Oil prices today. Home boy is excited about the price drop.
Welcome To Ronnie's World (IN GOD I FERVENTLY TRUST)
Here we are rooted in God’s Love. Driven by Faith. United in Love for All. We stand for Truth, Equality, and Justice, not just in words, but in action. We believe in the sacred bonds of Family, the duty to Country, and the moral call to Accountability. All of this, in pursuit of one shared vision: A Better, Healthier World for All.
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Mass Readings and Reflection for Thursday June 18th 2026
First Reading: (Sirach 48:1–14)
Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 97)
The Lord is King; let the earth rejoice.
Gospel: (Matthew 6:7–15)
Reflection
Today's readings present two powerful pillars of the Christian life: the courage of Elijah and the prayer of Jesus.
Elijah stood before kings and nations without fear because he knew that God's word was greater than earthly power. His strength did not come from armies or influence but from fidelity to God. In every age, God calls believers to stand for truth even when it is unpopular, difficult, or costly.
In the Gospel, Jesus teaches us the perfect prayer. The Our Father is more than words; it is a way of life. It teaches us trust, dependence on God, and above all, forgiveness. The measure of the mercy we receive is tied to the mercy we show others.
One of the hardest commands in the Gospel is to forgive. Yet resentment imprisons the heart, while forgiveness sets it free. God does not treat us as our sins deserve; He responds with mercy, patience, and love. As disciples of Christ, we are called to extend that same mercy to others.
Our world is filled with division, conflict, and bitterness. Families are broken, communities are polarized, and nations are at war. Jesus reminds us that peace begins in the human heart. A person who truly prays "forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us" cannot remain captive to hatred forever.
Like Elijah, may we be courageous in faith. Like Jesus, may we pray with sincerity. And through the grace of the Holy Spirit, may we become instruments of forgiveness, reconciliation, and peace.
Lord, teach us to pray, teach us to forgive, and teach us to love as You love.
Amen.
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
The Iran Deal, Trump, and the Politics of War
Major news outlets around the world are reporting that a deal to end the war involving Iran has been signed. These past few weeks have been something else entirely.
President Trump made all kinds of threats throughout the crisis but often stopped short of following through on them. That earned him the nickname "TACO Trump," a phrase critics use to mean "Trump Always Chickens Out."
However, when we take a step back and look at the situation objectively, Trump, as the leader of the free world, found himself between a rock and a hard place. It was not an easy position to be in. Some of his biggest donors favored a more aggressive military approach, while a large portion of his political base and supporters were strongly opposed to another war in the Middle East.
The reason is simple: many Americans are still struggling with the high cost of living. They understand that wars in major oil-producing regions often translate into higher energy prices, which eventually affect the cost of almost everything. Since news of the deal emerged, oil prices have reportedly fallen significantly from their wartime highs. Lower oil prices mean lower transportation and production costs, which can ease pressure on the prices of everyday goods and services. For ordinary Americans, that matters far more than geopolitical grandstanding.
Israel, however, appears unhappy with this development. Many MAGA supporters have responded by saying that if Israel disagrees with the deal, it is free to continue the fight without American support. Whether one agrees with that sentiment or not, it reflects a growing mood among many Americans who are increasingly reluctant to become involved in foreign conflicts.
The reality is that American military, diplomatic, and logistical support has long been a critical component of Israel's strategic position. Any reduction in that support would significantly alter the balance of power in the region.
That said, dissatisfaction with this agreement is unlikely to disappear. The political and strategic consequences of the deal may continue to shape Middle Eastern politics for years to come. For now, however, consumers and businesses will welcome any relief from oil-price pressures.
Until the next crisis emerges, people will enjoy the calm. In the Middle East, though, history suggests that periods of stability are often temporary. Peace may have been signed, but the region's deeper tensions remain unresolved.
Pal Ronnie
Why the AI Hype Is Holding Up
Much of the excitement around artificial intelligence is not just about what machines can do, but what they don't do.
Machines don't unionize.
Machines don't call out sick.
Machines don't sue.
Machines don't need health insurance, pensions, or paid leave.
Machines don't get tired, take breaks, or demand shorter workweeks.
From the perspective of businesses, AI promises something every employer has sought since the beginning of industry: higher productivity with lower labor costs.
This does not mean AI can replace all human workers. Creativity, judgment, leadership, empathy, and human relationships remain difficult to automate. However, the economic incentives behind AI are powerful because labor is often the largest expense for many organizations.
The AI revolution is therefore being driven not only by technological progress but also by simple economics. As long as companies believe machines can perform tasks more cheaply, more consistently, and around the clock, investment in AI will continue.
Whether this ultimately leads to widespread prosperity, greater inequality, or a redefinition of work itself remains one of the most important questions of the twenty-first century.
Daily Mass Readings and Reflection for Wednesday June 17th 2026
First Reading: (2 Kings 2:1, 6–14)
Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 31)
“Let your hearts take comfort, all who hope in the Lord.”
Gospel: (Matthew 6:1–6, 16–18)
Reflection
Today's readings reminds us to focus not on outward appearances but on the interior life of faith.
In the First Reading, Elisha asks Elijah for a "double portion" of his spirit. This was not a request for honor or prestige. Elisha understood that if he was to continue God's mission, he would need God's grace and power. When Elijah's mantle falls upon him, Elisha immediately steps into his calling. God's work does not end with Elijah; it continues through a faithful successor.
This is an important lesson for us. Every Christian has received a mantle from God, a responsibility, vocation, or mission. For some, it is raising children. For others, it is caring for patients, serving the Church, helping the poor, or being a witness to Christ in the workplace. The question is not whether we have been given a mission, but whether we are willing to carry it faithfully.
The Gospel complements this message by addressing our motives. Jesus warns against doing good works merely to gain recognition. Prayer, fasting, and almsgiving lose their spiritual value when they become performances for others. God is not impressed by appearances; He looks at the heart.
This teaching is especially relevant today. We live in a culture where many people seek validation through public recognition, social media approval, and constant attention. Even acts of charity and faith can become opportunities for self-promotion. Jesus challenges us to ask ourselves: Am I doing this for God or for human applause?
Both Elijah and Elisha teach us that God's power works through humble servants. Neither sought fame. Their concern was simply to fulfill God's will. Likewise, Jesus teaches that true holiness grows in secret, where only God sees.
Applying to Our World Today
Today many leaders seek power, influence, and public admiration. Social media encourages people to broadcast every good deed, every sacrifice, and every achievement. Yet God's Kingdom operates differently. The people who often make the greatest difference are those who serve quietly: parents who sacrifice for their families, healthcare workers who care for the sick, priests who faithfully minister to their people, and ordinary believers who pray daily for the needs of the world.
The future of the Church and society depends not on celebrities but on faithful men and women who, like Elisha, are willing to receive the mantle and continue God's work with humility.
Amen and God bless you 🙏
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
The Best Political Allegory of 2026
From the Animal Kingdom:
1. The Campaign: Promises Without Reality
"My fellow animals, if you vote for me, once I'm elected, I will become a vegetarian."
The lion immediately makes a promise that contradicts his very nature.
When asked what he will eat, he responds:
"Grass. I'll learn."
When questioned about other carnivores:
"They'll learn too."
Analysis
This represents politicians who make promises designed to win votes rather than solve problems.
Common examples include:
Promising benefits without explaining costs.
Promising peace without explaining security.
Promising prosperity without explaining economic policy.
Promising to satisfy every group simultaneously.
The key warning is that voters often prefer attractive promises over practical plans.
2. Secret Deals After Public Speeches
Publicly, the lion says:
"There will be opportunities for everyone."
Privately, he tells powerful groups:
"You'll receive exclusive food collection contracts."
"You'll control national security."
"You'll oversee every river permit."
Analysis
This illustrates the gap between campaign rhetoric and private political bargaining.
The lion is building a coalition of elites by offering:
Government contracts.
Political appointments.
Regulatory control.
Economic privileges.
Today this can appear as:
Political patronage.
Crony capitalism.
Insider contracts.
Lobbying influence.
Political favoritism.
The principle is simple:
Public promises attract voters; private promises attract power brokers.
3. Promising Everything to Everybody
His adviser asks:
"You promised half the forest projects to the rhinos."
"You promised security control to the leopards."
"You promised river control to the crocodiles."
The lion replies:
"Correct."
Then:
"Can you actually do all that?"
The lion answers:
"That's tomorrow's problem."
Analysis
Many leaders focus on winning elections rather than governing effectively afterward.
The assumption is:
"Once power is secured, we'll figure it out later."
This often leads to:
Budget deficits.
Broken promises.
Public disappointment.
Political instability.
4. The Election Victory
After winning, reality arrives.
Instead of prosperity:
Fuel prices rise.
Transportation costs rise.
Food prices rise.
Citizens complain.
The lion responds:
"They struggled before me."
"They'll struggle after me."
Analysis
This reflects leaders who avoid accountability.
Rather than asking:
"How do we solve this?"
They ask:
"How do we avoid blame?"
The statement implies:
"Problems existed before me, therefore they are not my responsibility."
5. Elite Enrichment While Citizens Suffer
The citizens struggle to buy bread.
Meanwhile:
"Private roads."
"Marble floors."
"Private swimming pools."
Analysis
Throughout history, public anger often grows when citizens see:
Rising taxes.
Inflation.
Declining services.
At the same time they observe:
Political elites becoming wealthier.
Government waste.
Luxury spending.
The contrast fuels distrust.
6. Blaming the People
When citizens complain about rising costs:
"The people must learn to manage their money better."
Someone responds:
"Manage what money?"
Analysis
This satirizes governments, corporations, or leaders who dismiss genuine hardship.
The criticism is that leadership sometimes becomes disconnected from ordinary life.
Those at the top no longer understand the pressures experienced by average people.
7. New Taxes and Public Anger
The lion announces:
"All animals will begin paying a new national development tax."
The crowd responds:
"Enough is enough!"
Analysis
The issue is not taxation itself.
The issue is trust.
People generally tolerate sacrifice when they believe:
Leaders are honest.
Money is being used responsibly.
Everyone shares the burden.
Without trust, every new tax appears exploitative.
8. The Most Important Section: Divide and Rule
The lion asks:
"How do we stop the protests?"
The hyena answers:
"We don't fight the protest."
"We make the protesters fight each other."
Then:
"Create eight social pages."
"Tell the fast animals the slow animals are holding them back."
"Make every group believe they're a victim."
Analysis
This is perhaps the central lesson of the story.
Historically, powerful groups often weaken opposition by encouraging division.
Possible dividing lines include:
Race.
Religion.
Tribe.
Ethnicity.
Political party.
Region.
Language.
Gender.
Social class.
The goal is not necessarily to win arguments.
The goal is to prevent unity.
The story states:
"Hungry animals united are dangerous."
"Hungry animals divided are manageable."
9. Fear as a Political Tool
The lion says:
"Every attack becomes a headline."
"Every incident becomes a debate."
"Every crisis becomes a distraction."
"Fear is louder than accountability."
Analysis
Fear can dominate public attention.
When people become consumed by:
Crime.
Conflict.
Crisis.
Scandal.
They may pay less attention to:
Budgets.
Debt.
Corruption.
Long-term policy failures.
The story suggests that fear can be used to redirect public attention.
10. Borrowing Against the Future
The lion asks:
"How much should we borrow?"
Answer:
"As much as they'll give us."
What is offered in return?
"Oil, minerals, land rights."
Analysis
This represents unsustainable debt and the mortgaging of future generations.
The immediate benefit is:
More money today.
The long-term cost may include:
Higher taxes.
Reduced sovereignty.
Economic dependence.
Burdens on future citizens.
11. Education as a Casualty
Teachers are owed:
"24 months salary."
The solution offered:
"Pay them four months."
"Increase school fees five times."
Analysis
The story criticizes short-term political thinking.
Education produces results slowly.
Therefore leaders focused only on immediate political survival may neglect it.
The victims are often:
Children.
Teachers.
Future economic growth.
12. Co-opting Opposition
Honey Badger becomes popular.
Instead of confronting him, the lion offers:
A title.
An office.
A vehicle.
A salary.
Analysis
This is a common political strategy.
Rather than defeating critics:
Bring them inside the system.
Sometimes opposition leaders lose credibility because they become beneficiaries of the very system they once criticized.
Honey Badger's response is significant:
"I will keep my honesty."
13. The Most Powerful Speech
Honey Badger says:
"You created a government position for me overnight."
"Which means you can move quickly when you want to."
"Why not create real jobs?"
"Why not pay the teachers?"
"Why not repair the roads?"
Analysis
This is the story's moral turning point.
The issue is not capability.
The issue is priorities.
Many governments, organizations, and leaders demonstrate remarkable efficiency when serving their own interests.
Citizens then ask:
"Why doesn't that same urgency exist for public needs?"
14. The Final Lesson
The elder animal explains:
"Division is their greatest weapon."
"Not money."
"Not soldiers."
"Division."
And:
"As long as animals fight each other, nothing changes."
Applying It to Today
The story's warning applies broadly to modern society.
Across many countries and political systems, citizens increasingly divide themselves over:
Political parties.
Ethnicity.
Race.
Religion.
Immigration.
Culture wars.
Economic class.
Meanwhile, many shared concerns remain:
Cost of living.
Housing affordability.
Education.
Healthcare.
Public debt.
Infrastructure.
Corruption.
Government accountability.
The allegory argues that ordinary people often lose influence when they become consumed by fighting one another instead of focusing on common problems and demanding transparency from leaders.
Central Message
The story's central message can be summarized in one sentence:
A population that is united around shared principles can hold leaders accountable; a population that is divided into competing tribes becomes easier to manipulate, distract, and govern without accountability.
Mass Readings and Reflection for June 16th, 2026
First Reading: (1 Kings 21:17–29)
Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 51)
Response: “Be merciful, O Lord, for we have sinned.”
Gospel: (Matthew 5:43–48)
Reflection
Today’s readings bring together two powerful themes: repentance and radical love.
1. No One Is Beyond Mercy
Ahab was one of the most corrupt kings in Scripture-greedy, unjust, and heavily influenced by evil. Yet when he humbles himself before God, the Lord notices and shows him mercy.
This reminds us that:
God does not ignore sin, but He also never ignores sincere repentance.
No matter how far someone has fallen, turning back to God matters.
Never think, “It’s too late for me.” God responds to even the smallest movement of the heart.
2. Love Beyond Human Limits
In the Gospel, Jesus raises the standard of love:
Not just love your neighbor,
But love your enemy.
This is not natural. It goes against our instincts:
We want fairness.
We want justice.
We want to protect ourselves.
Yet Jesus points us to the example of the Father:
God gives sun and rain to all—good and bad alike.
True Christian love:
Is not based on feelings.
Is not based on who “deserves” it.
Is a choice rooted in God.
3. The Connection Between the Readings
Ahab shows that even the guilty can repent and receive mercy.
Jesus shows that we are called to extend that same mercy to others.
In other words:
We want mercy from God.
But God asks us to give mercy to others, especially those who have hurt us.
Practical Application for Today
In a world marked by division, resentment, and conflict, these readings challenge us to do two difficult things:
Humbly acknowledge our own sins and need for God's mercy.
Extend forgiveness and charity to those who offend, oppose, or disappoint us.
God's mercy transformed Ahab when he humbled himself. The same mercy can transform us. And when we allow God's love to work in our hearts, we become capable of loving others as Christ loves us-not because they deserve it, but because God has first shown mercy to us.
Amen
Monday, June 15, 2026
Daily Mass Readings and Reflection on June 15th, 2026
First Reading: (1 Kings 21:1–16)
Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 5)
Response: Lord, listen to my groaning.
Gospel Acclamation
Alleluia, Alleluia.
Your word is a lamp for my feet and a light on my path.
Alleluia.
Gospel: (Matthew 5:38–42)
Reflection
Today's readings contrast two very different responses to power and injustice.
In the first reading, Ahab and Jezebel abuse authority to take what does not belong to them. Their greed leads to deception, injustice, and the death of an innocent man, Naboth. The story reminds us that worldly power often seeks its own advantage at the expense of others.
In the Gospel, Jesus proposes a radically different path. Rather than revenge or retaliation, He teaches mercy, generosity, and nonviolence. Turning the other cheek does not mean approving evil; it means refusing to allow hatred and vengeance to rule our hearts. Christ calls His disciples to overcome evil with goodness and to trust God as the ultimate judge.
In a world often marked by conflict, lawsuits, resentment, and the desire to “get even,” Jesus invites us to be instruments of peace. We are called to seek reconciliation, practice generosity, and respond to injustice with faith rather than bitterness.
May we have the courage to follow Christ's example, choosing mercy over revenge and peace over hostility.
Amen
Sunday, June 14, 2026
We Got a Deal and Oil Prices Dropped
Sunday Mass Readings and Reflection June 14th, 2026
First Reading: (Exodus 19:2–6a)
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 100
"We are His people, the sheep of His flock."
Second Reading: (Romans 5:6–11)
Gospel: (Matthew 9:36–10:8)
Reflection:
One word stands out in today's Gospel at Mass at St. Martha'sParish: compassion.
Matthew tells us that when Jesus looked at the crowds, "He had compassion for them because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd."
Everything Jesus did flowed from compassion. He healed because of compassion. He taught because of compassion. He forgave because of compassion. Even those who opposed Him were not objects of hatred but people whom He loved as children of God.
This is an important reminder in our world today. It is easy to become frustrated with others, to judge them, or to ignore their struggles. Jesus challenges us to see people differently. He invites us to look beyond appearances and recognize the pain, confusion, loneliness, and burdens that many carry in their hearts.
The Gospel also reminds us that "the harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few."
Jesus asks His disciples to pray for laborers to serve God's people. The Church continues to need priests, religious sisters and brothers, deacons, missionaries, and faithful laypeople willing to share the Gospel. Yet this call is not limited to those in formal ministry. Every Christian is called to be a worker in the Lord's harvest.
After naming the Twelve Apostles, Jesus sends them out with a mission: proclaim the Good News, heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, and cast out demons.
Most of us may never perform miracles as the Apostles did, but we are called to continue their mission in ordinary ways.
To heal the sick may mean visiting someone who is lonely, encouraging a friend who is suffering, or simply listening to someone who needs support.
To raise the dead may mean bringing hope to those whose spirits have been crushed by disappointment, grief, addiction, or despair.
To cleanse the lepers may mean welcoming those who feel excluded, forgotten, or marginalized.
To cast out demons may mean standing against hatred, dishonesty, injustice, and anything that separates people from God.
Jesus concludes with a powerful instruction: "You received without payment; give without payment."
God's grace is a gift. We have freely received His love, mercy, forgiveness, and blessings. Therefore, we are called to share these gifts freely with others, not seeking recognition or reward but acting out of love.
The First Reading reminds us that God chose Israel to be His treasured possession. The Second Reading reminds us that Christ died for us while we were still sinners. Together, these readings reveal a God who loves first, forgives first, and calls first.
Our response should be simple: to become instruments of His compassion.
Today, let us ask ourselves:
Do I look at others with compassion or judgment?
Am I helping to build God's Kingdom through my words and actions?
How can I bring hope, healing, and encouragement to someone this week?
The harvest is still plentiful. There are still many people searching for hope, kindness, and love.
May we follow the example of the Apostles and become faithful laborers in the Lord's vineyard, bringing Christ's compassion to all whom we meet.
Amen.
God bless you.









