Thursday, February 19, 2026
The Call of the Cross
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
The Call of Lent
Gospel: Matthew 6: 1-6; 16-18
Another Lent begins. Another Ash Wednesday is upon us where in the modern age we go to receive ashes and post pictures of ourselves with ash on forehead for social media. It is as if we had not heard the Gospel for today's Mass. Did we not hear the words about avoiding doing things in order to be seen and receive attention? As with so many things Jesus tells us to do, this is just one more that is set aside because we know better.
But if we are serious about Lent, about the fast and the putting on of ashes to repent of sin, then the words of Jesus must be taken seriously. We need not create a spectacle of ourselves in our work of repentance. People will know we have repented only when our lives have changed and we act differently than we did previously. If we are extending mercy to others, performing deeds of loving kindness in the care of others, then the fruit of repentance will be evident in those deeds and not in performative acts of the ego.
Another Lent, another opportunity to make progress in the spiritual life through prayer, penance, and acts of mercy. The only way to do these deeds authentically is to do them humbly, quietly, and with no fanfare. Perform deeds of mercy the world does not care about: visit the sick and elderly in hospitals and care facilities; visit the imprisoned with prison ministry; provide welcome to immigrants, refugees, and migrants. And don't post it on social media. Don't tell anyone. Just do it.
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
Varieties of Bread
Gospel: Mark 8: 14-21
Jesus warns his disciples against the yeast of the Pharisees and Herod, contrasting their bread with the loaves he himself multiplied for the crowd. Both the Pharisees and Herod are about the business of power, influence, and wealth. Herod was in allegiance with the Roman Empire, doing whatever it took to retain power, committing atrocities, abusing the populace, and engaging in the pleasures of the world as any Roman leader would do.
The Pharisees were zealous for the law, but not as a means to holiness and care for others. They too wanted political power and influence. They wanted the overthrow of the Roman occupation and the restoration of the kingdom of Israel. They would go on to ally themselves with zealots, committing violence and revolting against the occupiers, only to see nothing but ruin for the people. The quest for political power, influence, and wealth leads to ruin.
But the leaven of Jesus is the leaven of love and mercy. He multiplied the loaves in order to feed people, nothing more. The action was not a means of securing influence and worldly power. It was simply to feed people, to extend the mercy of God to others. Jesus went from place to place doing exactly this work by healing, liberating, and feeding people. That too is the mission of the authentic disciple. When shopping for bread, we must choose wisely...