Monday, February 16, 2026

A Vain Search


Gospel: Mark 8: 11-13

We human beings look incessantly for signs.  We play Bible roulette to seek for answers.  We consult mediums, tarot cards, the entrails of chickens to see what the gods portend.  We stare at the skies and pore over our English muffin to see if the Virgin Mary is appearing there.  We strain every ounce of our body to see if God is speaking something aloud to us, some allocution - anything at all - in the hopes that we might get some sign, even though we could not explain what it is we are looking for.

Why do we do this?  We are not content with God's language which is silence.  Silence makes us uncomfortable.  It makes us uncomfortable, for silence reveals God fully to us.  Silence reveals us completely to ourselves.  And we like neither, for what we learn therein is often unpleasant.  We learn that we have work to do.  We have repentance and conversion to undertake, and we do not want to do that.  So we create some other reality, some false religion filled with sign seeking.

Jesus was completely comfortable in silence.  He would spend entire nights alone on a mountain in silence.  This is how he came to know God.  This is how he came to understand himself.  This is how he came to clarity regarding the world around him.  We too can come to these places of awareness if we but give up the vanity of sign seeking and learn to be in silence, listening to the voice of God within.  Lent is coming, a perfect time to enter the desert and encounter the silence. 

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Minding What Matters


Gospel: Matthew 5: 17-37

After first giving us the Beatitudes, Jesus then oddly tells us that not one bit of the law is to be ignored until all has been fulfilled.  The statement is odd because we have seen, and will see, how Jesus repeatedly ignores different aspects of the law himself.  He ignores the Sabbath law when healing others or when the disciples pluck grain while traveling.  He disregards the cleansing and purification laws while interacting with those who are unclean.  So what is happening here?

Jesus goes through various parts of the law, but notice carefully what parts he emphasizes: those that involve our interaction and relationships with other people: murder, oath taking, divorce, adultery.  In each case he will quote the law and then apply the Beatitudes to them.  Do not murder means not thinking or saying anything harmful of another - the law of mercy.  Not committing adultery means not even looking at another lustfully - purity of heart.  

What matters in the law is the law of love - love God, love others.  And we only love God when we love our neighbor.  God is not loved by building shrines or adorning altars.  God does not need these things.  God needs us to love others.  If we want to build a shrine, build one within our hearts and in the hearts of others.  Use the values of the Beatitudes - mercy, meekness, purity of heart, peacemaking, empathy - to care for others, building a shrine of love in our hearts and in the hearts of those for whom we care. 

Saturday, February 14, 2026

Checking Our Privilege


Gospel: Mark 8: 1-10

In today's Gospel portion, we see Jesus having compassion on the crowd that is hungry, while the disciples are indifferent to the hunger of the crowd.  We come to realize that the source of the disciples' indifference lies in the fact that they have food while no one else does.  They do not have empathy because they themselves are not and they have food.  And yet even though Jesus has access to food, he does have empathy for the crowd.  

Jesus asks the disciples to give him their food.  He multiplies it so that all now have access to food, and Jesus requires his disciples to give this food to everyone.  The disciples must have a direct encounter with those in need, and they must provide for those needs out of their own resources.  This is the fundamental mission of the Church, and Jesus continually calls us out of our lives of comfort to provide for a world hungry and starving.  

This feeding is twofold.  First, it is literal food for physical sustenance.  But it is also the food of the Eucharist that we are to provide for a hungry world as well.  For too long we have hoarded both of these things - the material wealth of the world and the gift of Eucharist and communion.  The Lord Jesus has multiplied both for us so that we might distribute it to all so that none go hungry either in body or soul.  He continually calls us to this work each and every day.