Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Daily Mass Readings and Reflection on July 15th, 2026


First Reading: (Isaiah 10:5–7, 13b–16)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 94:5–6, 7–8, 9–10, 14–15)

Response: The Lord will not abandon his people.

Alleluia: (Matthew 11:25)

Alleluia, alleluia.
Blessed are you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth;
you have revealed to little ones the mysteries of the Kingdom.

Alleluia, alleluia.

Gospel: (Matthew 11:25–27) 

Reflection

1. Isaiah: The Axe That Thinks It Is the Carpenter (Isaiah 10:5–7, 13b–16)

Isaiah exposes a spiritual delusion: Assyria believes its own strength is self-generated.

It conquers nations and imagines: “By my own power I have done it.” But God responds with a question that cuts through every human pride:

“Will the axe boast against him who hews with it?”

The axe is real.

The axe is sharp.

The axe accomplishes great things.

But the axe is not the carpenter.

This is the heart of Isaiah's warning:

Human beings are instruments of God's providence, not the authors of it.

Whenever we begin to believe our success, intelligence, influence, or strength is "ours," God allows a holy "leanness" to enter our lives—not to punish, but to purify.

It is the spiritual detox of pride.

2. The Psalm: God Sees What the Proud Think He Doesn't (Psalm 94:5–6, 7–8, 9–10, 14–15)

The wicked say:

“The LORD does not see.”

But the Psalm answers:

“He who planted the ear, does he not hear? He who formed the eye, does he not see?”

The proud think God is absent.

The humble know God is attentive.

The proud think God is slow.

The humble know God is patient.

The proud think God is blind.

The humble know God is merciful.

The Psalm reminds us that God's justice is never delayed-it is deliberate.

He waits for hearts to soften, for illusions to crack, and for pride to collapse into truth.

3. The Gospel: The Childlike Are the Ones Who See God (Matthew 11:25–27)

Jesus praises the Father for hiding divine mysteries from "the wise and learned"-those who trust in their own intellect, status, or spiritual credentials.

Instead, God reveals Himself to the childlike.

Childlike does not mean childish.

Childlike means:

  • Receptive

  • Trusting

  • Humble

  • Dependent

  • Free from ego

The childlike heart is the opposite of Assyria's boastful heart.

Assyria says:

"I did this."

The childlike say:

"You did this, Lord."

Assyria says:

"I understand."

The childlike say:

"Teach me."

Assyria says:

"I am strong."

The childlike say:

"I need You."

Jesus concludes:

“No one knows the Father except the Son and anyone to whom the Son wishes to reveal him.”

Revelation is not earned.

It is received.

It is not the reward of intelligence.

It is the fruit of surrender.

4. The Hidden Thread: God Uses the Strong, But Dwells With the Small

Isaiah shows God using Assyria-a mighty empire-as an instrument.

Yet God does not reveal Himself to Assyria.

He reveals Himself to the childlike.

This is the paradox of divine action:

  • God uses the powerful.

  • God dwells with the humble.

The powerful accomplish His external works.

The humble receive His interior life.

Assyria moved borders.

The childlike move heaven.

Assyria conquered nations.

The childlike conquer their own hearts.

Assyria boasted.

The childlike adore.

5. The Personal Challenge: Where Am I Acting Like the Axe?

Every person has areas where they feel strong, capable, and in control.

Today's readings ask a piercing question:

Where have I begun to believe that I am the carpenter rather than the instrument?

Is it in my work?

My relationships?

My spiritual life?

My achievements?

My reputation?

My intellect?

My discipline?

My success?

God is not offended by our strength.

He gave it.

But He is grieved when we forget its source.

The cure is not humiliation.

It is humility.

Humility is simply living in the truth:

God is God, and I am not.

6. The Invitation: Become Small Enough to See God

Jesus does not say:

"Become smarter."

"Become more accomplished."

"Become more impressive."

He says:

Become childlike.

Only the childlike can receive revelation.

Only the childlike can rest completely in God.

Only the childlike can hear the Father's voice.

Only the childlike can be entrusted with the mysteries of His Kingdom.

Assyria was powerful but spiritually blind.

The little ones were weak by the world's standards, yet rich in heavenly wisdom.

The way up is down.

The path to greatness is humility.

The heart that kneels before God is the heart that truly sees Him.


Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Daily Mass Reading and Reflection on Tuesday July 14th, 2026

 



First Reading: (Isaiah 7:1–9)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 48)

Response: God upholds his city forever.

Response: God upholds his city forever.

Gospel: (Matthew 11:20–24)

Reflection: 

Today's readings present two very different responses to God.

In the first reading, King Ahaz faces a terrifying political crisis. Enemies surround Jerusalem, and fear grips both the king and his people. Their hearts shake "like the trees of the forest before the wind." Into this atmosphere of anxiety, God speaks a simple yet powerful command: "Do not fear."

God does not promise that life will always be free of danger. Instead, He promises His presence. Isaiah reminds Ahaz that faith is the foundation of true security: "If you do not stand firm in faith, you shall not stand at all." Human strength, political alliances, wealth, or military power cannot ultimately save us. Only trust in God provides a firm foundation.

The Gospel reveals the opposite problem. Unlike Ahaz, the people of Chorazin, Bethsaida, and Capernaum were not lacking signs from God. They had witnessed Jesus heal the sick, restore the blind, cast out demons, and proclaim the Kingdom of God. Yet their hearts remained unchanged.

Jesus' words are not spoken out of anger alone but out of deep sorrow. He had done everything possible to lead them to repentance, yet they refused His invitation. His miracles were never meant merely to amaze people-they were signs pointing to conversion and a renewed relationship with God.

This Gospel invites us to examine our own lives. We, too, have received tremendous blessings. We have God's Word, the sacraments, the witness of the saints, the gift of the Church, and countless moments of grace. The question is not whether God has spoken to us, but whether we have responded.

Sometimes we become like the people of Capernaum. We grow accustomed to God's gifts and begin to take them for granted. We attend Mass, hear the Scriptures, receive the Eucharist, yet fail to allow Christ to transform our hearts. Familiarity with holy things can never replace genuine conversion.

True repentance is more than feeling sorry for our sins. It is allowing Christ to reshape our priorities, soften our hearts, and make us more loving, forgiving, humble, and faithful each day.

Jesus continues to perform mighty deeds in our lives. Every answered prayer, every unexpected blessing, every act of mercy is another invitation to draw closer to Him. The greatest miracle of all takes place at every Mass, where Christ gives Himself to us in the Holy Eucharist.

May we never become indifferent to His grace.

Instead, let us stand firm in faith, trust Him in times of fear, and respond generously to the countless blessings He has given us. Hearts rooted in faith remain steady, and hearts open to repentance become places where God's mercy bears lasting fruit.

Monday, July 13, 2026

Mass Reading and Reflection for Monday July 13th, 2026


First Reading: (Isaiah 7:1–9)

Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 48:2–3a, 3b–4, 5–6, 7–8

Response: God upholds his city for ever.

Gospel Acclamation

Alleluia, alleluia.

If today you hear his voice, harden not your hearts.

Alleluia.

Gospel: (Matthew 11:20–24)

Reflection

Today's readings come together to teach a challenging but beautiful truth: the greatest crisis we face is not what surrounds us but what happens within us. The real battle is whether we choose fear or faith, hardness or openness, resistance or conversion.

In the first reading, King Ahaz is terrified by the sight of invading armies. Yet God sees what Ahaz cannot. The Lord calls those powerful enemies nothing more than "smoldering stumps" and tells the king:

"Take care you remain tranquil and do not fear... Unless your faith is firm you shall not be firm."

Like Ahaz, we often allow our hearts to be shaken by financial worries, political uncertainty, illness, broken relationships, or an uncertain future. We measure our security by our savings, careers, health, or reputation. God reminds us that true stability does not come from circumstances but from trusting Him when life becomes difficult. Faith is the foundation that allows us to stand when everything else seems uncertain.

Psalm 48 continues this message by proclaiming that God Himself is the stronghold of His people. The city's security does not come from walls or armies but from the Lord who dwells within it. Today, that city is also our own heart and the Christian community. When God truly occupies the center of our lives, fear loses its power. The question each of us must ask is simple but searching: Is God merely part of my life, or is He truly my stronghold?

The Gospel presents an even deeper warning. Jesus condemns Chorazin, Bethsaida, and Capernaum-not because they lacked miracles, but because they witnessed God's power without allowing it to transform them. They saw extraordinary signs, heard Christ's teaching, and remained unchanged.

This is a danger for every believer. We can attend Mass regularly, hear Scripture every day, participate in ministry, and become so familiar with holy things that we stop allowing them to change us. We may admire Jesus without surrendering to Him. We may know the Gospel without living it. Grace received without conversion becomes a missed opportunity.

Today also recalls the witness of Saint Kateri Tekakwitha, whose memorial is celebrated in the United States. She provides a beautiful contrast to the cities that rejected Jesus. Born into a Native American community that did not share her Christian faith, she endured misunderstanding and hardship after embracing Christ. She witnessed few extraordinary miracles, yet she responded wholeheartedly to God's grace. Her life became a living miracle of holiness because she possessed what Jesus sought in the Gospel: a humble, receptive, and faithful heart.

Saint Kateri reminds us that holiness does not require perfect circumstances or extraordinary experiences. It requires a heart willing to trust God, obey His voice, and persevere in faith.

Today, let us ask the Lord for the grace not simply to hear His Word but to respond to it. May we choose faith over fear, allow God's presence to become our true refuge, and never become so accustomed to His grace that we fail to be transformed by it.

Amen.

Sunday, July 12, 2026

Oil Prices Up Again Strait of Hormuz Closed

 


Mass Reading and Reflection for Sunday, July 12th, 2026


First Reading: (Isaiah 55:10–11)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 65)

Response: The seed that falls on good ground will yield a fruitful harvest.

Second Reading: (Romans 8:18–23)

Gospel: (Matthew 13:1–23)

Reflection:

Today's readings invite us to examine not the quality of God's word, but the condition of our hearts.

Isaiah reminds us that God's word is never empty. Like the rain and snow that nourish the earth, His word always accomplishes His purpose. Every time we hear Sacred Scripture proclaimed, every homily we receive, every moment of prayer we spend in His presence, God is planting seeds of grace within us. The power lies in the seed itself. The question is whether our hearts are prepared to receive it.

In the Gospel, Jesus presents the familiar Parable of the Sower. At first glance, it seems to be about four different kinds of people. Yet the saints and the early Fathers of the Church teach us that these four soils often exist within each of us.

Sometimes our hearts become like the path, hardened by pride, resentment, disappointment, or indifference. God's word cannot penetrate because we have stopped listening.

At other times, we resemble the rocky ground. We gladly receive God's word when life is peaceful, but when suffering, sacrifice, or trials come, our faith has no deep roots. Genuine discipleship requires perseverance, and roots are formed in hidden moments of prayer, silence, and trust.

Perhaps the greatest danger today is the thorny soil. Jesus tells us that worldly anxieties and the lure of riches choke the word. Many believers do not reject Christ outright. Instead, careers, financial worries, endless entertainment, technology, and constant distractions slowly crowd Him out. Faith does not disappear overnight; it is gradually suffocated by competing priorities.

Then there is the good soil-the heart that listens, understands, welcomes God's grace, and allows it to bear fruit. The good soil does not create the seed; God alone gives life. The disciple's task is simply to remain open, receptive, and faithful. This is the heart of Catholic spirituality: God's grace always comes first, but we must freely cooperate with it.

St. Paul, writing to the Romans, reminds us that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory God has prepared for us. Like seeds hidden beneath the earth, God's greatest works often remain unseen for a time. Growth is gradual. Holiness is cultivated patiently. Grace transforms us little by little until, one day, the hidden life of Christ within us bears abundant fruit.

There is also a beautiful Eucharistic message in today's Gospel. At every Mass, Christ first sows His word through the Liturgy of the Word. Moments later, He gives us not merely His teaching, but Himself in the Holy Eucharist. The same Jesus who scatters the seed now enters our hearts under the appearance of bread and wine.

As we approach the altar today, Jesus asks each of us:

What kind of soil am I?

Is my heart hardened by sin? Shallow in faith? Crowded by distractions? Or open and ready to receive Him?

The wonderful news is that no heart is beyond God's grace. A hardened path can be broken open through repentance. Rocky soil can grow deeper through prayer and perseverance. Thorns can be removed through conversion and detachment from worldly distractions. The Divine Sower never stops sowing because He never gives up on His children.

The miracle of today's Gospel is not simply that the seed is powerful. The greater miracle is that God can transform ordinary hearts into fertile ground that yields thirty, sixty, and one hundredfold.

May we allow Him to do that work within us today.

Saturday, July 11, 2026

Daily Mass Reading and Reflection on Saturday, July 11th, 2026


First Reading: (Isaiah 6:1–8)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 93)

Response: The Lord is King; he is robed in majesty.

Gospel Acclamation

Alleluia, alleluia.

If you are insulted for the name of Christ, blessed are you, for the Spirit of God rests upon you.

Alleluia.

Gospel: (Matthew 10:24–33)

Reflection

In the first reading, the prophet Isaiah encounters the holiness and majesty of God. Standing before the Lord, he becomes painfully aware of his own sinfulness and cries out:

"Woe is me! I am lost, for I am a man of unclean lips."

Yet God does not reject him. Instead, God purifies him, removes his guilt, and prepares him for mission. Then comes the divine invitation:

"Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?"

Isaiah responds with remarkable courage:

"Here am I; send me!"

The Gospel presents Jesus preparing His disciples for a difficult mission. He knows they will encounter rejection, hostility, and persecution. That is why, throughout this passage, He repeatedly encourages them:

"Do not be afraid."

Fear is one of the greatest struggles of the human heart. We fear failure, rejection, illness, uncertainty, and loss.

Psychologists observe that anxiety often begins with endless "what if" questions:

  • What if I fail?

  • What if I lose everything?

  • What if things become worse?

  • What if no one helps me?

The anxious mind continually imagines the worst possible future, drawing us away from the present and trapping us in imagined disasters.

Faith offers a different response.

Whenever fear asks, "What if?" faith replies:

"Even if, the Lord is with me."

Even if things do not unfold according to my plans, the Lord is with me.

Even if I suffer, the Lord is with me.

Even if I experience uncertainty, loss, or pain, the Lord is with me.

This perspective changes everything.

Faith does not always remove life's storms, but it enables us to stand firmly within them.

Jesus reinforces this truth when He reminds His disciples:

"Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? Yet not one of them falls to the ground apart from your Father. Even the hairs of your head are all counted."

God knows every detail of our lives. Every burden, every hidden struggle, every tear is seen by our loving Father.

The psalm proclaims:

"The Lord is King; he is robed in majesty."

This is the foundation of Christian courage.

Fear does not reign.

Anxiety does not reign.

Darkness does not reign.

Death does not reign.

God alone reigns.

Whenever we forget this truth, fear grows stronger. But whenever we remember who sits upon the throne, peace begins to return.

Most of us may never experience dramatic persecution, but every day we are called to witness to Christ through honesty, forgiveness, compassion, integrity, and faithful living.

Jesus reminds us:

"Everyone who acknowledges me before others, I also will acknowledge before my Father in heaven."

Faith cannot remain hidden.

Like Isaiah, each one of us hears God asking today:

"Whom shall I send?"

The question is not whether God calls us-He does.

The real question is whether we will answer in fear or in faith.

Today's readings leave us with several important lessons:

  • God calls imperfect people. Like Isaiah, we may feel unworthy, but God purifies and strengthens those He calls.

  • Do not allow "what if" to control your life. Replace it with the confidence of "even if, the Lord is with me."

  • God knows every detail of your life. Nothing escapes His loving care.

  • Courage is not the absence of fear; it is trusting God in the midst of fear.

  • When God asks, "Whom shall I send?" may our response always be:

"Here I am, Lord; send me."

Amen.

Friday, July 10, 2026

We Can't Out Memorize Machines: The AI Mini Piece


So today I was thinking about AI.

It feels exactly like the old California Gold Rush the 1800s, except now the gold is silicon, data, and compute. On Wall Street, fund managers are minting billionaires, and the returns are eye-popping. Trillions of dollars have already been poured into building AI and into every company that touches it.

Most people are overwhelmed. Worried. Convinced this new gold mine will make us all unemployed. So we do what humans do best, we panic and feel hopeless.

But here's the truth: we're still the humans. We're the ones who build, direct, and use the tools.

The only way forward is to be intentional. Most of us grew up in a school system that rewarded memorization. In the age of AI, that's no longer enough. AI will outperform any human at memorization every single time. It has already ingested vast libraries of books, formulas, research, and ideas. Ask even the smartest human alive, and they'll hesitate, misremember, or need time to think. Machines don't.

So our challenge isn't memorizing, it's understanding.

Understanding how things work.
Understanding how ideas connect.
Understanding how systems fit together.

That's how we win with AI, not against it.

We can't fight it. It's here to stay. The people and organizations driving this technology have invested trillions of dollars, and they're not about to walk away from those investments.

The real opportunity isn't competing with AI at what it does best. It's becoming better at what makes us human: judgment, creativity, wisdom, empathy, and the ability to connect ideas in meaningful ways.

What do you think, pals?

It was Just a Matter of Time


 

Daily Mass Reading and Reflection Friday, July 10th, 2026


First Reading: (Hosea 14:1–9)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 51)

Response: My mouth shall proclaim your praise.

Gospel: (Matthew 10:16–23)

Reflection 

Yesterday's Gospel reminded us that Jesus instructed His apostles not to worry about material possessions. A laborer deserves his wage, and those who receive the blessings of ministry are called to support those who minister to them. Freely we have received; freely we are to give.

Yet today's Gospel reminds us that while ministry brings blessings and grace, it is also carried out on rough terrain. The path of ministry is rocky, slippery, and muddy.

Many people admire the outward appearance of ministry. They see ministers being praised, respected, and honored. They notice the benefits that sometimes accompany ministry. But they often fail to see the hardships hidden beneath the surface.

Jesus makes no attempt to flatter His apostles. Instead, He tells them plainly:

"I am sending you out like sheep among wolves."

The apostles must be prepared to face fear, suffering, and persecution.

Who are these wolves?

First, the wolves represent kings, governments, leaders, and systems that oppose the truth because the Gospel exposes evil and makes them uncomfortable. These are those who seek to suppress the truth rather than embrace it.

Second, the wolves represent persecution itself. The apostles will be hated, falsely accused, imprisoned, and even killed because of Christ.

Third, there will be betrayal from within. Jesus warns that brother will betray brother, parents their children, and children their parents. Even among believers, there will be those who cooperate with evil systems and turn against those who faithfully proclaim the Gospel.

Fourth, the wolves include those who reject God's message. Some may even call themselves believers while refusing to accept the truth of the Gospel.

The Rough Terrain of Ministry

The difficulties are not only spiritual.

Some places are physically difficult to reach. Ministers must cross mountains, rivers, forests, and dangerous roads. Some travel long distances on foot. Others journey by sea and face the dangers of storms or shipwreck.

Even today, many parishes remain isolated and difficult to access. Some have no motorable roads. Yet a faithful minister must be willing to endure hardship for the sake of God's people.

Unfortunately, some ministers desire only the comforts of ministry. They seek its privileges but avoid its sacrifices. They want a ministry filled with honor rather than one marked by suffering.

But Jesus never promised a comfortable ministry.

He said:

"I am sending you out like sheep among wolves."

Every minister must therefore be ready to suffer for the Gospel, to stand courageously for the truth, and to proclaim it boldly, even when it is unpopular, even when it challenges governments, communities, or individuals.

Fear must never silence the Gospel.


Amen 🙏 

Thursday, July 9, 2026

Daily Mass Readings and Reflection Thursday, July 9th, 2026


First Reading: (Hosea 11:1, 3–4, 8–9)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 80)

Response: Let Your face shine on us, Lord, and we shall be saved.

Gospel:(Matthew 10:7–15)

Reflection

Today's Gospel begins with Jesus giving His apostles a final instruction before sending them on their mission. Having already empowered and commissioned them, He now reminds them: "You received without payment; give without payment" (Matthew 10:8).

Jesus is referring to the authority and spiritual gifts He freely entrusted to His apostles. Since they did not earn or purchase these gifts, they must not turn ministry into a source of personal profit. The proclamation of the Gospel, the celebration of the sacraments, and the service of God's people are sacred responsibilities that should never be commercialized.

This teaching is reflected in the evangelical counsel of poverty, by which priests and religious renounce attachment to material possessions. They are called to avoid the pursuit of wealth so that their hearts remain fixed on Christ and His mission. Jesus' instruction to carry no gold, silver, or extra provisions is a reminder that ministers must rely first on God's providence rather than on material security.

At the same time, Jesus also says, "The laborer deserves his food." While ministry is offered freely, those who benefit from it have a responsibility to support those who dedicate their lives to God's service. Priests and religious often have no businesses or other means of income because they have devoted themselves entirely to the work of the Gospel. Therefore, the faithful should care for their material needs with generosity and gratitude.

Let us pray for all ministers of the Church, that they may remain detached from worldly wealth and faithfully serve God's people with pure hearts. Let us also remember our responsibility to support them, enabling them to continue their mission without the burden or temptation of seeking material gain.

Amen