Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Homily — Ash Wednesady

I would like to focus on one important grace of this Lenten season, that is, prayer. St. Paul said to the Corinthians, “Working together, then, we implore you not to receive the grace of God in vain.” Prayer – individual prayer and prayer in common – are two expressions of this very important grace, and each of them finds a place in today’s readings.

First, our prayer begins with God and goes to God. It is our exchange with God, our contact with God in faith, hope and love. It is inspired by the Holy Spirit but it is prone to attack from all that is against God. Jesus shows one way that prayer is under attack. It happens when our pride wants to take credit for prayer and boast before others. After all, prayer sets us apart from the majority of men. It elevates us, or seems to. We have something special, and we know it. This kills prayer, so Jesus immediately prescribes steps to remove this exaltation. He tells us to pray in secret, closing the door of our inner prayer room, and then simply to pray, not with many words. There is no praise of men to fuel our prayer at that point. All we have is the Father seeing us. We have to be satisfied with being seen by the Father, which of course, is the greatest gift we can receive. For the Father’s gaze is like healing radiation therapy on a cancer victim. It burns away whatever attacks our prayer. The only reason to pray is to be seen by our Father. But that is precisely the reward we most need, the Father’s gaze.

Next, God wants our prayer to be supported by a community, that is, the Church. St. Paul hints at this communal support for our prayer when he speaks on behalf of the Church, “Working together, then, we implore you not to receive the grace of God in vain.” Prayer is such a grace, and we need the help of others to hold fast to this grace. We cannot overcome the attacks against prayer without working together. In our case, that means working together with others in a community of prayer. Singing, listening, praying the way Jesus did with psalms and hymns and inspired songs allows us receive the grace of God worthily. The attacks against prayer are beaten back by the prayer of a community. For wherever two or three are gathered in imitation of Jesus’ prayer, there is Jesus himself. The surest way to receive the grace of prayer is to receive it in and through the Body of Christ. That is what our Lenten observance teaches us.

Finally, the attacks against prayer are often caused by our negligence. Negligence is a constant threat in monastic life. To some extent, this attack is related to a kind of individualism. Rather than enter into the inner room of our heart, we choose to create a DO NOT ENTER zone which subtly excludes even God from entering. It does not like God poking around in its business. Negligence has many other causes, but St. Paul’s admonition “Working together…” gives us communal protection and enables us to take advantage of all the graced moments of prayer. 

Lent is a time for us to wake up and simply pray, not with many words, but with purity of heart and the confidence that God is looking down upon us. This is the reward and gift that the Lord has prepared for those who love him.

Answering Love With Love

Faith is to know that we are loved. It is to answer love with love. ‘Love me with love, you who are loved.’ To love God is not a duty but a cry of recognition, when we understand that he has first loved us, even to the horror of the cross, of hell. Then our timid liberty is stirred, our heart is moved and all that matters henceforward is that wound by which life comes to us.


OLIVIER CLÉMENT The Roots of Christian Mysticism, Ch. 3

Monday, February 16, 2026

Christ’s Blood and Words

We are said to drink the blood of Christ not only when we receive it according to the right of the mysteries, but also when we receive his words, in which life dwells, as he said himself ‘:The words that I have spoken to you are a spirit and life’ (John 6.63).


ORIGEN Homilies on Numbers, 16,9 

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Homily — The Sixth Sunday of the Year A

Today, in the United States there is so much controversy about who is an American citizen, and even about who can become an American citizen.  It is a painful period in our history.  In the time of St. Matthew, the evangelist of today’s gospel, there was tremendous controversy over who can become a Christian—was it only for Jews?  What started as an all-Jewish movement of the Spirit after Pentecost quickly began to encounter non-Jews impelled by Jewish Christian preachers (such as Paul) and moved by the same Holy Spirit to become themselves followers of Christ. The Jewish Christians found the idea of eating, praying and associating with non-Jewish Christians repulsive as it was against their traditions to eat and voluntarily associate with the “unclean” gentiles—they still thought of themselves as Jews.  This occurred even though all these people, Jews and gentiles alike, were saved by the same Lord Jesus into the Church, which was seen by Jewish Christians as the fulfillment of their Jewish religion.  Today’s Gospel touches on what this “fulfillment” meant to Jewish Christians and the first gentile Christians. 

       

All Jews of Christ’s time never associated with gentiles; so how could they now begin to do so at this turning point in their history as some of them became Christians and gentiles wished to join them without embracing Jewish practices, particularly male circumcision.  To many Jewish Christians of the time this was no case of “much ado about nothing”: it was a matter of obedience to God and of their Jewish identity: the gentile converts must, in their opinion, embrace Jewish circumcision and the Torah with its 613 positive and negative commandments.  They insisted that they become Jews in order to be fully Christians.  Gentile converts to Christianity looked upon the Jewish practice of male circumcision as a horrible mutilation of the human body—as did all gentiles. You can see how heated the controversy between the Judaizing Christians and the gentile Christians was in the exasperation of St. Paul, who wanted the gentile converts to be free of the burden of circumcision and the Law of Moses. He wrote to his Galatian gentile converts who were being pressured by Judaizing Christians this egregious remark, “Would that those who are upsetting you might also castrate themselves!”   Here he must have taken a deep breath. Paul calms down two verses after this outburst and writes that the “whole law is fulfilled in one statement, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’”


In the opening verses of today’s gospel, Jesus seems to hold to the opinion of the radical Judaizers. He says to his disciples (including us) “Do not think that I have come to abolish the law and the prophets. I have not come to abolish, but to fulfill. Amen… until heaven and earth pass away, not the smallest letter (a jot) or the smallest part of a letter (a tittle) will pass from the law, until all things have taken place.” This passage has proven to be one of the most confusing in the Bible. It seems to put the teaching of Jesus in complete conflict with that of St. Paul about freedom from circumcision and the Law. However. both Jesus and Paul are correct. 


Indeed, even as Jesus speaks with the authority of God himself in the Sermon on the Mount, the Law and the Prophets are being fulfilled in the very person, words and deeds of Jesus, the Son of God, the son of David, the Son of man, the Prophet of Prophets.  Nothing of Genesis or the history of Israel, with its great prophet Moses and the reception of the Torah or Law,  nothing of all the prophets and kings and men of wisdom, is forgotten, nothing; but all of it comes to a magnificent fulfillment that transcends, but does not disregard, the Old Covenant as we now in Jesus move on to the New.  We know that salvation is from the Jews, namely, in Jesus Christ, a descendent of King David and Savior of the World.  Time and time again leading up to today’s Sermon on the Mount (and throughout the Gospel of Matthew for that matter), the author shows how events in or surrounding the life of Jesus are the fulfillment of passages, prophecies in the Bible pointing towards him as the Messiah and King of the Jews. The gospel begins declaring Jesus to be the longed-for Messiah (in Greek, Christ) as well as the son of David the King and the son of Abraham the father of the Jewish people.  A long genealogy roots Jesus in the entire history of Israel. The narrative of the virgin birth of Jesus is, for example, explained as the fulfillment of the prophecy of Isaiah, “Behold, a virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call him Emmanuel, which means God is with us.”  A quote that makes explicit the divinity and humanity of Jesus. This is the pattern Matthew follows throughout to show that Jesus is solidly rooted in the salvation history of the Jews and fulfills it.  In the temptation scene, Jesus himself quotes the last book of the Torah, Deuteronomy, saying, “One does not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.”  In the very next chapter of Matthew these words of Jesus take on a new and fuller meaning as we hear the word of God from the mouth of Jesus.


After the temptation scene, Jesus selects his first disciples and then goes up the mountain to deliver the famous sermon in which he does indeed modify the jots and tittles and even corrects passages of the Torah or fulfills their meaning.  He does so with the authority of God Himself who gave the first Torah to the Jews through Moses.  What comes forth from Jesus has the authority of what comes forth from the mouth of God. We are being called in the Sermon on the Mount to live by his every word, but not in a legalistic way as it was understood by the contemporaries of Jesus, but rather in a way that involves personal union with Jesus who is more than someone who gives a new Torah—he gives us a new life in Him.  Pope Benedict XVI remarks on this that in the case of Jesus, “It is not the universally binding adherence to the Torah that forms the new family. Rather, it is adherence to Jesus himself and his Torah. …If Jesus is God, then he is entitled and able to handle the Torah as he does--universalizing the essential content of the Torah and thus truly ‘fulfilling’ it.” ( Jesus of Nazareth)


In the examples given today we see the way he rewrites the Torah, making it a matter of the heart, not the written law. If the Torah mediated by Moses says DO NOT KILL, that of Jesus says OVERCOME YOUR ANGER WITH RECONCILIATION impelled by the heartfelt beatitudes of meekness and love of justice. Furthermore, he says that reconciliation and true worship go hand in hand: a teaching of Jesus dear to the heart of our father St. Benedict.  Where the Torah of Moses says YOU SHALL NOT COMMIT ADULTERY, Jesus says OVERCOME YOUR LUST WITH GOD’S GIFT OF PURITY OF HEART. Where the Torah of Moses allows for divorce for even paltry matters, Jesus establishes marriage as a lifelong bond of love and fidelity between husband and wife in which THE TWO SHALL BECOME ONE FLESH. In this Jesus hearkens back to the original Torah teaching about marriage as found in the Book of Genesis.   It is not a male dominated institution in which the wife can be sent away like a servant fired for burning the roast. Again, it is through the purity of heart, the humility and love that are the gifts of the Holy Spirit of the Risen Jesus that marriages can succeed.   Where the Torah of Moses says MAKE GOOD TO THE LORD ALL THAT YOU VOW, Jesus says DO NOT SWEAR AT ALL.  His point is that if you truly follow him, you will become a person of such integrity that YOUR YES WILL MEAN YES AND YOUR NO WILL MEAN NO.  Swearing to High Heaven is from the evil one.


St. Thomas Aquinas writes that the New Law is the grace of the Holy Spirit poured out into our hearts.  This New Law is a Law of Freedom, but not a freedom that gives license to the impulses of the flesh, but one that gives us the power to become other Christs.  After the Council of Jerusalem which ended the requirements of circumcision and of the acceptance of the Torah, and as Jewish Christians grew in Christ’s gift of himself in the Eucharist and the Holy Spirit, and as many new gentile converts came to be seen not as barbarous invaders, but as brothers and sisters in the Lord, in time more and more Christian synagogues matured as Christian Churches in which there were no longer gentiles and Jews at odds with each other, but one body in Christ. 


Our monastic community here on this little mount is composed of monks from every inhabited continent in the world, except for Australia, composed of every age group from the early thirties to the high nineties, composed of every ethnic and cultural background—yet we live together in Christ as one.  This is a gift, a witness, we give in the Church and to our divided nation—may our country become once again through the work of the Holy Spirit and the prayers of our patroness Immaculate Mary what we pledged about every morning as little children: one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. Yes, withliberty and justice for all!  Unless you become as little children, you cannot enter the Kingdom of God.  Let us now receive the King of the Kingdom in our reception of the Eucharist, the first fruit of which is the unity of the Body of Christ.

Friday, February 13, 2026

The Heart’s Doorkeeper

Be the doorkeeper of your heart and do not let any thought come in without questioning it. Question each thought individually: ‘Are you on our side or the side of our foes?’ And if it is one of ours, it will fill you with tranquility.


EVAGRIUS OF PONTUS Letter 11

 

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

A Fool For Christ

What is it then to be a fool for Christ? It is to control one’s thoughts when they stray out of line. It is to make the mind empty and free so as to be able to offer it in a state of readiness when Christ’s teachings are to be assimilated, swept clean for the words of God that it needs to welcome.


JOHN CHRYSOSTOM On the Incomprehensibility of God, Sermon 5

Monday, February 9, 2026

Praying in Secret

We have to take particular care to follow the Gospel precept that bids us go into our inner room and shut the door to pray to our Father. This is how to do it.


We are praying in our inner room when we withdraw our heart completely from the clamor of our thoughts and preoccupations, and in a kind of secret dialogue, as between intimate friends, we lay bear our desires before the Lord.


We are praying with our door shut when, without opening our mouth, we call on the One who takes no account of words but considers the heart.


We are praying in secret when we speak to God with the heart alone and with concentration of the soul, and make known our state of mind to him alone, in such a way that even the enemy powers themselves cannot guess their nature. Such is the reason for the deep silence that it behoves us to keep in prayer…


Thus our prayers should be frequent but short, for fear that if they are prolonged the enemy might have an opportunity to insinuate distraction into them. This is true sacrifice: ‘A broken and contrite heart, oh God, thou will not despise’ (Psalm 51.17).


JOHN CASSIAN Conferences IX