Tuesday of Week 2 of Easter
Even though most of us like the light, the gospel notes a sense in which people seem to prefer darkness to light.
Even though most of us like the light, the gospel notes a sense in which people seem to prefer darkness to light.
Catherine’s advice: “Build a cell inside your mind, from which you can never flee.”
Even though Easter Week is now behind us, today’s liturgy still overflows with the joy of Jesus’ resurrection. We continue to celebrate that great event for the next six weeks, until Pentecost Sunday on the 20th of May, the fiftieth and final day of Easter.
Sharing in the Eucharist is a statement of loyalty, both of personal and shared faith…
His resurrection rolled away more boulders than the one blocking his tomb; it also flung wide the doors to the future…
The apostles went back to their roots, to resume their work as fishermen. But their lives had been transformed…
God’s plans are enmeshed in human existence, and are being carried out across the sweep of history…
Emmaus suggests that if we travel life’s journey with others, sharing our faith and our fears, Christ will be with us..
It is notable how the Easter stories convey the gradual recognition of Jesus, after his resurrection…
The act of divine power that raised Jesus from the dead was already predicted in an inspired psalm of David, a thousand years before…
This Easter morning we celebrate the central mystery of our faith, the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. He suffered on the cross and died for us, but now he is risen! Filled with the spirit of Easter joy, we proclaim the might and glory of God.
On Easter morning, the stone was rolled back from the mouth of the tomb. Is my heart be ike a tomb awaiting resurrection? Can I identify any “gravestone” that is holding me back
We gather around the Easter candle, celebrating the Lord’s resurrection. With that light to illumine our way, we remember how God has cared for humanity from the dawn of time. The readings from both testaments remind us what happened at the highpoints of our history.
I will bring you to the heights of heaven. With my own right hand I will raise you up, and I will show you the eternal Father…
Consummated, completed, achieved to the last degree, engraved forever on the memory of mankind…
The liturgy that begins this Thursday evening continues until we reach Easter. We are at the start of a three-day celebration of the passion, death and resurrection of Jesus. We journey from the Last Supper to Gethsemane tonight, from there to Calvary tomorrow, and from the tomb to resurrection and new life at the Vigil of Easter Sunday.
What exactly had Jesus in mind through the symbolism of the broken bread and the shared wine?
Poor Judas was doubtless talented and rather idealistic; but he became an icon of treachery. Why?
The life of Jesus interweaves two contrasting strands: apparent failure and ultimate triumph…
The iconic, worshipful gesture done for Jesus by Mary of Bethany deserves more prominence in our liturgy..