Thursday, June 4, 2026

The Gift of Risk . . .

 




Fear 
by Khalil Gibran . . 

It is said that before entering the sea
a river trembles with fear.

She looks back at the path she has traveled,
from the peaks of the mountains,
the long winding road crossing forests and villages.

And in front of her,
she sees an ocean so vast,
that to enter
there seems nothing more than to disappear forever.

But there is no other way.
The river can not go back.

Nobody can go back.
To go back is impossible in existence.

The river needs to take the risk
of entering the ocean
because only then will fear disappear,

because that’s where the river will know
it’s not about disappearing into the ocean,
but of becoming the ocean.




Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Words of Wisdom, Not lost!

 Hymn for the Hurting


by Amanda Gorman

Everything hurts,
Our hearts shadowed and strange,
Minds made muddied and mute.
We carry tragedy, terrifying and true.
And yet none of it is new;
We knew it as home,
As horror,
As heritage.
Even our children
Cannot be children,
Cannot be.

Everything hurts.
It’s a hard time to be alive,
And even harder to stay that way.
We’re burdened to live out these days,
While at the same time, blessed to outlive them.

This alarm is how we know
We must be altered —
That we must differ or die,
That we must triumph or try.
Thus while hate cannot be terminated,
It can be transformed
Into a love that lets us live.

May we not just grieve, but give:
May we not just ache, but act;
May our signed right to bear arms
Never blind our sight from shared harm;
May we choose our children over chaos.
May another innocent never be lost.



God of hope; God of mercy . . .hear our prayer!

 





Litany of Lamentation

For those who are suffering.
For those who are injured.
For families that are separated.


For firemen, police, emergency medical workers and all public officials.
For those who serve in the armed forces.
For those who answer the call to comfort and give aid.
For those who provide support thru their prayers.


For those who are dying.
For those who died while saving the lives of others.
For those who have died from acts of terrorism [or natural disasters] around the world.
For all who lost their lives.


For those who survived.
For the children who have been orphaned.
For the men and women who have lost their spouses.
For all who mourn and those who comfort them.


For peace in our city and in our world.
For unity among faiths.
For a greater appreciation and love of all humanity.


For patience and perseverance.
For calm in the midst of fear.
For forgiveness and the grace to overcome adversity.


For generosity of spirit.
For hope in times of despair.
For light in the darkness.


Gracious and Loving God,
you are our comforter and our hope.
Hear your people's prayers as they come before you.
Strengthen us in this time of need.


Inspire us to acts of charity and generosity
and give us hope of a brighter future.
We ask this in Jesus' name.
Amen.

- Joseph P. Shadle

The Bread and Wine We Offer:

 

    



The Body and Blood of Christ Sunday 2026 

June 7, 2026

www.johnpredmoresj.com | predmore.blogspot.com

Deuteronomy 8:2-16; Psalm 147; 1 Corinthians 10:16-17; John 6:51-58

 

By celebrating the feast of the Body and Blood of Christ, the Church reminds us of two things: God will always nourish us, and through our partaking of the Eucharist, we become, as St. Paul pointed out, the Universal Body and Blood of Christ. Through our full participation in the Eucharist, we see that our faith is nourished. Faith is first and foremost an action. Faith is proof of what we believe. Faith becomes our capacity for loving action. 

 

The Gospel reminds us that Jesus is the Living Bread and he invites us to drink his Blood, and we become what and who we eat. The Gospel writes, “The one who feeds on me will have life because of me.” By sharing in this meal of faith, we become the living, eternal Body and Blood of the Universal Christ. We become love in action. 

 

Let’s talk about what we do when we gather for Eucharist. After we ask for God’s mercy and sing “Glory to God,” the priest says, “Let us pray.” There might be an awkward brief silence and then the priest picks up his book and says a short prayer. It is not that the priest forgot his place or what he is to do next. This is a privileged moment if presented rightly. This is your moment to remember all that has happened during the week, the accomplishments and struggles, all the stuff of daily life, and you are to raise them up to God’s consciousness. Once that is done, the priest collects your prayers and lifts them up to God, the Father, God, the Parent. All the stuff of your week is gathered and offered to God. We offer to God all of our human experiences.

 

During the offertory, the community offers to God bread and wine as a token gift of gratitude. These are the parts of the meal that Jesus blessed at the Passover supper and asked us to remember. When we offer bread, it is not merely wafers of wheat. The bread is designed to symbolize all human effort, all that you set out to do in the last week. It is your labor, study, research, gardening, cooking – all forms of work and striving. This bread contains every effort that we expend to make our lives pleasing to God and to one another. 

 

We also offer wine, which is something that was first crushed, like grapes. Wine represents whatever crushes the efforts of humanity. This includes all the suffering that people will experience – any pain, anguish, grief, frustration, confusion, failures, and losses. We offer to God anything that hinders and diminishes our strivings. The bread and the wine represent the totality of human life and experience. We place it upon the altar for the Holy Spirit to transform them as the priest raises them up on your behalf. They are brought into the Living Body and Blood of Christ, who seeks to enrich humanity by bringing everyone together in charity.

 

The communion that we receive is a spiritual and physical union of hearts, minds, and bodies of all who are gathered. When we seek communion, we affirm our covenant with God, which entails naturally care for the person next to us. We agree to create unity in Christ as we live and move and have our being in Him. As we participate, we are changed and transformed over time, little by little, into Christ. 

 

When we celebrate the Eucharist, through the Holy Spirit, God transforms us to make us more like Christ. We raise our human labors and our sufferings, alongside the bread and wine, and we are the object of God’s transformation. Let us offer ourselves to our God as fully as we can. Let us raise all that we carry with us so God may touch them with grace. We are profoundly changed, and so are our efforts and sufferings, so that we can be shared with a hungering world. 

 

 


A Celebration of God's Love!

 

 

Feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus
June 12


The story is told that once a young boy was about to have open-heart surgery.  To prepare him the surgeon said, “Tomorrow I will look at your heart.”  Smiling, the boy interrupted, “You’ll find Jesus there.”  Ignoring his remark, the surgeon continued, “After I have seen your heart I will try to repair the damage.”  Again, the boy insisted.  “You are going to find Jesus in my heart.”

The surgeon who had suffered losses in his own family and was still in pain from a failed marriage, felt very distant from God. He replied in a chilling tone, “No, what I’ll find is damaged tissue, constricted arteries, and weakened muscle.”

The next day he opened the boy’s chest and exposed his heart.  It was worse than he expected – a ravaged aorta, torn tissue, swollen muscles and arteries.  There was no hope of a cure, not even the possibility of a transplant.  His icy anger at God began to surface as he thought, “Where is God? Why did God do this?  Why is God letting this boy suffer and cursing him with an early death?”

As he gazed at the boy’s heart, he suddenly thought of the pierced heart of Jesus, and it seemed to him that the boy and Jesus shared one heart, a heart that was suffering for all those in the world experiencing pain and loss; a heart that was redeeming the world by love. 

Struck with awe at such goodness, such redemptive, unconditional love, tears began rolling down the surgeon’s cheeks, hot tears of compassion for the little boy.  Later, when the child awoke, he whispered, “Did you see my heart?”  “Yes,” said the surgeon.  “What did you find?” the boy asked. The surgeon replied, “I found Jesus there.” (Source Unknown)

The heart can be understood as a physical part of each of us – that hidden yet vital organ that circulates the full human blood supply three times per minute and whose hundred thousand beats a day are often taken for granted.  The heart is the very core of a person.  When that very center is deeply affected, one’s whole way of thinking about the world, one’s whole way of feeling it, of being in it is profoundly altered.  As in our opening story, the doctor experienced a conversion of heart – a healing from heartlessness to heart-fullness. And the child – who was all heart and shared in the heart of Jesus – had a heart filled with redemptive and unconditional love.

Today’s feast is the celebration of the “enlarged heart” of God as it was enfleshed in the heart of Jesus through the womb of Mary – a heart filled and overflowing with unconditional love and mercy.  Today is not necessarily a feast of our devotion to the heart of Jesus, but it is a celebration of God’s devotion to us by offering us a heart of love beyond our comprehension, a heart of love beyond any Hallmark card expression, and a heart full of love that is unfathomable. Our God’s love is tender; Our God is totally in love with us, and desires to be of one heart with us.  For as John writes: God is Love!

As we celebrate this feast today of God’s love for us it was different in the Middle Ages – as the devotion was not to the heart of Jesus but to the wound in the side of Jesus.  In later times, especially rising from the visions of St. Margaret Mary, the focus shifted more to the Heart of Jesus.

In the writings of Margaret Mary, she describes what happened one day as she was praying when she received a vision of Jesus:   “For a long time he kept me leaning on his breast, while he revealed the wonders of his love and the mysterious secrets of his Sacred Heart. Till then, he had always kept them hidden; but now, for the first time, he opened his Heart to me.”

Margaret Mary continued to describe in her writings how Jesus revealed his heart as a heart on fire with love as he said: “My divine Heart is so passionately fond of the human race, and of you (Margaret Mary), that it cannot keep back the pent-up flames of its burning love any longer.”  She then reveals what followed. “Next, he asked for my heart. I begged him to take it; he did, and placed it in his own divine Heart.  He let me see it there – a tiny atom being completely burned up in that fiery furnace.  Then, lifting it out – now a little heart-shaped flame – he put it back where he had found it.”

In Scripture we find a number of examples of how Jesus’ love was lived out. . .
• Let the children come to me . . .then he embraced them and blessed them, placing his hands on them
• At the sight of the crowds, his heart was moved with pity for them.
• Moved with pity, Jesus touched their eyes and immediately they received their sight.
• (Rich man) Jesus looking at him loved him.


So what is the good news for us today?
Let us through our daily reflection imagine ourselves resting in the heart of God hearing the heartbeat of God in the intimacy of our own prayer. 


(Nouwen)- “when we come to hear the heartbeat of God in the intimacy of our prayer, we realize that God’s heart embraces all the sufferings of the world.  We come to see that through Jesus Christ these burdens have become a light burden which we are invited to carry.  . . It is in the heart of God that we come to understand the true nature of human suffering and come to know our mission to alleviate this suffering not in our own name, but in the name of Jesus.”
For God’s heart goes out to us and God’s love is always there for us –

https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/061226.cfm

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Sharing of the Word . . .



https://www.youtube.com/live/IWJT7ZvqgZk 






Cardinal Blase Cupich's Homily for May 31st, 2026

with video introduction of Pope Leo's new encyclical 


Thursday, May 28, 2026

All you Need is Love: Trinity Sunday

 

                                                      


The Trinity Sunday 2026 

May 31, 2026

www.johnpredmoresj.com | predmore.blogspot.com


Exodus 34:4-9; Daniel 3; 2 Corinthians 13:11-13; John 3:16-18

 

The church celebrates the Trinitarian nature of God by highlighting three aspects of God’s relationship with us. In this God we see the Father, loving the Son, who receives everything from the Creator Parent, and the Spirit between them is the divine love poured into the world. It ought to tell us that life itself begins in joy and overflowing love. We are meant to live in communion, not in isolation or competition. The new encyclical, Magnificent Humanity, by Pope Leo emphasizes this communion through Catholic Social Teaching and care for the common good. God’s love wants us to know that we have life in abundance and overflowing joy.

 

Paul’s letters to the Corinthians show us the way forward: Rejoice, change your ways, encourage one another, agree with one another, and live in peace. It is a simple plan of life. We also know life is complex. It is easy to be nice to nice people. It is not so easy to remain nice to people who have poor social boundaries or lack social etiquette. It is less easy to be nice when some family members are divided, when politics remains polarizing, when people think their thoughts are the only right ones. We find ourselves in a world of increasing loneliness and with people living beside one another, but not truly with one another. Hence, a major reason for Pope Leo to concentrate on Artificial Intelligence and faith’s interaction with science. Here is where the Trinity comes in. Every act of reconciliation reflects the mercy of the Trinity.

 

Though we try to listen, it is difficult to be with someone who listens poorly and speaks as if the person owns the truth. They suck the air out of the room and are not open to the informed thoughts of others. It is difficult to remain in relationship when someone has an addiction or mental illness or is stubbornly closed to other’s opinions or looking at one’s own areas of growth. It is difficult for a good person to choose charity over contempt when it appears as the other person seems to get rewarded for bad behavior. It is not easy to stay position and as a person of innate goodwill, and that is exactly what God is asking us to do.

 

Our work of encouragement is not syrupy niceness. It means that we have to strengthen another person’s spirit, even if the person acts poorly socially. We have to call forth courage so that someone who is tentative can choose what is best for herself. We have to help someone remember who he is, not as an accumulation of failures or bad decisions, but as a person that God is still trying to get to one’s real self. Whenever we heal relationships or help one understand herself better, we reveal the image of God. When we take the time to listen deeply or forgive thoughtfully, we reveal the image of God. When seek unity without trying to dominate the other person, when we call the best forth from him, we reveal the image of God. Love does not erase differences. It is able to hold people together in communion. A Trinitarian community is one in which we help each other become fully alive. 

 

          The Trinity reveals the greatest gift possible – self-giving love. God is love. Love is God. If we feel any increase of love, we experience the grace of God. If we cannot know for certain if God was present, we ask ourselves, “Am I experiencing love?” If the answer is yes, God is present. It is the very nature of love, the very nature of God, to join and bond with others because love is intrinsically relational. Love is a cosmic force. It wants to relate. It cannot exhaust itself. Love creates more love, a deeper love, a transformative love. Love is who God eternally is.