisely capture what the Sacred Heart image conveys. It does so “silently,” without words, not unlike the method through which my parents conveyed to their children their convictions about right and wrong, their experience of God, and their Catholic vision of life. But it does communicate. In the presence of the Sacred Heart, we know that we have a God who understands, who feels, who forgives, who speaks the words that we deeply long to hear, who loves with that kind of love that is all-encompassing and still relentlessly personal and unconditional.


It is that Jesus, that God, that I often address in prayer. Assessing the quality of my own heart, and recognizing how “mixed” it can be, I nonetheless want to offer it to a God who I trust will know exactly how to respond. Perhaps we can all beg for ourselves that same grace.


Fr. Frank Reale, S.J.



Thursday, June 11, 2026

Thoughts on forgiveness

 

Memorial of Saint Barnabas, Apostle

Matthew 5:20–26

Friends, in today’s Gospel, Jesus commands us to be reconciled with one another. I want to say something about the role of forgiveness in repairing our broken relationships.


When you are at worship and realize that you need to forgive someone (or be forgiven by someone), go and do it. Go get reconciled, then come back. It’s like a rule of physics. There is something hidden in the deep mystery of God, and I can’t fully explicate it. Somehow, if there is a lack of forgiveness in you, it blocks the movement of God in you. Perhaps it’s simply because God is love, and so whatever is opposed to love in us blocks the flow of God’s power and God’s life.


One reason we do not forgive is that we feel that some injustice has been done to us, and we resent it. A good cure for this feeling is to kneel before the cross of Jesus. What do you see there? The innocent Son of God nailed to the cross—the ultimate injustice. What does he do? He forgives his persecutors. Meditate on that, and your sense of being treated unjustly will fade away.


Bishop Robert Barron




Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Thoughts on community

 

Community Keeps the Flame of Hope Alive
From: Finding My Way Home: Pathways to Life and the Spirit
Christian community is the place where we keep the flame of hope alive among us and take it seriously so that it can grow and become stronger in us. In this way we can live with courage, trusting that there is a spiritual power in us when we are together that allows us to live in this world without surrendering to the powerful forces constantly seducing us toward despair. That is how we dare to say that God is a God of love even when we see hatred all around us. That is why we can claim that God is a God of life even when we see death and destruction and agony all around us. We say it together. We affirm it in each other. Waiting together, nurturing what has already begun, expecting its fulfillment – that is the meaning of marriage, friendship, community, and the Christian life.
 
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Reflection Question: When was the last time that you shared your burdens with others and what steps can you take to to seek out others to wait, listen, pray, and cultivate hope with?

 
When they arrived, they went upstairs to the room where they were staying. Those present were Peter, John, James and Andrew; Philip and Thomas, Bartholomew and Matthew; James son of Alphaeus and Simon the Zealot, and Judas son of James. They all joined together constantly in prayer, along with the women and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his brothers.
- Acts 1: 13 - 14



Sunday, June 7, 2026

Thoughts on the Feast of Corpus Christi



This weekend we celebrate the feast of the Body and Blood of Christ, often known simply by its Latin name, Corpus Christi, the Body of Christ.


It was only about two months ago, on Holy Thursday, that the Church celebrated the body and blood of Christ. It might seem odd to commemorate that gift again so soon, but this weekend’s celebration has a different character. Holy Thursday was solemn and focused our attention of Jesus’ death. Today’s solemnity is joyful and focuses us on the mission begun at Pentecost: to act as Christ did and share his love with the world.


As St. Paul suggests, this term can have two meanings: the Body of Christ which we share in the Eucharist, and the body of Christ that we form as a community of believers united with the Risen Christ.


This combination of meanings reminds us that the Eucharist is profoundly social. This Sunday’s reading from 1 Corinthians provides a concise but very rich statement about what we do when we celebrate the Eucharist as the people. Paul reminds the Corinthian Christians (and us) that as members of the body of Christ we constitute one body. It is a natural symbol and powerful image, reminding us of how all of its parts must work together and of how no part can be hurt without the whole body being hurt. Christ makes this body different. He comes first; he makes the body; his relationship to us forms us into the body of Christ. Our vertical relationship with Christ has as its necessary consequence our horizonal relationship with one another. In that social sense we are the body of Christ. As Paul states, as members of Christ’s body, we affirm our identity and unity when we receive the eucharistic body of Christ.


In this Sunday’s Gospel from John, Jesus identifies himself as the living bread that came down from heaven. When his disciples take in and become all that he is, the life forces he enfleshed continue to be offered for the life of the world. The interconnectedness of all persons and all life in the body of Christ is not an abstract concept; it is palpable and visible. Our participation in the Eucharist concretizes and energizes our relationship with Christ and with one another. As members of the body of Christ, we share in the body of Christ.


One final thought: Jesus’ body was a place of action. In his body, Jesus healed, fed, forgave, called and taught. Through Jesus’ body, humanity felt God’s love. John teaches us today how we too can, like Jesus, give God a body from which to act and a heart from which to love. Our love of Christ’s body should make of own bodies a place from which God can act in love, thus continuing the mission of Christ.


Fr. Frank Reale, S.J.




Friday, June 5, 2026

Thoughts on Jesus as Lord

 

Memorial of Saint Boniface, Bishop and Martyr

Mark 12:35–37

Friends, in our Gospel today, Jesus quotes a psalm where David calls him Lord. It calls to mind a question: Do you also recognize Jesus as Lord? 


Is Christ commanding your life in every detail? Is he the Lord of your family life? Of your recreational life? Of your professional life? Is he the Lord of every room in your house, including the bedroom? Does your sexuality belong to him? Do your friendships serve his purpose? Are you totally given over to him, under his lordship?


When we surrender to the path of love that he has laid out for us, our lives become infinitely lighter, easier, and more joyful, for we are moving with the divine purpose. We will have moved out of what Paul calls the way of “the flesh” and into the way of “the Spirit.”


Flesh refers here not to the body as such but to sin. When you are caught up in patterns of self-regard and self-protection, life becomes a burden, and you find yourself taking up the weapons of war all the time. But when you recognize Jesus as Lord, you can let all of that go.


Bishop Robert Barron



Thursday, June 4, 2026

Thoughts on love

 

Ninth Week in Ordinary Time

Mark 12:28–34

Friends, in today’s Gospel, the Lord says that the second greatest commandment is to love your neighbor as yourself.


Love is not primarily a feeling or an instinct; rather, it is the act of willing the good of the other as other. It is radical self-gift, living for the sake of the other. To be kind to someone so that he might be kind to you, or to treat a fellow human being justly so that he, in turn, might treat you with justice, is not to love, for such moves are tantamount to indirect self-interest.


Truly to love is to move outside of the black hole of one’s egotism, to resist the centripetal force that compels one to assume the attitude of self-protection. But this means that love is rightly described as a “theological virtue,” for it represents a participation in the love that God is.


Since God has no needs, only God can utterly exist for the sake of the other. All of the great masters of the Christian spiritual tradition saw that we are able to love only inasmuch as we have received, as a grace, a share in the very life, energy, and nature of God.


Bishop Robert Barron



Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Thoughts on Heaven

 

Memorial of Saint Charles Lwanga and Companions, Martyrs

Mark 12:18–27

Friends, in today’s Gospel, Jesus confronts the Sadducees, who did not believe in resurrection from the dead. They proposed a conundrum that they thought would disprove resurrection: If a woman married seven brothers, all of whom died, whose wife would she be in the resurrection?


Notice how Jesus deals with this little conundrum: He brushes it aside. Jesus says to them, “When they rise from the dead, they neither marry nor are given in marriage, but they are like the angels in heaven.”


What’s he saying here as he brushes aside this little bit of casuistry? What is heaven? Is it escaping from the body? No, that’s not it. That’s not a biblical view. Heaven is a place where our bodiliness will be so rich and so intense that we will be able to relate to all those around us in the most intimate and powerful way possible.


And there we will be fully alive, for as Jesus explained from the Torah, God is not God of the dead but of the living.


Bishop Robert Barron