Saturday, May 3, 2025

Sunday, Parish Eucharistic Festival - Carlo Acutis

 

Today, we have this special Sunday Mass. I would like to highlight a young man who created the first ever International Eucharistic Display, that contains 158 documented Church approved miracles.

Carlo Acutis was born on May 3rd, 1991, in London, England, to devout Catholic parents. His family soon moved to Milan, Italy, where Carlo spent most of his life. From an early age, Carlo exhibited an extraordinary devotion to the Eucharist and a profound love for the Virgin Mary. He attended Mass daily and had a deep understanding of the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. At the age of 7, he wrote “To always be close to Jesus, that’s my life plan.”

In addition to his strong faith, Carlo had a keen interest in technology and computer programming. He used his skills to create a website cataloging Eucharistic miracles from around the world, a testament to his desire to share his faith with the world. Despite his remarkable piety, though, Carlo was an ordinary teenager in many ways. He volunteered at a church-run soup kitchen, helped the poor in his neighborhood, assisted children struggling with their homework, played saxophone, soccer, and video games, and loved making videos with his dogs and cats.

However, his life took a dramatic turn when he was diagnosed with leukemia at the age of 15. Throughout his illness, Carlo remained remarkably resilient, offering his suffering to God and drawing strength from the Eucharist. When he was dying he said, “I’m happy to die, because I’ve lived my life without wasting even a minute of it doing things that wouldn’t have pleased God.”

He died on October 12, 2006, at the age of 15. His life, though brief, left an indelible mark on those who knew him and countless others who have since learned about his story.

Before he died, he developed on the computer and printed his large International Eucharistic Display that travels from parish to parish. Just think about that for a moment, he did that when computer technology was still developing and all before before the age of 15.

Blessed Carlo Acutis was beatified in 2020, and was to be canonized on Divine Mercy Sunday, last week, but since the pope died, the canonization will take place on another date.

The miracle attributed to his intercession occurred in 2022 when a Costa Rican woman named Valeria, who fell from her bicycle at 4 a.m. on July 2, 2022, and suffered a serious head injury. Even after emergency surgery removing part of her skull to reduce severe intracranial pressure, doctors warned her family she could die at any moment.

A friend of the young woman’s mother began praying to Blessed Carlo the same day, and the mother went to Assisi and prayed at Carlo Acutis’ tomb on July 8 – the same day the young woman began to breathe on her own again. She slowly recovered basic mobility, and a CT scan showed the hemorrhage was gone.

Blessed Carlo said, “When people sit in the sun, they become tan, “but when they sit before Eucharistic Jesus, they become saints.” Above all, he was impassioned by Jesus; and since he was very good on the internet, he used it in the service of the Gospel, spreading love for prayer, the witness of faith and charity toward others.

I personally had prayers answered through Blessed Carlo’s intercession. After I had surgery in Tulsa several years ago, and was in the hospital, a nurse came to my room to give me medicine, but she first needed to record it on the computer, which was located in every patient room. She attempted to turn on the computer multiple times, but it wouldn’t work. She left and said she would be back in a few minutes. Knowing Blessed Carlo was a computer expert, I prayed, “Carlo Acutis, please turn this computer on!About 15 minutes later, the nurse returned, and said, “Thank you for turning on the computer. How did you do it?” I said, “I never touched it. I prayed to a young man, who died by the name of Carlo Acutis, and now it’s working. He got it working.”

The Eucharistic miracle display he created has many miracles approved by the Church. For example in the 1200’s the miracle of St. Clare watching Midnight Mass in her room when she was too sick to attend Mass. And when Muslims were attacking Assisi and enter the monastery of nuns founded by St. Clare, she went the wall surrounding the cloister and as she held up a Host in a monstrance, a ray of light shone out of the Host, scaring the Muslims, who ran away.

Another miracle in the 1200’s, was St. Anthony of Padua, who asked a farmer, who didn’t believe Jesus was present in the Eucharist-- to not feed his mule for three days and then come to St. Anthony with his mule and the mule’s favorite grain. Three days later, the man with the mule and the grain returned. While St. Anthony was holding the Eucharist and while the owner of the mule held the grain, the mule walked up to the Eucharist and bowed down on its front knees in adoration of the Sacred Host. Due to this miracle, the man believed in the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist.

In 750 AD, at Lanciano Italy, during Mass, when a priest was having doubts about the Eucharist, as the priest elevated the Host above the altar, the Eucharist partially turned to flesh and blood drops fell from the Host. The miracle can still be seen today in a reliquary.

On January 31, 1906, on the small island of Tumaco, off the shore of Columbia, at 10 o’clock in the morning, there was a violent earthquake. All the inhabitants of the village ran to the church and begged the pastor, Fr. Gerardo Larrondo, to lead a procession with the Blessed Sacrament. The sea was rising in a giant wave and had already engulfed part of the beach. Fr. Gerardo quickly consumed the small Hosts in the ciborium. He called out to his people: “Let us go, my people. Let us go toward the beach, and may God have pity on us.” The people marched with the priest crying out to God. When Fr. Larrondo reached the beach with the monstrance he courageously went to the water’s edge, as the wave came rushing in, he calmly raised the Sacred Host and traced the sign of the Cross over the water. The wave hesitated, paused and backed off. The entire area was destroyed by the tidal wave, but didn’t touch the area where the priest and the people had gathered, while he held Jesus in the Host.

My dear friends, and young people. Imitate a 15 year old saint, Blessed Carlo Acutis. Come to daily Mass, come to Eucharistic Adoration, live your life of charity by helping others and ask Carlo Acutis for his heavenly help. Have his desire his desire, “To always be close to Jesus, that’s my life plan. Live your life doing everything to please God, not wasting a minute. Come often to Jesus in Eucharistic Adoration, and trust the words of Blessed Carlo, “When people sit in the sun, they become tan, “but when they sit before Eucharistic Jesus, they become saints.”

And remember Carlo said, “the Eucharist is the highway to heaven”.

So if you want to go to heaven, if you want to become a saint, receive Jesus as often as possible in Holy Communion and adore Him every week in Eucharistic Adoration and live a life of charity helping others.

Blessed Carlo Acutis, pray for us, who have recourse to thee.

Friday, May 2, 2025

3rd Sunday Easter - Miraculous Catch of Fish & Feed my Lambs


In the Gospel today, after spending the entire night on the boat fishing and not catching anything, then in the early in morning, Jesus appeared to them on the shore of the lake, but they didn’t recognize Him. He told them to throw the fishing nets off the side of the boat. When they did, the apostles caught 153 fish. Doesn’t it make you wonder how they knew the exact number of fish? Obviously, they counted them, like any good fisherman would.

Do you think any of the Apostles prayed that night on the boat, asking God to help them catch fish? I doubt it.

I am sure most of you have gone fishing before, and before you went fishing, did you ask Jesus to help you catch fish? I’ll suspect not. But, why not? Jesus wants us to come to Him for everything, including catching fish to eat. No matter how small or how large our need, we should come to Jesus for everything. He wants us to completely depend upon Him.

The resurrection appearance of Jesus on the shore of the Sea of Tiberius, shows us, that He cares about the Apostles and us. It shows us that He appointed one man to guide and lead the Catholic Church, who is its chief shepherd.

It was by the miracle of catching many fish, that John was the first to recognize Jesus, and that is why John said, “It’s the Lord!”

John was sensitive to the Lord’s amazing miracles.

John knew Jesus well, and understood only Jesus would have miraculously placed the fish near the boat, and then tell them to throw the net in the location of the fish to catch them.

When they came ashore with the great haul of fish, they noticed Jesus prepared breakfast for them. He was cooking fish over a charcoal fire and had bread for them too.

Have you ever had breakfast with Jesus? Have ever invited Jesus to eat breakfast with you or any other meal? Why not? When we pray before meals, why not invite Jesus to be with us when we eat breakfast?

Jesus cared that the Apostles were hungry after a long night of fishing. He cared that they were disappointed in not catching anything. He specifically showed His care for Peter, giving Peter the opportunity to make up for his three denials that happened before the cock crowed after Jesus was arrested.

Our Lord never chastised Peter for denying Him three times. But, He allowed Peter to make up for what he did, by telling Jesus that he loves Him three times.

If somebody were to hurt you three times, wouldn’t you be angry? Wouldn’t you probably bring up the incident and tell the person that they hurt your feelings?

But that’s not what Jesus did. Rather, He asked Peter, the same question three times. “Peter, do you love me?” Each time Peter responds,Yes, Lord you know that I love you.” Jesus tells Him, “Feed my lambs, tend my sheep. Feed my sheep.”

Not only did Jesus lovingly help Peter to make up for the three denials, but also showed His confidence in Peter and commissioned him to take care of the Church.

By telling Peter to feed His lambs, tend His sheep, and feed His sheep, He was helping Peter to understand that he is the chief shepherd of the Church, for isn’t that what a shepherd does, feeds, and tends the sheep and lambs?

It is therefore, the pope’s duty to feed the people, who are the sheep, with sound doctrine and teachings. That is why it is the chief role of the pope to teach, to clarify, and to proclaim the faith, because by doing so, the people are fed with the Word of God, which helps them to get to the green pastures of heaven.

Most likely, by the end of the week, we will have a new pope. Let us earnestly pray to Jesus asking Him to give us a good shepherd, who will truly clarify, teach, and proclaim the faith passed down to us from Jesus and the Apostles.

This weekend is our Eucharistic festival. It all starts at 4pm with two priests hearing Confessions (Fr. Michael Kerchen and myself), at 4:50pm, Fr. Michael will give a 10 minute talk on the Eucharist. At 5pm, we will have a special Mass at 6pm.

Then we will have hamburgers and hot-dogs at the parish hall and watch a Eucharistic video “Jesus Thirsts”. After the video, about 7:45pm, we will have a Eucharistic Procession and then go the farm of Jon and Laurie for Adoration Under the Stars from 9pm to 10pm.

Amazingly, by God’s providence, this weekend the book 33 Days of Eucharistic Glory arrived. There are 60 copies, please take one with you.

Before Mass, children brought up flowers to give to the Virgin Mary and we honored Her by singing a hymn to Our Lady while a little girl crowned Her. The beautiful poem that was read was often quoted by Bishop Fulton Sheen.

Lovely Lady dressed in blue. Teach me how to pray! [Jesus] was just your little boy, Tell me what to say!” etc...

As we begin the month of May, dedicated to the Virgin Mary, let us honor our heavenly Mother, by daily kneeling before a statue or image of Her, praying Her Rosary, beseeching Her to place Her mantle over us, to protect us, and let us ask Her to take our petitions to Jesus, knowing through Her motherly intercession, Jesus will more quickly answer our prayers.

The Virgin Mary, keep us close to Her Eucharistic Son and help us to love, honor, respect and adore Jesus, truly and really present in the most blessed Sacrament. And may today’s Eucharistic festival, pour out an abundance of graces for you, your family, our community, and the whole world.




First Holy Communion, 3rd Sunday Easter (6:30pm Mass)

 

Today, is special because Hazel, Emma, and Judd will make their First Holy Communion.

A few weeks ago, they made their first Confession. At that time, Jesus washed away all their sins for the first time.

They are now able to go to Confession regularly and allow Jesus to wash away their sins and give us peace. They are encouraged to go to confession once a month or more often if they like, whenever they want. We always have confession before every Mass. They learned that penance, means to do prayers or actions to make up for their sins.

During the year, I discovered that they are fast learners. They’re smart kids! But it’s not just about learning. It’s about believing. They believe the bread is totally changed into the person of Jesus. They believe the wine is changed into the blood of Jesus. They believe Jesus is truly present in the Eucharist when they receive Him in Holy Communion and they believe Jesus is here in the tabernacle. They know why they genuflect when they come to church.

Today, Jesus will come into their hearts for the very first time today. And so, they will be able to receive Holy Communion every time they come to Mass.

After they receive Communion, they will go to their pews, bow their heads in prayer, and tell Jesus, they love Him, they will thank Him, they will pray for others and for themselves.

At the end of Mass today, they will also be enrolled in the scapular of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. In the 1200’s, the Virgin Mary appeared to Saint Simon Stock and gave him the brown scapular. She promised those who wear the scapular shall not suffer eternal fire. But it’s not a lucky charm, we need to practice our faith and do the best we can to be holy. When we wear the scapular, the Virgin Mary will be protecting us, and praying for us. It’s a protection against evil spirits. The month of May is dedicated to Mary. Tomorrow morning, we will have the crowning of a statue of the Virgin Mary and after the 8am Mass we will pray the Living Rosary in front of the statue of Mary at the parish hall.

The Virgin Mary is our spiritual Mother and She prays for us. We should regularly pray to Mary and ask favors from Her. Like a good mother, she will answer our prayers if what we are asking is good for us.

After Mass tonight, I encourage the children to light a candle before the statue of Mary and ask Mary to keep you close to Jesus.

In the Gospel today, after spending the night on their boat fishing all night and not catching anything, then in the morning, only when Jesus told them to throw the fishing nets off the side of the boat, did the apostles catch 153 fish. Doesn’t it make you wonder how they knew the exact number of fish? Obviously, they counted them, like any good fisherman would.

Do you think any of the Apostles prayed that night on the boat, asking God to help them catch fish? I doubt it.

I am sure most of you have gone fishing before and before you went fishing, did you ask Jesus to help you catch fish? I’ll suspect not.

But, why not ask Jesus to help you catch fish, after all, He helped the Apostles catch fish when He told them to throw the net over the side of the boat.

During Holy Communion, we are one with Jesus and during that time our heart is united to His Heart. That is the best time to ask Jesus for something you may want. The next time before going fishing, during Holy Communion, ask Jesus to help you catch fish. You can ask Jesus to help you do well in sports or to help you to paint something, or to help you to avoid sin, or to do good on a test or ask Jesus to help your family. You can ask Jesus to help you to be holy. You can pray for someone who died, so they can go to heaven in case they may be in purgatory.

Most especially, we should thank Jesus when we receive Holy Communion. In fact, the word “Eucharist”, means thanksgiving. We should thank Him for everything we can think of, especially for coming inside our heart.

Finally, I would like to thank the parents of the children for praying for them, giving a good example and helping them to take their classes. And I would like to thank Haley Stroppes for teaching the children every week, giving them snacks, watching videos, and practicing Confession and Holy Communion. We are blessed to have her teach the children.

Today, let us ask the Virgin Mary, to intercede for these children, their families and all of us. May the Virgin Mary keep all of us close to Jesus in the Eucharist and to receive Him as often as possible.

Friday, April 25, 2025

Divine Mercy Sunday, Death of Pope Francis


Catholics around the world mourn the death of Pope Francis and we pray for his soul, that he may rest in peace. Today, (Yesterday) was the funeral of Pope Francis.

The pope is our spiritual father. The word “pope” (papa) means “father”. The pope is the successor of St. Peter and there is a line of men, who held the office from Peter unto today. In Eucharistic prayer 1, are some of the early popes: Peter, Linus, Cletus, Clement, Sixtus, Cornelius. Pope Francis was the 266th pope.

The day after the pope dies, the Church begins a Novena for the soul of the pope and for the cardinals who will elect the next pope. We are currently praying the Rosary Novena in our parish for his soul.

The primary purpose of a cardinal is to elect a pope. There are currently 252 cardinals, only 135 can vote, because those over 80 are not allowed to vote. The conclave begins 15 to 20 days after the death of the pope, which means they probably won’t begin until after May 5th. It’s called conclave, which is Latin or “with the keys”, meaning the room in which they vote is locked and no one may enter or leave during voting. The conclave is held in the Sistine Chapel in Rome.

The duty of the pope is to protect the faith and boldly announce the Gospel to the world. The man in white represents the leader of the Church. We honor the office of the pope given to us by Jesus to guide and lead the Church. We love our pope despite his weaknesses and failings.

Pope Francis was a very controversial pope. 

First, we must admit it has to have been very difficult for an 88 year old man, with health problems, to guide and lead a Church with 1.4 billion Catholics. We also have to take into consideration, his personal background, being a member of Jesuit order, not known for their faithfulness to the Church and joining them when he was a young man.

One of his controversial actions was when he renounced the title “Vicar of Christ”, meaning one who acts in the person of Christ and is the supreme head of the Catholic Church.

He was a pope of the peripheries by appointing new cardinals from countries from the edges of the world, that never had them before. He was often seen with the poor and was a great defender of the unborn saying to kill an unborn child was murder.

He allowed women to be involved in Church governance but would not allow women to deacons-- nor priests.

He believed in climate change and wanted to protect the earth. He was present in the Vatican gardens when a group of Catholics bowed down & worshiped a wooden fertility goddess, called Pachamama, representing mother earth. After the idol was placed on the altar at St. Peter’s Basilica, a young man from Austria, took the idol and tossed into the Tiber River, because of the sacrilege.

Pope Francis requested that priests bless homosexual couples. All bishops from the entire continent of Africa refused to obey, saying that it would be sinful to bless them.

Pope Francis was in favor of immigration, including illegal immigration.

Under his leadership an agreement was made with China allowing the communist government to appoint Catholic bishops, rather than the Catholic Church, which caused faithful Catholics in China to be persecuted by the Chinese government.

He attempted to change the structure of the Church through the synod of synodality by allowing lay people to be part of what priests and bishops have traditionally took part.

He gave the Argentinian Conference of Catholic bishops permission for the divorced and remarried civilly, without changing their life, to receive Holy Communion, which contradicts thousands of years of Church teaching. Morality can’t be different from country to country.

He said all religions are pathways to heaven. But, Jesus Himself and His Church is the only pathway to heaven. Our Lord said, I am the way, the truth and the life and no one comes to Father, but through me.”

Pope Francis is quoted as saying, “What I am going to say is not a dogma of faith but my own personal view: I like to think of hell as empty; I hope it is...”  

The Catechism of the Catholic Church says that Catholic teaching “affirms the existence of hell and its eternity. Immediately after death the souls of those who die in a state of mortal sin descend into hell, where they suffer the punishments of hell, ‘eternal fire.’ The chief punishment of hell is eternal separation from God, in whom alone man can possess the life and happiness for which he was created and for which he longs.” 

We have to remember, every word any pope speaks is not infallible. Only when he clarifies faith or morals binding the entire Church to believe it, are the pope’s words infallible.

For example, Pope St. John Paul II restated the infallible teaching that women cannot be priests in 1994. On Nov 1st 1950, Pope Pius XII declared Mary’s Assumption an infallible dogma. In 1854, the dogma of the Immaculate Conception was proclaimed by Pope Pius IX.

It is rare when a pope makes an infallible statement. The many controversial statements by Pope Francis are not infallible and there may have doctrinal mistakes within them, as well as other popes too in their writings and words. During the pontificate of Pope Francis, he never officially made an infallible proclamation.

As Catholics we obey the Pope in all things except those which may contradict the Deposit of Faith (Scripture and Tradition) and or if we are asked to do something sinful, we refuse, like the bishops of Africa who said it would be sinful for them to bless a homosexual couple. However, we honor and respect the pope, as the successor of St. Peter.

We trust in the mercy of Jesus, and Our Lord’s words, “Peter, you are rock and on this rock, I will build my Church and the gates of hell shall never prevail against it.” We trust Jesus, that the Catholic Church will continue until Jesus comes in all His glory, although the Church will go through Her passion before the 2nd coming.

On Feb 22nd, of 1931, the feast of the chair of St. Peter, when Jesus appeared to St. Faustina, he held one hand raised-- in blessing and the other hand touching his garment at his chest. From the point on his garment two rays of light emanated (one red and the other white).

Jesus said, “Paint a picture according to the vision you see and with the signature, ‘Jesus I trust in You!’ I desire that this picture be venerated first in your chapel and then throughout the whole world.” 

Since Jesus appeared to St. Faustina giving her the image to paint on February 22nd, the feast of the Chair of St. Peter, perhaps, Our Lord wanted us to trust in God’s mercy with regard to popes. Perhaps, He also wanted us to have mercy on popes, realizing they are human and can make mistakes.

The feast of the Chair of St. Peter is a reminder that the pope is the Vicar of Christ on earth and that he acts for Jesus through the Church.

In the Gospel today, the disciples were gathered in the Upper Room and were afraid. But Jesus came to them with his message of peace. He said, “Peace be with you!” They were no longer afraid. It is like that for us too. We will not find peace until we find it in Jesus. Jesus’ message for each of us today is to find our peace in Him. In the Gospel, He also breathed on them, and said, 'Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained'. By these words Jesus inaugurated the Sacrament of Confession.

Jesus asked Sr. Faustina that the Sunday after Easter be celebrated as a Feast of Mercy and be preceded by a novena beginning on Good Friday. Jesus promised those who go to confession and receive Holy Communion on Divine Mercy Sunday would obtain a complete remission of all sin and all punishment due to sin.

The cardinal of Poland- at the center of the devotion said, the Lenten confession is sufficient for the requirement of the devotion, as long as one is not currently in mortal sin.

Canon Ignacy Rozycki from Poland came to the conclusion that the extraordinary grace promised by Jesus on the Feast of Mercy is a gift of grace equaled only by the grace of Baptism. Therefore, today, if we have the intention of having all our sins forgiven and all the punishment due to our sins washed away, our soul will become like it had been at baptism. And, if we were to immediately die after receiving Holy Communion, we would go straight to heaven. There would be no purgatory time at all. All sins and punishment due to our sins will be completely washed into Our Lord’s infinite ocean of mercy.

Jesus said, “Let no soul fear to come to me, even if its sins be as scarlet. This feast emerged from the bosom of my mercy and is founded in the depths of my mercies.”

Sr. Faustina was given the Chaplet of Divine Mercy. Jesus said, “Say unceasingly this chaplet. Anyone who says it will receive great mercy at the hour of death. Priests will recommend it to sinners as a last hope. If the most hardened sinner recites this chaplet even once, they will receive grace from my infinite mercy. I want the whole world to know my infinite mercy. I want to give unimaginable graces to those who trust in my mercy.” Jesus also said, “I desire the confidence of my people. Let not even the weak and very sinful fear to approach me, even if their sins be as numerous as all the sand of the earth all will be forgiven in the fathomless pit of my mercy.”

St. Faustina said, God’s infinite divine mercy is given to the world today, to prepare for the second Coming of Jesus.

This Sunday (today), we will celebrate Divine Mercy Devotions, with a Eucharistic Holy Hour at 3pm. Please come and pray for God’s mercy for the Church, our country and our families. I encourage you to daily pray the Chaplet of Divine Mercy and the Rosary for the upcoming conclave when the cardinals will gather to elect the next pope.

Next Sunday will be our Eucharistic Festival. Two priests will hear Confessions beginning at 4pm, at 4:50pm Fr. Michael Kerschen will give a talk on the Eucharist. We will have an extra Mass at 5pm on Sunday and we will have hamburgers and hot dogs at the Parish Hall. We will then watch the video “Jesus Thirsts” a powerful movie on the Eucharist. After the movie we will have a Eucharistic Procession and then go to Jon and Laurie’s farm for outdoor Eucharistic Adoration under the Stars. Singer and musician Chris Rowden from Wichita will be here to sing and play music for the procession and for Adoration Under the Stars.

Three of our children will make their First Communions at the 6:30pm Mass Saturday. Next Sunday at the 8am Mass we will have the Crowning of Mary and a Living Rosary outside by the statue of Mary at the Parish Hall.

Next weekend will be grand weekend, a weekend of joy and glory. Please sign up on the paper at the entrance of the church or notify Susan Wempe so she will know how much food to make.

Let us rejoice and give thanks today for God’s mercy, on this Feast of Divine Mercy. When we receive Holy Communion today, we will be free from sin, and the punishment due to sin (all our purgatory time washed away). No matter which pope leads the Church, we will trust in God’s unfathomable mercy. And let us pray much for the soul of Pope Francis and for the college of cardinals, who elect the next pontiff, that he may be a man who will lead the Church as Jesus desires.

Thursday, April 17, 2025

Easter Sunday - Resurrection of Jesus

 

Jesus is Risen! He is Risen Indeed!

Before Jesus appeared to anyone, He rose from the dead. There are no human witnesses to the Resurrection of Jesus. No one was in the tomb. His dead body, marred by His terrible Passion on Good Friday, literally rose from the dead and was immediately transformed into a glorious body.

When He rose from the dead all wounds and blood disappeared, except for the wounds in His hands, feet and side. Why didn’t the Lord allow anyone to see His resurrection? Faith. He desires all His followers to believe that by His own power, He rose from the dead.

The Gospel of John explains that the burial cloths were rolled up in a separate place. This suggests that if the body were stolen, no thief would have taken the time to wrap up the burial cloths and placed them in a separate place.

One could imagine the lifeless body of Jesus wrapped in the shroud, lying on a cold slab, when suddenly in a flash, a light so immense and brilliant the naked eye would have been immediately blinded, and the body was suddenly and instantly transformed bursting through the cloth, resulting in Jesus standing immediately next to the slab. Now only the shroud remained.

At the moment of the resurrection, the shroud imploded, as the body instantly came through the cloth in a micro-burst, and Our Lord stood there in the tomb alive with His resurrected body with a divine tunic.

Jesus desiring to help His Apostles know His body was not stolen, but risen, wrapped the burial cloth covering His head and placed it in a separate place in the tomb. When Jesus rose from the dead, to depart from the tomb, and because of the gift of subtlety, He walked directly through the large stone covering the entrance of the tomb, or the wall, without the stone needing to be rolled away.

Jesus was not in the tomb when there was a great earthquake; for an angel of the Lord descended from heaven, approached, rolled back the stone, and sat upon it.” Consequently, Jesus would have departed the tomb prior to the stone being rolled away by the angel, and therefore, Jesus walked through the wall of the tomb or the large stone before the angel rolled it back.

Sacred Scriptures tell us Jesus first appeared to Mary Magdalene. But, there is a pious tradition mentioned by Pope Saint John Paul II, that Jesus appeared to His Mother Mary first. He said, “How could the Blessed Virgin, present in the first community of disciples, be excluded from those who met Her divine Son after He had risen from the dead?” “Indeed, it is legitimate to think that the Mother was probably the first person to whom the risen Jesus appeared.”

Unlike Mary Magdalene, who wasn’t expecting to find the risen Jesus, the Blessed Virgin Mary knew Her Son Jesus would rise, and so, sorrowfully, but patiently, waited for His resurrection. In a spirit of prayer, Our Lady awaited Her glorified Son. We can imagine the meeting of Mother and Son when Mary was kneeling in prayer waiting for Her Son to come. Suddenly, Jesus appeared to His Mother, and at that moment, She instantly recognized His glorious body. Her sorrow vanished and Her Heart was filled with joy. Since She was kneeling, She first saw the wounds in His feet and immediately bent over and kissed them and adored Him. Our Lord reached out His hands to help Her up and then She saw the wounds in His hands and kissed them. As Jesus took His wounded hands and helped Her up from the ground, surely, She embraced Her Son, kissed His face, and hugged Him. What once were tears of sorrow, immediately turned into tears of joy. What were their first words to each other? Our Lord may have simply said, “Mother!” and She could have responded, “My God, my Son!”

We are reminded of the many appearances of Our Blessed Lord after He rose from the dead. He appeared to Mary Magdalene, the two men on the road to Emmaus, once to St. Peter, and three times to His apostles, twice in the upper room, and once on the shore of the Sea of Galilee. In the first letter to the Corinthians, Jesus appeared to 500 at one time. Scripture also tells us Jesus appeared to James. Our Lord appeared on the Mount of Olives to the eleven giving them His great commission to preach to the whole world. There is a pious tradition His Mother was on the mountain with them before He ascended into heaven.

With Jesus appearing to so many people, it would be difficult to make up such the story, if it were not true. The Resurrection of Jesus is a historical fact. If Our Lord’s resurrection did not happen, why would so many people be willing to lay down their lives, especially in the first three centuries and even up to today? To lay down one’s life for something false would be ridiculous.

Mary Magdalene went to the tomb, and much to her amazement, she discovered two angels sitting there. One angel sat at the feet where the body of Jesus was laid and the other at the head. Can you imagine seeing two angels in a tomb? It would be scary to go by yourself inside a tomb early in the morning. No one would expect to see two angels sitting there. After the angels asked her why she was weeping, she said, “Sir, if you carried him away, tell me where you laid him, and I will take Him.”

Immediately after this, she encountered Jesus, but didn’t know it was Our Lord. Only when He said her name, “Mary”, did she recognize Him. She immediately ran to tell the apostles that she had seen Him.

Just think about this for a moment, according to scripture, who did Jesus first appear? Mary Magdalene, a former prostitute.

Jesus wanted us to know He loves sinners, puts behind their sins, and bestows special graces upon those who truly desire to live a life of discipleship.

This the Easter message: Jesus is risen! Jesus is alive. Jesus loves sinners. Through His suffering, death and resurrection, Our Lord came to save us. He opened the gates of heaven by becoming one of us and passed from death to life and unto eternity, so that we may be with Him forever. God loves us so much He sent His Son in the world to save us, that we might have life with Him.

There is a book written by a Franciscan of the Renewal, Fr. Mark Mary Ames, CFR, called The Father, 30 meditations to draw you into the Heart of God. In the book is a story of Julissa a six year old girl in Honduras. The little girl’s mother became addicted to alcohol and turned to prostitution to provide income for her family. Over the years, Julissa’s mother didn’t take care of her daughter and soon her aunts and members of the local Catholic parish took care of her.

Unfortunately, as Julissa became a teen, she started to get into trouble with drugs and alcohol, promiscuity and then prostitution. She would go into the streets and not return for months. Sadly, over the next 10 years Julissa became like her mother.

The local parish and her aunts did everything they could for her to get an education and have a better healthier life. But, nothing seemed to work. Finally, Julissa disappeared for several years as addiction and brokenness took over all aspects of her life.

One day, the Franciscans heard the sad news that, although Julissa was in her 20’s, she dying due to the compromise of her immune system caused by the life she was living. They found her, visited her often, and prayed with her giving her consolation in the final days of her life. When she was offered Confession, Anointing of the Sick and Holy Communion, she was reconciled to God. Just a few days before her last breath, she received the mercy of God poured out through the sacraments and died a happy death, despite the fact most of her life, she had lived addicted to drugs, alcohol and was a prostitute.

Just as Jesus forgave Mary Magdalene, a prostitute, Jesus forgave Julissa and restored her soul to the state of grace bearing witness to the resurrection of Jesus, who suffered, died and rose from the dead, that we may have life and have it abundantly in heaven. Jesus, through a priest, came to her at a time she needed Him the most.

My dear friends, we must never forgot Jesus loves us and desires that we be saved. May we be faithful to our life as a Christian and like Mary Magdalene and Julissa proclaim, “He is Risen! He is risen Indeed! Alleluia!

Easter Vigil - Resurrection of Jesus

 

This is the most blessed and most joyful night of the year as we celebrate Jesus’ resurrection.

Think about it, Jesus rose from the dead! Death is not the end. It is only the door to beyond. We do not want the resurrection of Jesus to have to fight for room in our lives; we pray Jesus’ death and resurrection will be the center of our lives.

We began our celebration tonight with a service of light, which symbolized Jesus rising from the dead, and bringing light to all of us. The light of Christ has shone in the world scattering darkness forever. We had been waiting for this moment for thousands of years.

We heard in the readings tonight an account of the creation of man and woman (first reading) and the liberation of the Hebrews from Egypt (third reading). This was in God’s plan for mankind, but the high-point in God’s plan for us was the resurrection which is why tonight is the greatest celebration of the Church. This night is the most blessed of all as we heard in the Exsultet, the Easter Proclamation.

Jesus’ resurrection reminds us that there is life beyond the grave. Jesus’ resurrection reminds us that there is more to each of us than meets the eye, that we have an immortal soul. We will live forever with God.

Think of the glorious future that awaits each of us. In the letter to the Romans which we heard tonight Paul wrote that we will imitate Christ in his resurrection. Paul wrote to the Philippians, “For us, our homeland is in heaven, and from heaven comes the Savior we are waiting for, the Lord Jesus Christ, and he will transfigure these wretched bodies of ours into copies of His glorious body.”

Just think of it, your body will be transformed to become a glorious body like that of Jesus. Do we live like someone who believes in such a glorious future? When we do, everything in this world takes on a new perspective, so that we do not become possessed by our possessions. We cannot take our house, car, boat, pets, or money to heaven. We should use our possessions to help others, and if we have unnecessary items, we can give them away to others who need them. We should be detached from all our possessions. Ultimately, all that we have comes from God and belongs to Him. How can we use what He has entrusted to us, to help others, especially those in most need?

In heaven, all our desires will be full-filled. And since we are promised to be transfigured like the risen Jesus, it is natural to pray every day. It would be a contradiction to say that we believe in God but not pray. The reason we have so many problems is because we don’t pray enough. Pray, pray, pray. Personal prayer and praying the Rosary keeps us focused on Jesus.

“Our homeland is in heaven, and from heaven comes the Savior we are waiting for, the Lord Jesus Christ, and he will transfigure these wretched bodies of ours into copies of his glorious body.” John, in his first letter, says something similar, “My dear people, we are already children of God, but what we are to be in the future has not yet been revealed; all we know is, that when it is revealed we shall be like him because we shall see him as he really is.” (1 John 3:2) Our second reading at Mass tomorrow concludes, “But when Christ is revealed—and he is your life—you too will be revealed in all your glory with him.” (Col 3:4)

Let us us keep our heart and mind on Jesus, knowing He is risen. He is alive. He is with us. He loves us and wants to be part of everything we do.

And may the Virgin Mary, our Mother, who was the first to see Her Son after He rose from the dead, give us the same Easter joy She had when She saw Him, embraced Him, and spoke to Him after He had been crucified and buried. Mostly taken from Fr. Tommy Lane


Good Friday - St. Thomas Aquinas

 

Why did the Son of God have to suffer for us?

There was a great need, and it can be considered in a twofold way: in the first place, as a remedy for sin, and secondly, as an example of how to act.

It is a remedy, for, in the face of all the evils which we incur on account of our sins, we have found relief through the passion of Christ. Yet, it is no less an example, for the passion of Christ completely suffices to fashion our lives. Whoever wishes to live perfectly should do nothing but disdain what Christ disdained on the cross and desire what He desired, for the cross exemplifies every virtue.

If you seek the example of love: Greater love than this no man has, than to lay down his life for his friends. Such a man was Christ on the cross. And if He gave His life for us, then it should not be difficult to bear whatever hardships arise for His sake.

If you seek patience, you will find no better example than the cross. Great patience occurs in two ways: either when one patiently suffers much, or when one suffers things which one is able to avoid and yet does not avoid. Christ endured much on the cross, and did so patiently, because when He suffered He did not threaten; He was led like a sheep to the slaughter and He did not open His mouth. Therefore Christ’s patience on the cross was great. In patience let us run for the prize set before us, looking upon Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith who, for the joy set before him, bore His cross and despised the shame.

If you seek an example of humility, look upon the crucified one, for God wished to be judged by Pontius Pilate and to die.

If you seek an example of obedience, follow Him who became obedient to the Father even unto death. For just as by the disobedience of one man, namely, Adam, many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one man, many were made righteous.

If you seek an example of despising earthly things, follow Him who is the King of kings and the Lord of lords, in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge. Upon the cross He was stripped, mocked, spat upon, struck, crowned with thorns, and given only vinegar and gall to drink.

Do not be attached, therefore, to clothing and riches, because they divided my garments among themselves. Nor to honors, for He experienced harsh words and scourgings. Nor to greatness of rank, for weaving a crown of thorns they placed it on my head. Nor to anything delightful, for in my thirst they gave me vinegar to drink.” St. Thomas Aquinas

As we venerate the cross, let us give thanks to God for the sufferings Jesus endured for love of us, so that our sins could be forgiven and that would learn to carry our own cross in patience and in love.

And if we carry our Cross, we know the Virgin Mary, will meet us on our road to Calvary and stand with us when we are on the Cross, praying for us, just as She did for Her Son Jesus and will pray for us, now and at the hour of our death.

Mass of the Lord's Supper - Holy Thursday


When I was in high school, someone asked me, "If you could have anything in the world, what would you want?" Even though I was not practicing my faith well, I said, “I would like to go back in time and be at the Last Supper and also be there at the Crucifixion of Jesus.”

Little did I know every Mass, we are at the Last Supper and every Mass we are at the Crucifixion of Jesus. How interesting, I would end up becoming a priest and now daily say the words of Jesus at the Last Supper and also make present the sacrifice of Calvary on the altar.

Every day, you have the opportunity to come to Calvary, to come to the Last Supper when you come to Mass. Everyday, you have opportunity of receiving Jesus in Holy Communion.

Today as we celebrate the Lord’s Supper, the very First Mass, we thank Jesus for giving us the Eucharist and the priesthood. Pope Saint John Paul II said in one his Holy Thursday Letters to priest, “There can be no Eucharist without the priesthood, just as there can be no priesthood without the Eucharist.”

You see priests involved in many different activities. No matter what type of good work a priest does the high point of the priest’s ministry is celebrating the Eucharist. It is the most important moment of the day for the priest. And so the Pope writes, “The ordained ministry…enables the priest to act in persona Christi (in the person of Christ) and culminates in the moment when he consecrates the bread and wine, repeating the actions and words of Jesus during the Last Supper.”

Before this extraordinary reality we find ourselves amazed and overwhelmed, so deep is the humility by which God “stoops” in order to unite himself with man! If we feel moved before the Christmas crib, when we contemplate the birth of God, what must we feel before the altar where, by the poor hands of the priest, Jesus makes his Sacrifice present in time? We can only fall to our knees and silently adore this supreme mystery of faith.

To come to Mass is a privilege. To receive the Eucharist is a privilege. To come to adore Jesus in our Eucharistic Adoration is a privilege. These are privileges because the Eucharist is the greatest gift God gives us on earth, because the Eucharist is the gift of God Himself.

The price of the Eucharist was very costly. Every time Mass is offered we hear how much it cost Jesus to give Himself-- to us-- in the Eucharist. Jesus said, “This is my body, which will be given up for you.” And when He had taken the cup, He said, “This is the cup of my blood, the blood of the new and everlasting covenant, to be shed for you, so that sins may be forgiven.” Our Lord gave His body and blood on the Cross, so that He could give us His body and blood in the Eucharist.

At the Last Supper the apostles were ordained priests so that Our Lord could give Himself. At the Last Supper, the apostles made their first Holy Communion. Yet one of them would betray Jesus. Even though Judas was ordained a priest by Jesus and even though Judas made his first Holy Communion at the Last Supper. Scripture tells us that Satan entered his heart and then he took the morsel, which was the Eucharist. Judas received the Eucharist in the state of mortal sin, and what did he do, but left the Last Supper early before it was over.

The eleven apostles would ordain other men as bishops, priests and deacons. These eleven men would offer Mass, hear confessions, and preach the Gospel wherever they went.

All of them, but John would be martyred. John would take care of the Blessed Virgin Mary and watch over Her until She was assumed into heaven.

The succession of priesthood is past down to us today through the sacrament of Holy Orders. That’s why today, bishops are considered apostles and priests and deacons are ordained by the bishops. One of the primary purposes of the priesthood is to make available to the people the priceless gift of the Eucharist in every time and place until Jesus comes again.

At the Last Supper, Jesus took a towel and tied it around his waist. Then he poured water into a basin and began to wash the disciples' feet and dry them with the towel around his waist… Our Lord said, “I have given you a model to follow, so that as I have done for you, you should also do."

Deacon Keith Founier said, “How extraordinary! The God who fashioned the entire universe, who dwells in inaccessible light, is now present as a Man among men; serving the very humanity that had been created through Him. This God, before whom all the Nations will one day bend the knee, bends His human knee before the ones He had chosen to carry His redemptive mission forward until He returns in glory.”

Jesus washed the feet of the apostles to remind them that as priests, they were to carry on the redemptive work of Jesus by serving the people, especially by offering the Mass.

Lay people cannot offer the Mass, but lay men, women and children are also called to serve their neighbor. That’s what the stewardship way of life is all about. It is about serving God and serving our neighbor, which finds its source and its strength from the Eucharist. That’s why Eucharistic Adoration in our parish is so incredibly powerful, because the more we come to adore Jesus, the more we want to serve others, and serve God by our time and talent.

Today, we celebrate the institution of the Eucharist, the greatest of all sacraments, because the Eucharist is Jesus Himself, and as St. Thomas Aquinas states the Mass is the greatest of all miracles.

It is a reminder of the sublime and glorious and most Holy event, the worship of God. It is a reminder we should humble our self before receiving Holy Communion and make a sign of reverence before. Many churches in the diocese of Wichita and throughout the world are installing communion rails. We are able to use the kneeler here at Holy Trinity throughout the week. Tonight, out of reverence for Jesus in the Eucharist, I encourage you to receive Communion kneeling, if you are able, and start receiving on the tongue. I encourage you make the commitment to dress up for Mass, to not wear shorts to Mass or to Adoration. In the Eucharist is God Himself. It is not bread. It is not wine. The Host is truly the Risen Jesus.

Randy Blaise, a parishioner of St. Peter in Schulte, Kansas proved his love for Jesus in the Eucharist. Last month, in Topeka, a satanist was performing a sacrilegious event mocking the Mass and holding what may have been a consecrated Host.

As the satanist threw the Host to the ground, Randy threw his body on top of the Host to prevent it from being stomped on, and immediately consumed it. The satanist assaulted Randy beating him, until the police came and arrested the satanist. Randy was willing to defend the Eucharist from profanation.

All of us are called to defend Jesus in the Eucharist too and show the greatest possible reverence to Our Lord truly present in the Sacred Host.

On this Holy Thursday, the Mass of the Lord’s Supper, let us praise God for the wonderful gifts of the priesthood and the Eucharist.

May we thank Jesus every day for the precious gift of Himself, the Eucharist, given to us at the Mass, which comes to us through the hands of the priest.

May we give Jesus Christ, the Son of God, the most reverence possible, humbly acknowledging He is God and we are naught.

14th Monday Raising the Dead- The Resurrection