• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

The Passionists of Holy Cross Province

The Love that Compels

  • Migration
    • Statement from Passionist Leadership Regarding Current United States Immigration Policies
    • The Global Migration Crisis: What Can a Retreat Center Do?
  • Laudato Si’
    • Celebrating the Season of Creation
    • Laudato Si’ 2023-24 Report and 2024-25 Plan
    • Ways to Live Laudato Siˊ
    • Sustainable Purchasing
      • Sustainable Purchasing Guide
      • Hints for Sustainable Meetings and Events
      • Sustainable Living Hints
    • Passion of the Earth, Wisdom of the Cross
    • Passionist Solidarity Network
  • Pray
    • Daily Reflections
    • Prayer Request
    • Sunday Homily
    • Passionist Spirituality and Prayer
    • Video: Stations of the Cross
    • Prayer and Seasonal Cards
  • Grow
    • Proclaiming Our Passionist Story (POPS)
    • The Passionist Way
    • Retreat Centers
    • Passionist Magazine
    • Passionist Ministries
      • Preaching
      • Hispanic Ministry
      • Parish Life
      • Earth and Spirit Center
      • Education
      • Fr. Cedric Pisegna, CP, Live with Passion!
    • Passionist Solidarity Network
    • Journey into the Mystery of Christ Crucified
    • Celebrating the Feast of St. Paul of the Cross
    • Subscribe to E-News
    • Sacred Heart Monastery
      • History of Sacred Heart Monastery
      • A Day in the Life of Senior Passionists
      • “Pillars” of the Community
  • Join
    • Come and See Holy Week Discernment Retreat
    • Are You Being Called?
    • Province Leadership
    • Vocation Resources
    • Passionist Brothers
    • The Life of St. Paul of the Cross
    • Discerning Your Call
    • Pray With Us
    • Passionist Vocation Directors
    • World Day for Consecrated Life
    • Lay Partnerships
  • Connect
    • Find a Passionist
    • Passionist Websites
    • Fr. Cedric Pisegna, CP, Live with Passion!
    • Passionist Alumni Association
  • Support
    • Donate
    • Monthly Giving
      • St. Gemma Circle of Giving Intentions
    • Leave a Legacy
      • Giving Matters
      • Ways to Give
      • Donor Relations
      • Testimonials
    • Prayer and Seasonal Cards
    • Privacy Policy Statement
  • Learn
    • Our Passionist History: Webinar Series
    • Proclaiming Our Passionist Story (POPS)
    • Our Founder
    • History
    • The Letters of St. Paul of the Cross
    • The Diary of St. Paul of the Cross
    • Mission and Charism
    • Saints and Blesseds
    • FAQs
    • Find a Passionist
    • STUDIES IN PASSIONIST HISTORY AND SPIRITUALITY
  • Safe Environments

Daily Scripture

Upcoming Daily Scriptures

Daily Scripture, January 3, 2015

Scripture:

1 John 2:29-3:6
John 1:29-34

Reflection:

"but the one who sent me to baptize with water told me. . ." John 1: 33

I believe with all my heart that God wants to speak to each of us, just as He did to John the Baptist in this reading. There are many ways He can communicate with us, such as through nature, through the words of another person, through scripture, through circumstances, and through music. But I also believe that we can hear Him in the quiet of our hearts.

One of the most profound times this happened to me was when I was grieving for my mom. She died the year I turned 40, nine years after my dad had died. I thought to myself, "I know how to grieve, I did it before, I can do it again." But my grief was debilitating and seemed overwhelming at times. It would surprise me suddenly and I’d find myself sobbing in a grocery store or at mass. Maybe it was losing my Mom, or maybe it was losing my second parent that made it more difficult. I’m not sure. What I do know is that I cried often, and a lot. I was still trying to call her on the phone two years after she died.

That year as I was on the road driving to my yearly women’s retreat, I heard the Lord say to me in my spirit, "I’m going to help you deal with your Mom’s death." I was hopeful and grateful, because it had been so hard, and I didn’t seem to be making much progress. The minute I got to the retreat center, I ran straight to the chapel, knelt at the altar and looked up at Jesus on the crucifix and said, "I’m here Lord, tell me what to do."

And I heard, "Close the casket."

"What?"

"Close the casket."

"What do you mean Lord?"

"The last picture you have of your Mom is seeing her dead in the casket. But she’s not dead, she’s more alive than you are! She’s here with me. See her dancing with your Dad. See her playing cards with your kids. You need to change the picture you have of her in your head."

"I can do that! Thank you Lord!"

And I did do that. I closed the casket in my mind and changed the way I thought about my Mom from then on. I saw her sitting in her brown chair holding my kids, or standing at the door to welcome us when we came to visit. It was the turning point in my grieving process. I still miss my mom, but now I recall my favorite memories of her, and I thank God for the blessing she was in my life. And of course, I look forward to the day I will see her again in heaven!

One more thing. . .I had been grieving for over two years when God spoke these words to me. Give yourself time to grieve, but when that time is over, let God help you "close the casket" too. "There is an appointed time for everything. . . a time to be born, a time to die. . . a time to weep and a time to laugh, a time to mourn and a time to dance." (Eccl 3:1a, 2a, 4)

 

Janice Carleton and her husband Jim live in Portland, OR and partner with Passionist Fr. Cedric Pisegna in Fr. Cedric Ministries. She is the mother of 4 grown children and grandmother of 6. Janice also leads women’s retreats and recently wrote her first book: God Speaks to Ordinary People – Like You and Me. Visit Janice’s website at http://www.janicecarleton.com/ or email her at [email protected].

Daily Scripture, January 2, 2015

 

Memorial of Saints Basil the Great
and Gregory Nazianzen,
Bishops and Doctors of the Church

Scripture:

1 John 2:22-28
John 1:19-28

 

Reflection:

The Christmas seasons is a time when children are so often the focus of our attention and energies: planning, shopping, cooking, wrapping gifts, opening gifts, church activities, family visits. No wonder that there might come a moment around January 2 when we grown-ups might feel that we’ve earned a break from the juvenile and are ready for some "downtime" in front of the tv, the computer, or at a movie theatre.

It was against this backdrop that my attention was snagged by the reference at the end of today’s first reading about being "children". There are some very clear references of Jesus and of the New Testament authors to the followers of Jesus as children, or as "little ones."  On the feast of the Guardian Angels, October 2 each year, the gospel very literally has Jesus challenging his followers to become like children.

In today’s reading from 1 John, chapter 2, verse 28 begins by addressing the followers of Jesus as "children." But his anointing teaches you about everything and is true and not false; just as it taught you, remain in him. [28]And now, children, remain in him…

As though to drive home the point, the Greek word for children here (teknoi) is also the word used for the formative relationship between a mentor/teacher and his student.

This is a good thought to hold to as we start the new year, and as we are tempted to declare our best intentions for the year ahead: our proverbial "New Year’s Resolutions". Our lives are entwined with a God-made-flesh, who asks us to abide in him, to let him teach us how to grow into the full stature of a "child of God." We need only one New Year’s Resolution, it is to abide in Jesus so that we will use every moment of the year ahead to live as the son and daughter that once put on Christ in baptism, and now lives in the community of faith known as the Church of Jesus Christ.

 

Fr. Arthur Carrillo, C.P.  is the director of the Missions for Holy Cross Province.  He lives in Chicago, Illinois. 

 

Daily Scripture, January 1, 2015

 

Scripture:

Numbers 6:22-27
Galatians 4:4-7
Luke 2:16-21

 

 

 

Reflection:

Solemnity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Mother of God

January 1 is the octave of Christmas, bringing the eight day celebration of the Lord’s nativity to a formal close.  This is also a feast that took a while to settle on its official title!  Traditionally it celebrated the circumcision of Jesus, an account from Luke’s Gospel that is still included in the Lectionary selection for this feast (Luke 2:16-21).  But Pope John XXIII, for reasons that are not so clear, decided to drop the reference to the circumcision and call the feast simply, "The Octave of Christmas."  But in the liturgical reforms of 1969 that took place after the Second Vatican Council, the Church renamed January 1 as a time to celebrate the Blessed Virgin Mary as the Mother of God and that is the title we celebrate today.

On this day a lot of things converge.  For all of us it is the beginning of a new calendar year and a time to mark another milestone on the journey of our lives.  For many in our world 2014 was a difficult year-along with the many blessings God has given us, there was the continuing violence in the Middle East intensified by the rise of militant terrorism in Syria and Iraq; the racial explosion in Ferguson, Missouri; the terrible toll on human life through the Ebola virus; the clash between Israel and Gaza, to name just a few events.  To this short list can be added many personal losses and sufferings that so many families will not forget. 

The New Year and the Scriptures of our liturgy for today invite us to turn in hope to a new year of grace.  The traditional focus of this feastday on circumcision celebrated the formal induction of Jesus, the Word Incarnate, into God’s people.  For Jewish males, circumcision was the sign of their participation in the covenant between God and Israel.  God would be their loving God forever and they would be God’s people.  We, too, circumcised or not, as followers of Jesus, "the first born," are bound up with our loving God forever.  As Paul recalled in thinking of God’s enduring covenant with his beloved Israel-"God’s promises are irrevocable" (Romans 11:39). 

The first and second readings, as well as the Responsorial Psalm, exuberantly proclaim that bond of love.  The blessing from Numbers 6:22-27 is one of the Bible’s most well-known passages: "May the Lord bless you and keep you!  The Lord let his face shine upon you, and be gracious to you!  The Lord look upon you kindly and give you peace!"  This is surely a blessing for a new and hopeful year ahead.  The Response to Psalm 67-a psalm that pleads for God’s blessing-is in the same vein: "May God bless us in his mercy!"

And in the second reading from the Letter to the Galatians, Paul gets right to the heart of the matter: "When the fullness of time had come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to ransom those under the law, so that we might receive adoption as sons and daughters of God."  Through the Spirit given to us by God, we are able to address God in the most intimate terms, "Abba, Father!"  The Hebrew word abba is an affectionate greeting that a child as well as an adult addresses to a beloved father.  One can still hear this word in the Holy Land as a child calls out to his father or a thoughtful adult son speaks respectfully and lovingly to his father.  So, Paul tells us, we can address God fearlessly with the same respect and love.

In dedicating this New Year’s day feast to Mary, the Mother of God, Pope Paul VI noted that it gives us a chance to once more contemplate the incredible beauty of Christmas and the heart of its message: "God so loved the world that he sent his only son, not to condemn the world but that they world might be saved through him" (John 3:16).  And in contemplating that breathtaking reality, we are invited to do so through the eyes of Mary, the Mother of God.  Luke notes in the gospel text that "Mary kept all these things, reflecting on them in her heart."

So, here on this New Year’s Day as the world turns to a new chapter, we, in the contemplative spirit of Mary, have the opportunity to make peace with all the events-good and bad-of the past year, to remember God’s abiding love for us–come what may, and to turn to a New Year with hope and trust.

 

Father Donald Senior, C.P. is President Emeritus and Professor of New Testament at Catholic Theological Union.  He lives at the Passionist residence in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Chicago.

 

Daily Scripure, December 31, 2014

Scripture:

1 John 2:18-21
John 1:1-18

Reflection:

"Children, it’s the final hour." (I John 2:18a)

That’s the first line of today’s Liturgy of the Word.  I can just imagine the editors of the Lectionary all sitting around a big table, worn from working into the wee hours of the morning, empty carafes of coffee and donut crumbs laying all over the place.  Some guy is asleep under the table, I’m pretty sure.  "They’ll need to be reminded that it’s the last day of the year.  Let’s use I John 2:18."

Perhaps they’re right.  Thanksgiving, Advent, Christmas…  The time has raced by for me.  The Baptist’s cry of "Prepare Ye the Way" has now become "I hope you’ve prepared the way."  And now I feel a lot like I imagine those editors: weary from a long stretch of preparation and service. 

And now it’s New Year’s Eve!  Party and dance and music and eggnog (with a little extra nog, please).  Wait; where did 2014 go?  I had all these plans for things I was going to accomplish.  Where are my running shoes; I have to get in shape.  I promised 365 days ago!  Where’s my pencil; I need to finish composing that choral work on the Cross, which I started in February!  Where’s my paintbrush; the house…

But wait, there’s more.  As I sit and reflect on the past 365 days, I’m forced to ask The Question:  Did I make room for God?  Did I let Christ thrive in my heart?  Did I reach out in love and care to others?  Did I call to apologize to that person that now hates me?  Did I forgive that person that betrayed me?

Was I Jesus’ hands to those in my little part of the vineyard?

Were you?

Dear God of beginnings and endings, the Alpha and Omega, thank you for the gift of every hour, even this last one.  Please grant us the grace to let go of our regrets and failures so we may live the new dawn of tomorrow, and birth your love to the world.

Amen.

 

Paul Puccinelli is Director of Liturgy & Music at St. Rita Parish in Sierra Madre, CA, and a member  of the Retreat Team at Mater Dolorosa Passionist Retreat Center.

 

Daily Scripture, December 30, 2014

Scripture:

1 John 2:12-17
Luke 2:36-40

Reflection:

In today’s gospel reading from Luke, we read about a certain prophetess named Anna.  She came upon the presentation of Jesus in the temple.  She gave thanks to God and then began to talk about the child "to all who looked forward to the deliverance of Jerusalem."  Deliverance for whom?  Deliverance from what?  For those answers we have to read the rest of the gospel.

Fast-forward two thousand years.  That gospel continues to be realized among us.  Jesus comes now for our deliverance.  Deliverance from what?

He comes to deliver us from our sins, by his gift of forgiveness.  He comes to deliver us from our self-doubt, by assuring us we are beloved of His Father.  He comes to deliver us from our fear of death, for he comes as the one who died and rose.  He comes to deliver us from our confusion, by showing us how to live.  He comes to deliver us from our sadness by the joy of his presence.  Finally, he comes to deliver us from prejudice, hatred, greed and all that divides us, so that all may be one and there may be peace on this earth.

But first we have to unite ourselves with him in the temple of our hearts and present ourselves to the Father. "Into your hands, Father, we commend our spirit."  Then our hearts will grow and our wills will be strengthened. We will be filled with wisdom, and the grace of God will be upon us.

 

Fr. Alan Phillip, C.P. is a member of the Passionist Community at Mater Dolorosa Retreat Center, Sierra Madre, California.   http://www.alanphillipcp.com/

 

Daily Scripture, January 10, 2015

Scripture:

1 John 5:14-21
John 3:22-30

Reflection:

It may be a result of being one of ten children, or it may be in the genes I inherited from my driven type-A father. Regardless of its origins, I have a competitive streak.  I want to be exceptionally good at whatever I do.  I strive for perfection, preparing endlessly and working very hard.  This is both an advantage and a nemesis.  It allows God to use me in many ways and most of the time I feel humbled and privileged to be God’s instrument.   At other times, though, my shadow side breaks through.

When that happens, I am tempted to compare myself to others in unhealthy ways.  I feel envy creeping in when someone else’s presentations or classes receive higher ratings than mine.  I find myself evaluating and critiquing liturgies, lectors, teachers, speakers, and anyone else who has a skill I also possess. I have to fight my desire to be recognized and rewarded for the work I do.  When I’m on a team, I get too impatient with people who are not working as hard as I am, and I often take over the tasks assigned to others because I want them to be done "right".  I find myself being overly critical of another’s successes.  In short (and to my profound embarrassment), I realize that I want others to decrease so I can increase.

It is too easy to forget that all my abilities were given to me from heaven, and that it is only the grace of God working through me that touches people’s hearts and changes their lives. Even when I do achieve something or am recognized for my abilities, I cannot take all the credit myself. Our gracious, loving God has given me many gifts, and God keeps placing opportunities in my lap that allow me to choose to use them. I hope I am using them well, but God is the focal point and destination, not me.  God is God, and I am clearly not.

John’s gospel today is a relevant and pointed lesson.  John had created quite a name for himself.  He achieved "success" in the eyes of the world and was recognized as a force in the society.  Yet he gladly and humbly steps aside for Jesus, whom he knows is greater than he. His followers are concerned by all the attention Jesus is getting, especially when they see people going to Jesus to be baptized instead of coming to John. Yet when John sees people flock to Jesus, he is happy and proclaims that his joy is complete.

My challenge is to counter my shadow side with John’s gospel.  As it so aptly reminds me, God is the source of everything I have, everyone I love, and everything I own.  Nothing I have and nothing I have done would be possible without God.   In this new year, may I be even more aware that in all I do, I am an instrument of Someone bigger than myself. God must increase and I must decrease.  It is only in that way that my joy may become complete.

 

Amy Florian is a teacher and consultant working in Chicago.  For many years she has partnered with the Passionists.  Visit Amy’s website: http://www.amyflorian.com/.

 

Daily Scripture, December 29, 2014

Scripture:
John 2:3-11
Luke 2:22-35

Reflection:
Today the words of John are strong and clear.  "Whoever says he is in the light, yet hates his brother, is still in the darkness.  Whoever loves his brother remains in the light, and there is nothing in him to cause a fall.  Whoever hates his brother is in darkness."

It doesn’t get any more honest or clear; however "honest and clear" does not mean easy.

Today the signs of the times are colored by division and strife.  We live in a world which challenges our ideas around how we should treat our fellow human beings, even when we disagree with them.  When I watch the news I find my own feelings of anger rising and I quickly judge others and their actions.  The compassion which should be in my heart as a member of the Passionist family, a Christian and a human melts from the light  into darkness.  Perhaps this is a good time for me to remember the words I have agreed to from the International Charter for Compassion.

"We urgently need to make compassion a clear, luminous and dynamic force in our polarized world.  Rooted in a principled determination to transcend selfishness, compassion can break down political, dogmatic, ideological and religious boundaries.  Born of our deep interdependence, compassion is essential to human relationships and to a fulfilled humanity.  It is the path to enlightenment, and indispensable to the creation of a just economy and a peaceful global community."  I pray as Simeon in today’s gospel:

"Lord, now let your servant go in peace; your word has been fulfilled: my own eyes have seen your salvation…a light to reveal you to the nations."

If I walk in compassion, I walk in the light.

Terry McDevitt, Ph.D. is a member of our Passionist Family who volunteers at the Passionist Assisted Living Community in Louisville, Kentucky.

Daily Scripture, December 27, 2014

Feast of Saint John the Evangelist

Scripture:

1 John 1:1-4
John 20:1a, 2-8

Reflection:

When I was pastor, I soon recognized a pattern; in fact, there was almost a rhythm – every Thanksgiving, or Christmas, or Spring Break, it seemed I was talking with fearful and frustrated parents… for one of their children in college would be home for the break, or on vacation, and dramatically announce to parents that s/he no longer believed in God. They decided they were atheists. The fear and frustration – almost desperation –  in the parents’ voice was palpable.

I remember one appointment in particular. A mom spoke of her daughter, lamenting, "It’s not so much that she rejects Catholic doctrine or ritual; in fact, it’s not even a theological issue, it’s a philosophical one. My concern is that she has set herself up as the authority, limiting all of reality to merely what she can perceive, or comprehend."

My first response was usually an attempt to console them in their anxiety. But part of the conversation would also include a question: "Why do you feel that university, even a Catholic college, should insulate or protect your child from these deeper questions?"

The Octave of Christmas thrusts us into these deeper questions, offering several liturgical challenges… the celebration of several martyrs in the shadow of the manger in Bethlehem, and in today’s Gospel, we ponder a resurrection narrative! This life and death theme saturates today’s feast of John the Evangelist. It is a call to authenticity, the real. Proof is in the pudding.

Jesuit Fr. William O’Malley says (Help My Unbelief, Obis Books, 2008), "Scientists work from consequences to probable causes. So should seekers for human meaning. They corroborate their inferences with experience. So should those who seek God. Modern biology has improved health care and life expectancy. One would hope belief in God would produce a recognizable enrichment of human life. Jesus himself said, "By their fruits you will know them" (Matthew 7:16).

What we have seen and heard
we proclaim now to you,
so that you too may have fellowship with us;
for our fellowship is with the Father
and with his Son, Jesus Christ.  (1 John 1:3)

Perhaps our task today is not so much to proselytize (trying to persuade others to believe) but to evangelize (gently and tenderly narrating why we believe). And I know how powerful is the witness of so many good and loving parents, proclaiming the Jesus Christ they have seen and heard and experienced.

 

Fr. Jack Conley, C.P. is the director of the Office of Mission Effectiveness.  He is a member of the Passionist formation community at Catholic Theological Union in Chicago.

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 420
  • Page 421
  • Page 422
  • Page 423
  • Page 424
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 657
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

Support the Passionists

Contact the Passionists

Name

The Passionists of Holy Cross Province
660 Busse Highway | Park Ridge, IL 60068
Tel: 847.518.8844 | Toll-free: 800.295.9048 | Fax: 847.518.0461
Safe Environments | Board Member Portal | Copyright © 2025 | Log in