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Humility Is Key

In 05 Homilies by Fr. Reid on 2016/04/10 at 12:00 AM

When we come together to celebrate the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, after we make the Sign of the Cross, the very first thing we do is call to mind our sins, and then we make a public acknowledgement of our sinfulness by praying together the Confiteor.
This is an ancient prayer that has varied over time, but its usage at the beginning of Mass has been a mainstay in both Eastern and Western liturgies for many, many centuries now.
The purpose of the Confiteor is not simply to acknowledge our guilt before God, but also to dispose ourselves to receive His grace.
And to emphasize our contrition, we are encouraged to beat our breasts three times as we say the words: “through my fault, through my fault, through my most grievous fault” – a homage of sorts to the humble tax collector we hear about in today’s Gospel.
Today’s Gospel parable gives us a very important look into the mind of Christ and how He views sinners.
In His parable our Lord compares a Pharisee and a tax collector. The irony of this story is that Pharisees were supposed to be holy and righteous people, while tax collectors were thought to be the most morally bankrupt people in ancient Hebrew society.
Yet it is the humble tax collector whom our Lord holds out to us as a model in the parable. Unlike the Pharisee, who is convinced of his own righteousness, the tax collector fully recognizes and admits his sinfulness in the face of the Almighty.
What we learn in this parable is that even the worst sinners can be made righteous in the eyes of God. Regardless of the gravity or number of our sins, there is hope for us all.
Even if we have committed the most terrible of sins – and even done so repeatedly – we can still be made righteous; we can still be saved!
The key is humility. This is why the Confiteor at the beginning of Mass is so important: it helps us to be more humble, and this makes us more pleasing to God.
Our first reading shows us that not only does the virtue of humility help to justify us in God’s eyes, our humility disposes God to listen to our prayers. Sirach tells us that: “the prayer of the lowly pierces the clouds; it does not rest until it reaches its goal.”
As we know, humility is nothing more than a recognition of the truth about oneself. It is through the virtue of humility that we see ourselves as we truly are in God’s eyes.
Humility is the recognition that God is God, and that we’re not – and that we’re in constant need of His grace and mercy. Thus, it is the foundational virtue that we all must cultivate if we ever hope to grow in holiness.
Humility shows us our sinfulness and spiritual poverty; it also shows us how good God is, and how merciful He desires to be to all mankind. Yet without humility, we have no claim on God’s mercy.
The beautiful thing is that the more humble we are here on earth, the more exalted we will be in Heaven! Jesus Himself tells us in the Gospel today that, “whoever exalts himself will be humbled, and the one who humbles himself will be exalted.”
We see this played out in the life of the Blessed Virgin Mary, who, during her life on earth, perfectly embodied this most important of virtues. And now in Heaven she is the most powerful, glorious, and exalted saint of all!
Our Gospel makes another point that we should carefully heed. That is that we should be careful of judging both others and ourselves. The Pharisee makes two critical errors: thinking too highly of himself, and too quickly thinking poorly of the tax collector.
When we see others commit sin, especially if the sin is grave, we are often quick to impugn the character of that person, often ascribing to them motives that we have no way of knowing are present in that person’s mind and heart.
And yet at the same time, when we are caught in a serious sin, how often do we make excuses for our behavior? How often do we hold others to a higher standard than we hold ourselves? How often do we think more of ourselves than we really should?
During this past year I’ve made it a point to speak a lot about the nature of sin. This is because I want you to understand, brothers and sisters, that sin is an affliction, a cancer.
It is the most destructive force in the universe, capable of robbing a person of eternal salvation – and there’s no greater tragedy than that.
If we do not quickly repent of a sin or if we fail to root out a sin from our lives, it quickly becomes an enslaving habit. And if the habitual sin is mortal, its binding power is all the more fierce, making it even harder to be free of it.
So while sin is an affliction that one brings upon himself through his own choices, as we consider sin’s cancerous and destructive power, we can see that our fellow sinners are in need of our pity more than they are in need of our wrath and judgment.
The truth of the matter is that we never know what circumstances have led a person to commit the sins he commits. So we mustn’t judge their hearts.
But let’s be clear about something: having pity on a fellow sinner doesn’t mean that we should ever excuse sin. Sin not only hurts the sinner and those around him, it is an offense to God and should therefore be always avoided, and at all cost.
So while we should never judge another person’s heart, we are called to judge actions.
If we see that someone is doing something wrong, we should – in charity to that person andout of love for God – point that out to them, for correcting or admonishing a sinner is a
spiritual work of mercy.

But our aim in correcting others should never be to appease our own anger or to inflate ourown sense of self-righteousness. Rather, because sin is so destructive, our aim should always
be that person’s repentance and freedom from the cancer of sin.

This is especially important for parents to remember as they admonish their children. Whileit is natural for parents to get angry when they see their children sin, anger mustn’t be the
driving factor in correcting a child; concern for their soul should be!

If ever we find it difficult to admonish a fellow sinner without pride or rashness of judgment,we would do well to consider our own sins and our own need for mercy.
Again, this is why the virtue of humility is so very necessary! Humility helps us to see thatwhenever a person sins, even if they sin against us, it is still God Who is most offended by
the sin. And humility reminds us of the many times we wronged others.

As we call to mind our own sins, humility helps us to bear wrong patiently, which is anotherspiritual work of mercy.
My brothers and sisters, each of us is a sinner in needs of God’s mercy. Let us then bear withone another patiently, correcting each other as necessary out of love.
And let us always strive to confess our own sins and faults courageously and humbly so thatwe may always be pleasing in God’s sight and receive His mercy.
Our Lady, Virgin Most Powerful and Refuge of Sinners

 

27 October 2013

© Reverend Timothy Reid

Fr. Reid is the pastor of St. Ann Catholic Church, Charlotte, NC

Homilies from June 17, 2012 onward have audio.
To enable the audio, lease go directly to Fr. Reid’s homily homilies and select the matching date.

Link to Homilies:
http://stanncharlotte.org/content/index.php?option=com_content&view=section&id=8&Itemid=61

 

“Let us always be brutally sincere”

In 01 Daily Meditations on 2016/04/09 at 12:00 AM
If that dumb devil mentioned in the Gospel gets into your soul, he will spoil everything. On the other hand, if you get rid of him immediately, everything will turn out well; you will carry on merrily, and all will be well. Resolve firmly to be “savagely sincere” in spiritual direction (always keeping your good manners) and to be sincere immediately. (The Forge, 127)

As I have already said, we all have our defects. But our defects should never be a reason for us to turn away from God’s Love. Rather should they lead us to cling to that Love, sheltering within his divine goodness, as the warriors of old did by climbing into their suits of armour. Our defence is the cry ecce ego, quia vocasti me, here I am, because you have called me. Just because we discover how fragile we are is no reason to run away from God. What we must do is to attack our defects, precisely because we know that God trusts us.

How shall we be able to overcome our meanness? Let me make the point again because it is so important: by being humble and by being sincere in spiritual direction and in the Sacrament of Penance. Go to those who direct your souls with your hearts open wide. Do not close your hearts, for if the dumb devil gets in, it is very difficult to get rid of him.

Forgive me for insisting on these points, but I believe it is absolutely necessary for you to have deeply impressed on your minds the fact that humility, together with its immediate consequence, sincerity; are the thread which links the other means together. These two virtues act as a foundation on which a solid victory can be built. If the dumb devil gets inside a soul, he ruins everything. On the other hand, if he is cast out immediately, everything turns out well; we are happy and life goes forward properly. Let us always be brutally sincere, but in a good mannered way.

I want one thing to be clear: I am not as worried about the heart or the flesh as I am about pride. Be humble. If ever you think you are completely and utterly right, you are not right at all. Go to spiritual direction with your soul wide open. Don’t close it because, I repeat, the dumb devil will get in, and it is difficult to get him out again.

Remember the poor boy who was possessed by a devil, and the disciples were unable to set him free. Only Our Lord could free him, by prayer and fasting. On that occasion the Master worked three miracles. The first enabled the boy to hear because, when the dumb devil gets control, the soul refuses to listen. The second made him speak, and the third expelled the devil. (Friends of God, 187-188)

Our Father’s Plan

In 15 Audio on 2016/04/09 at 12:00 AM

Host – Scott Hahn & Jeff Cavins

Want to learn the key to reading the Bible and understanding the big picture of Our Father’s plan for His creation? Hosts Scott Hahn and Jeff Cavins provide an overview of the Bible’s external structure before delving into its rich content. 

Our Father’s Plan Back to Series List
Program Name Audio File Name – Click to download
1. Reading Through The Bible 

Host – Scott Hahn & Jeff Cavins  iq_2021.mp3 You could open up the Bible and start reading; but do you know where to start? Scott Hahn and Jeff Cavins will deal with this throughout the series as they discuss how to read the Bible in chronological order while telling us what the Bible is saying. It is important to know it’s a book of history. You can’t just open it up and start reading. It doesn’t read like a novel. They will show how to read the Bible in Chronological order. Scott outlines four key theological concepts and foundation principals. They look at what we can do with it and how we can apply it. They also describe Biblical covenants and look at the six covenants that were made throughout the Bible.

2. History Of Early World 

Host – Scott Hahn & Jeff Cavinsiq_2022.mp3 The first 11 chapters contain the main themes of the Bible. You can compare them to an acorn that sprouts a shoot and becomes a tree. They take a look at the first parts of Genesis 1-11. They say that genealogy acts like a camera lens. They also talk about the covenant that was made with Noah and how his sons spread throughout the land. Scott talks more in depth about the four themes and what they mean. He also describes the differences between a contract and a covenant.

3. Patriarchs 

Host – Scott Hahn & Jeff Cavinsiq_2023.mp3 Scott and Jeff take a look at God’s blood covenant with Abraham which takes place in the second part of Genesis (12-50). They discuss how the three promises that God made to Abraham became covenants. They also talk about the patriarchs, what they represent and why blessings were important. They highlight the Bible’s call to fidelity to Our Lord through Joseph’s bondage into slavery and his rise to power in Egypt.

4. Israel In Egypt 

Host – Scott Hahn & Jeff Cavinsiq_2024.mp3 Scott and Jeff look at Abraham and the three promises and covenants that were made between him and God. They talk about the book of Exodus and explain difficult areas of the book. They talk about Israel as being God’s first-born son and discuss the covenant that was made at Mount Sini. They look at why cattle, sheep and goats were sacred for Egyptians. He also explains the breakaway from Egypt and the Mt. Sinai covenant. They then talk about the “golden calf” incident and the result from it and why the Levites were the ones who became priests.

5. Conquest Of Canaan 

Host – Scott Hahn & Jeff Cavinsiq_2025.mp3 Scott and Jeff look at Israel’s forty year travail in the desert. They look at the books of Deutoronomy and Numbers. The book of Numbers describes the Israelite’s forty year wanderings. Scott and Jeff also cover the Dueteronomic covenant which established the political constitution for the nation of Israel from their time until the coming of Christ. It was to Israel what our Constitution is to us. They also explain why God required animal sacrifices.

6. Judges 

Host – Scott Hahn & Jeff Cavinsiq_2026.mp3 Scott and Jeff examine the rise and fall of the nation of Israeli. They talk about the books of Joshua and Judges. They also talk about a five point cycle of sin that takes place seven times during this period. The cycle starts out by finding ourselves in sin until we are delivered by God and then we go back to silence. Every time during this cycle, God raised up leaders who were called Judges. There were 12 judges, 6 who were major judges and 6 who were minor ones. Scott talks about the three parts of Joshua and the battle of Jericho.

7. United Kingdom 

Host – Scott Hahn & Jeff Cavinsiq_2027.mp3 Scott and Jeff take a look at Israel’s three major kings: Saul, David, and Solomon. The books of 1/2 Samuel and 1 Kings describe these kingdoms. The absence of a king represented a lack of holy leadership. Samuel warned the people of what a king would do and King Solomon ended up doing what Samuel said a king would do. They also look at how the second promise God made to Abraham was fulfilled in David. The kingdom lasted 120 years and was divided into 40 years for the three kings. This time is considered to be Israel’s Golden Age.

8. Divided Kingdom 

Host – Scott Hahn & Jeff Cavinsiq_2028.mp3 Jeff and Scott examine the rebellion against King Solomon’s son around the year 930 BC in 1 and 2 Kings and how it divided Israel in two. They explain the importance of the prophets and knowing which part of Israel they are talking to. This sheds light on what they are saying and why. They also look at the story of Jonah and the prophets Daniel and Ezekiel.

9. The Exile 

Host – Scott Hahn & Jeff Cavinsiq_2029.mp3 Scott and Jeff discuss the Babylonian exile and Israel’s return from exile. Judaism begins during their return. Israel endured 70 years in exile. Their return came about in 3 stages. Scott and Jeff examine the books of Ezra and Nehemiah who were among the first to return from exile. Haggai, Zechariah and Malachi wrote at this time as well. They conclude their discussion on the Old Testament by considering the Maccabbean revolt and the book of Maccabbees.

10. Gospels I 

Host – Scott Hahn & Jeff Cavinsiq_2030.mp3 Scott and Jeff describe how to navigate the New Testament. They discuss the New Testament’s structure, the Gospels’ main themes and intended audience and how they portrayed Christ. They also examine the similarities between Jesus and Moses.

11. Gospels II 

Host – Scott Hahn & Jeff Cavinsiq_2031.mp3 Scott and Jeff examine St. John’s Gospel which is considered to be the most symbolic. It gives us a reliable history that is almost sacramental in character. They talk about the sacraments that are found in John’s Gospel: Baptism and the Eucharist. They also talk about why the Eucharist is really the Flesh of Christ and not a symbol and why for many years no one questioned it. It is in John 6:4 that Jesus links himself to the Passover and the Exodus. The Old Testament lamb is a symbol of Christ.

12. Acts I 

Host – Scott Hahn & Jeff Cavinsiq_2032.mp3 Jeff and Scott introduce the early church. The Book of Acts is the last historical book. It fulfils the third promise to Abraham as Jesus commands His followers to spread the Gospel. They look at the Book Acts’ division in three parts which covers 29 years of the Church’s expansion. They also outline a theological approach to Acts and discuss Sola Fide and Sola Scriptura.

13. Acts II 

Host – Scott Hahn & Jeff Cavinsiq_2033.mp3 Scott and Jeff conclude the series by examining the books of Hebrews and Revelations. Hebrews sheds light on how the New Covenant fulfills the Old Covenant. Jesus is the New Melchizedek. The doctrine of the Eucharist is the basis of the New Covenant. They also talk about how to understand the heart of the message of Revelation. Through the Mass, we will win the spiritual battle. They look at the Book of Revelation’s insights into the anti-Christ and the rapture and the image of Mary as the Ark of the New Covenant.

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Blessed John Henry Newman

In 05 Homilies by Fr. Reid on 2016/04/09 at 12:00 AM

 

Blessed John Henry Newman, the great 19th century English convert and preacher, once wrote that: “Life is short, death is certain, and the world to come is everlasting.”
And because of these three simple truths, Blessed John, as well as all the saints throughout history, have encouraged us to spend our earthly lives preparing for Heaven. That’s really the primary message of our readings today, i.e., that we must be prepared to meet our Lord.
Coming from the same chapter of the Gospel of Luke, our Gospel today follows upon last Sunday’s Gospel quite well.
Last Sunday’s Gospel reminded us of the dangers of being attached to the things of this world, while this Sunday’s Gospel encourages us to store up riches in Heaven so that we might be well prepared for meeting our Lord.
Like last Sunday, today’s Gospel reminds us of the necessity of preparing for the afterlife, but this Sunday we are also told that our Lord has certain expectations of us based upon the natural gifts, talents, and graces He has given us in this life.
Yet even though our Gospel speaks of judgment and punishment and the expectations our Lord has of us, there is great hope expressed in our readings as well. Specifically our readings call us to live with faith in God’s goodness.
Living in this way: conscious that we will one day face judgment for our earthly lives, yet hopeful in God’s mercy and in His desire to save us from our sins, is at the heart of the Christian understanding of God and of how our relationship with Him should be ordered.
Specifically, our Catholic faith teaches us that there is a certain balance to be struck in the way we approach our Lord and relate to Him. Having a properly ordered relationship with God now while we live on earth prepares us to meet Him face to face in eternity.
By faith we know that God is our loving Creator, Who has endowed each of us with certain blessings and talents that He expects us to use in a way that glorifies Him. In short, our Lord expects a certain return on His investment in us.
Moreover, our Lord gives each person every grace necessary to be saved, and He implants within our hearts an understanding of His laws – of what is truly right and wrong – so that we may live according to His commandments. This is why God has certain expectations of us.
Yet while there is a certain fear that is appropriate in our relationship with God, our Lord also encourages us to trust in Him and in His promise of mercy.
As Jesus says to His disciples today: “Do not be afraid any longer, little flock, for your Father is pleased to give you the kingdom.”
Look at the tenderness of our Lord’s words to us! In these words we can see that God wants to save us, and that He wants us to have faith in His desire to save us!
My dear brothers and sisters, our God is a mighty God to be sure, One Who is all-powerful and all-knowing. He is the Creator and Ruler of all things. Nothing exists or remains in existence without Him.
And yet despite His ineffable greatness, He remains a personal God – One we can come to know. He is a God of love, a God of mercy. He is a God Who suffers both with and for His people. He is a Good Shepherd Who sees us as His flock.
And it’s for these reasons most of all that we should have faith in His power and desire to save us from our sins. Indeed, faith in God must be the foundation of our relationship with
Him. It is a properly formed faith that rightly orders our relationship with God – helping us

to both love and fear Him – and thus preparing us to meet Him.

The first reading from the Book of Wisdom speaks of the faith the ancient Israelites had intheir covenant with God. The Israelites knew that they were God’s chosen people and that
He would save them from their foes.

Certainly our Lord did just that when He delivered them from the slavery of the Egyptiansand eventually led them into the Promised Land.
Yet let us remember that our Lord did not lead the Israelites directly to the Promised Landafter freeing them from the cruel slavery of Egypt. Because of their lack of faith that led
them into sin, they had to wander in the desert for 40 years.

But once their faith was purified and strong, our Lord once again did mighty deeds in themidst, and the Israelites were allowed to enter into the Promised Land, the great
foreshadowing of our hope of entering Heaven.

The passage from the Letter to the Hebrews describes for us the essence of faith and its linkto our hope for salvation, as we see so perfectly lived out by Abraham.
Abraham’s faith was tested in incredible ways by our Lord, yet he nevertheless was obedientto all that the Lord bid him to do, confident in the promises the Lord made to him.
Ultimately, our readings today call us to examine what we believe about God and whether ornot we are living our lives according to our beliefs. Ultimately our readings call us to
examine our faith in the Lord.

My dear brothers and sisters, do you believe that our Lord in Heaven wants to save you fromyour sins that you might enjoy eternal life? Do you believe that He loves you and is giving
you every grace you need to be saved?

Do you believe as well that He will be our judge, and that one day we will have to make anaccount for both the good and the evil we have committed in this life?
If so, then be sure to live your life in a way that is consistent with this belief! “Gird yourloins and light your lamps, and be like servants who await their master’s return from a
wedding, ready to open immediately when He comes and knocks.”

Remember: “Life is short, death is certain, and the world to come is everlasting.” And while our Lord is faithful to His promise of mercy for those who fear Him, once we have died, we must be ready to face His judgment.
Therefore, let us draw near to His altar, knowing full well that we are sinners who mustn’t presume upon our own merits, but who are confident, nonetheless, in His great compassion and mercy.
Let us turn to our God and call upon His mercy, displaying to Him our wounds, seeking from Him forgiveness for our sins and failures, and hastening to Him for divine protection.
And let us do this all with an unwavering faith, a faith like that of Abraham, that we may indeed be those faithful and prudent stewards who are ready for their Master’s return.

11 August 2013

© Reverend Timothy Reid

Fr. Reid is the pastor of St. Ann Catholic Church, Charlotte, NC

Homilies from June 17, 2012 onward have audio.
To enable the audio, lease go directly to Fr. Reid’s homily homilies and select the matching date.

Link to Homilies:
http://stanncharlotte.org/content/index.php?option=com_content&view=section&id=8&Itemid=61

Liberation From Sin

In 06 Scripture & Theology on 2016/04/06 at 12:00 AM

The beginning of Luke’s gospel is written in a style that was common for historical works in the Greek world and Luke was written for a gentile population that was very familiar with Greek influences. The introduction tell us that this gospel is historically accurate, is not private opinions but from those who knew of Jesus, and it is meant to strengthen the faith of Christians.
Jesus has just finished his forty days of fasting and praying in the desert (sounds like Lent) and he returns to Nazareth where he grew up. He proclaims the word of God spoken by the prophet Isaiah. The people of this time expected that the Messiah would free Israel from the domination of the Romans. So they saw this passage promising their national independence.
The word of God that Jesus proclaims is about renewal. The people will be freed from slavery (idols), debt (guilt), and imprisonment (from sin). The word of God announces liberation from sin not from domination by the Romans. This reading announces a turning point. For the people hearing it the time has come to choose a new path. Hearing the word of God is the beginning.
Will we hear the word of God today? Are we ready to know that we are at a turning point? Are we ready to follow where the word of God is calling us? Let’s respond “Amen Amen”.

Luke 1:1-4, 4: 14-21

Deacon Jack Staub at St. Mathew Catholic Church, Charlotte, NC

On the Mercy of God

In 05 Homilies by Fr. Reid on 2016/04/03 at 12:00 AM

• Today is an extraordinary day in the life of the Church, for today is Divine Mercy Sunday, and it is the day that two of our more recent popes: Pope John XXIII and Pope John Paul II, are being canonized!
• The canonization of Pope John Paul II today is especially important, for it was John Paul II who gave us this remarkable feast of Divine Mercy Sunday in 2000.
• More remarkable even still, John Paul II died on the vigil of this feast in 2005, and he was beatified on this same feast day in 2011.
• Many of you are familiar with St. Faustina, the Polish nun who received apparitions of our Lord Jesus in the 1930s. In these visions our Lord asked St. Faustina to spread a message around the world.
• The message from our Lord was simple: that God’s mercy is deeper and richer and greater than any of us can ever imagine – and that it is available to all mankind, most especially the worst of sinners.
• Jesus first appeared to St. Faustina in 1931, dressed in white and holding His left hand to His chest while holding His right hand as if giving a blessing – as can be seen in the Divine Mercy image.
• From our Lord’s wounded chest flowed two rays: one of red, denoting blood; the other of a lighter shade, denoting water – just as flowed from His side pierced by the centurion’s lance. The pale ray stands for the water that makes souls righteous. The red ray stands for the Blood that is the life of souls.
• Upon appearing to St. Faustina in this way, Jesus said to her: “These two rays issued forth from the very depths of My tender mercy when My agonized heart was opened by a lance on the Cross. These rays shield souls from the wrath of My Father. Happy is the one who dwells in their shelter, for the just hand of God shall not lay hold of him.”
• Jesus appeared to St. Faustina because He wants us to receive His mercy now while we are alive on earth, for after we die we must face His justice. And without His mercy, we will perish. Please understand: none of us will make it to Heaven on our own merits. His mercy is our only hope for Heaven.
• Thus, Our Lord desired that this Sunday after Easter be consecrated to His Divine Mercy, and of this feast Jesus said to St. Faustina:
I desire that the Feast of Mercy be a refuge and shelter for all souls, and especially for poor sinners. On that day the very depths of My tender mercy are open. I pour out a whole ocean of graces upon those souls who approach the fount of My mercy. The soul that will go to Confession and receive Holy Communion shall obtain complete forgiveness of sins and punishment. (Divine Mercy in My Soul, n. 699.)
• If you’ve never taken the time to read St. Faustina’s Diary, which is called Divine Mercy in My Soul, I cannot recommend it highly enough to you. For in reading this diary, one is given a clear understanding of the great love our Lord has for all sinners – and how much He desires to give us sinners His mercy.
• Truly, it’s one of the Church’s greatest spiritual treasures from the 20th century. Not only does it tell us of God’s incredible and inexhaustible mercy, but it also tells us how to live a life of mercy, to be merciful to others by treating them with true Christian charity.
• In short, our Lord wants us to know that His love and mercy are greater than any sins we can ever commit. He wants us to know that He loves us no matter how great our sins may be.

• Truly, Jesus is offering us more than just forgiveness for sins. He desires to give us incredible graces to heal and strengthen our souls from whatever spiritual maladies we may suffer from.
• So today is a day of mercy for us. Thus, it is a day for miracles. I encourage all of you to take the time to consider the areas of your lives that are most in need of God’s mercy and healing and to ask for a miracle of mercy!
• Furthermore, Jesus was emphatic with St. Faustina that this devotion to His Divine Mercy is important, because as He said to her: “You will prepare the world for My final coming. (DMIMS, n. 429).
• That’s why today’s feast is so important. According to Saint Faustina’s diary, Jesus said of this feast day:
I am giving them the last hope of salvation; that is, the Feast of My Mercy. If they will not adore My mercy, they will perish for all eternity… tell souls about this great mercy of Mine, because the awful day, the day of My justice, is near. (DMIMS, n. 965)
• And so there is very definitely an urgency in Christ’s words to St. Faustina, an urgency that perhaps our Lord’s 2nd coming isn’t that far in the offing. So today is also a day to think about our sins and truly repent of them.
• But even if the end of the world is still a long way away, we certainly never know when we will die. Any of us can be called to judgment at any time. So we must take advantage of the great graces being held out to us today!
• In fact, any Catholic who attends Mass and receives Holy Communion today, goes to confession within 20 days, and offers prayers for the intentions of the Holy Father, may receive a plenary indulgence for the remission of sin.
• As always, we should do these things “in a spirit that is completely detached from the affection for a sin, even a venial sin.” (Apostolic Penitentiary Decree)
• So that we might all take part in these graces, I ask all of you to please kneel and to reflect for a moment on your sins. Think as well on any areas of your life in which you need a miracle of mercy.
• Together we will first recite An Act of Contrition, followed by an Our Father and the Creed, and the phrase “Jesus, I trust in You” three times. As we do, make a firm act of the will to reject all of your sins and repent of them. Confidently ask as well for any miracle of mercy you may need.

© Reverend Timothy Reid

Fr. Reid is the pastor of St. Ann Catholic Church, Charlotte, NC

Homilies from June 17, 2012 onward have audio.
To enable the audio, lease go directly to Fr. Reid’s homily homilies and select the matching date.

Link to Homilies:
http://stanncharlotte.org/content/index.php?option=com_content&view=section&id=8&Itemid=61

Easter Sunday

In 05 Homilies by Fr. Reid on 2016/03/27 at 12:00 AM

• On Holy Thursday night we remembered Christ as our great high priest as He instituted for us the inseparable gifts of the priesthood and the Eucharist, and as He showed us how to love one another through the humble acts of charity.
• On Good Friday we wept as our great high priest became our paschal lamb. Though priest, Christ incredibly became the innocent victim for our sins, dying a terrible and shameful death – for us and yet because of us.
• And today we celebrate Christ as our conqueror; we celebrate the fact that the Victim has become the Victor! And we, the sheep of His flock, get to share in the glory of His victory – even though we were cause of His victimhood.
• It is for this reason that, of all the great feasts Holy Mother Church celebrates, this feast: Easter – is the greatest of them all! For this is our feast of victory: victory over sin, victory over death, victory over the father of lies and all his minions.
• This is the day that our faith is confirmed, our hope is renewed, and our charity is enflamed!
• And all that remains for us now is to ensure that this victory be not hollow by falling again into the terrible bonds of sin and death, by falling back into our former ways of life.
• At the beginning of Lent, I mentioned that the great Cistercian abbot, St. Bernard of Clairvaux, once wrote that, “The capacity of any one’s soul is judged by the amount of love one possesses” (SBoC: Song of Songs, 27:10).
• His point was that, even though our souls are not material in nature, they have a spiritual capacity to expand or contract, and the more one practices the virtues – especially charity – the more the soul expands.
• And as the soul expands, the soul becomes a more spacious dwelling place for God, and consequently it takes on a greater likeness to God.
• Throughout the past 40 days of Lent, we have taken on the soul-expanding exercises of prayer, fasting, and alms-giving. And in a particular way this Lent, I asked all of you on Ash Wednesday to make reparation for sin – our own and those of the whole world.
• When we make reparation for our sins, we cannot help but grow in charity, for doing so makes our relationship with God whole again – enabling us to love Him more fully.
• Our sins damage our relationship with God, and while our Lord so graciously forgives us whenever we ask for His forgiveness in the confessional, we must still make up for the injustice we have committed against Him by our sins.
• When we make reparation for the sins of others humbly and with a generous heart, our souls expand greatly – for by doing this, we imitate well our Lord, Who with love and generosity beyond compare, gave Himself up to suffering and death so that our sins might be forgiven.
• Now as we celebrate this magnificent feast of Easter, we must ask ourselves if we are willing to continue this soul-expanding pursuit of holiness that we began in Lent.
• Will we continue growing in virtue and self-mastery, or will our old selves prevail?
• My friends, let us not waste the grace that we have received these past 40 days, and let
us not waste the grace of Easter that we are now receiving! Instead let us allow the grace of Lent and Easter to continue transforming and sanctifying us!
• This process of personal transformation and sanctification began, though, not just with Lent, but with our baptism. And today is the day above all others when we should renew our commitment to living a life of holiness.
• In fact immediately after the homily, the Church includes a renewal of our baptismal promises as part of the Easter liturgy. And at that time we will all make the promise the renounce sin so as to live in the freedom of God’s children.
• We will renounce the lure of evil, and we will renounce satan himself. And we will reaffirm all the central tenets of our Catholic faith.
• But my dear friends in Christ, let us do so with integrity of heart and firmness of will. Now that Easter is here, we must not slip back into lives of sin and indifference.
• Let us celebrate with joy this feast of our salvation. Let us honor our Lord, Who is both Priest and Victim, for His great work of redemption, but let us do so by living a life of genuine holiness that increases the love we bear in our souls.
• May our Lord bless all of you abundantly this Easter season!

© Reverend Timothy Reid

Fr. Reid is the pastor of St. Ann Catholic Church, Charlotte, NC

Homilies from June 17, 2012 onward have audio.
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Easter Vigil

In 05 Homilies by Fr. Reid on 2016/03/26 at 12:00 AM
  •   For some of you here tonight, this night will be the most important night of your life. Indeed, this is no ordinary night, for tonight is the night of your redemption!
  •   The various readings from Sacred Scripture tonight remind us of the dramatic story of salvation history. We heard the magnificent story of creation and learned the great lengths to which our Lord has gone throughout history to save man from eternal death.
  •   Through the readings from the prophets, we heard our Lord declare His undying love for us, and we received His promise to be always with us, to provide for us, and ultimately to save us, despite our sinful infidelity to Him.
  •   And finally in the Gospel, we peered into the empty tomb with Mary Magdalene and the other Mary in search of Jesus.
  •   And tonight is the night that we find Him.
  •   No, tonight is no ordinary night. This is not simply the night in which some of you willconvert to a different form of Christianity – as if it’s like the changing of one’s job orpolitical affiliation. The change that takes place tonight is much more radical than that.
  •   Indeed, the change effected within you tonight is not simply a change in your practice ofreligion, but a change in your soul that conforms you more closely to Christ!
  •   And so radical is this change that it will require you to die. However, the death you willdie is no ordinary death, for it will not be your body that dies. Rather, you will die aspiritual death in the waters of baptism; you will die to sin.
  •   Just as the Israelites passed through the waters of the Red Sea, and the evil Pharaoh andhis legions were drowned and washed away in those same waters, so too will every sinyou’ve ever committed be washed away as you pass through the waters of baptism.
  •   Afterwards, you will be clothed in a white garment as the outward sign of yournewfound dignity. And the light of Christ will shine upon your soul, enlightening it withHis truth, His goodness, and His beauty.
  •   Once you have passed through the sacred waters of baptism, you and 6 others heretonight will be strengthened by the Sacrament of Confirmation in order that you maylive out your baptismal promises as good soldiers for Christ.
  •   For all of you who receive it, the Sacrament of Confirmation will complete the goodwork begun in you by the Sacrament of Baptism, and you will be given the grace to liveour beautiful and ancient Catholic faith with fidelity and courage.
  •   Yet in His generosity, our Lord will not leave you on your own as you seek to practiceyour newfound faith. Being a good shepherd, He feeds His flock with the best of foods, for He feeds us with His very self: the Eucharist, which is really and truly His body, blood, soul and divinity.
  •   It is no ordinary night – not only for you who are to be received into the bosom of Holy Mother Church, but for all Christians. It is the night in which the hosts of heaven exult. It is the night that the trumpet of salvation sounds aloud our mighty King’s triumph!
  •   This is the night that the darkness of sin is banished and that Christians are set apart from worldly vices and from the gloom of sin.
  •   This is the night when Christ broke the prison‐bars of death and rose victorious from the underworld. It is a night that, in truth, is as bright as day.
  •   The sanctifying power of this night dispels wickedness, washes faults away, restores innocence to the fallen, and joy to mourners, drives out hatred, fosters concord, and brings down the mighty! Truly, it is a night like no other.
  •   “By most ancient tradition, this is the night of keeping vigil for the Lord, in which, following the Gospel admonition, [we], carrying lighted lamps in our hands, should be like those looking for the Lord when He returns, so that at His coming He may find [us] awake” (Roman Missal).
  •   On this night we keep vigil for our crucified and risen Lord, Who so graciously comes to us through the Sacraments, and Whom we know will come again at the end of time in that final battle between good and evil.
  •   So like the wise virgins who, with lighted lamps and full flasks of oil, were ready at their Master’s call, let us now prepare to enter into the Lord’s banquet – this banquet that will find it’s ultimate fulfillment in Heaven.
  •   May we keep awake in our hearts a lively faith, hope, and charity. And may we all live our Catholic faith with fidelity, courage, and absolute integrity so that we may indeed be made worthy of the promises of Christ.

30 March 2013

© Reverend Timothy Reid

Fr. Reid is the pastor of St. Ann Catholic Church, Charlotte, NC

Homilies from June 17, 2012 onward have audio.
To enable the audio, lease go directly to Fr. Reid’s homily homilies and select the matching date.

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Holy Saturday

In 05 Homilies by Fr. Reid on 2016/03/25 at 12:00 AM

• On Palm Sunday I mentioned that every man’s soul is like a universe unto itself: eternal and mysterious in nature, capable of transcending time and space.
• Like the universe in which we live, our souls are imbued with great beauty and light, giving us the capacity of “shining like the stars in Heaven,” as the prophet Daniel says.
• But within our souls are places of great cold and darkness as well, capable of refusing
even the gentle and merciful grace of our Creator and Redeemer.
• Though created to shine and burn with the blazing truth of God’s love and grace, the
black holes of sin and division within us can sometimes get the upper hand, blinding us
to the truth about ourselves and to the possibility of salvation that Faith holds out to us.
• This struggle between light and darkness, between good and evil, between the coldness
of sin and the warmth of love, began in a garden thousands of years ago with our first
parents.
• Created spotless and without sin, created with heavenly beauty and endowed with
preternatural gifts, created simply to love and serve God, at the prompting of the serpentine father of lies, our first parents turned away from Love Itself and betrayed Him.
• In so doing they opened up a chasm between God and man that was never meant to exist…a chasm that, to this day, man – of his own power – is unable to bridge. Their betrayal opened up a black hole within the soul of man.
• The effect of their tragic disobedience was so complete and far-reaching that every man, save our Lord and His Immaculate Mother, has been marked with a propensity to sin known as concupiscence, which is nothing more than a willingness to allow the black holes within our souls to dominate us.
• And dominate us they can. Sin has a magnetic power that can easily enslave us and lead us to despair if we make a habit of willingly giving ourselves over to it.
• Over the thousands of years of human history, we’ve seen the black holes of sin within men’s souls open up with ferocious tenacity, wreaking havoc and destruction on a monumental level.
• Even in our own epoch of history, evil has wreaked unthinkable havoc through the machinations of men like Stalin, Hitler, Hussein, and bin Laden. Yet as we learned yesterday, evil is only as powerful as God allows it to be.
• As seemingly powerful as evil can be, as overwhelming and oppressive as it sometimes appears, evil is never a match for the power of Love. And yesterday we recalled the greatest act of love mankind has ever known: our Lord’s self-immolation on the cross.
• Without this incredible act of love, none of us could be saved. Christ’s death on the cross is what makes eternal life possible for us. This is what we celebrate tonight.
• Tonight we see our Lord’s great love for man come to full blossom as Christ rises from the dead, giving us the sure and certain hope that, someday we, too, will rise again from the grave to enjoy the unending bliss of Heaven!
• On Good Friday, after Jesus had died, one of the soldiers thrust a lance into our Lord’s sacred side, causing blood and water to flow out.
• While this seems like a senseless act of brutality on the part of that soldier, the Fathers of the Church have commented that in ripping open our Lord’s side in this way, this soldier unwittingly opened up the source of the sacramental life of the Church!
• And tonight, 12 of you will stand at the foot of the Cross and allow those life-giving streams to wash over you. 5 of you will be washed in the cleansing waters of baptism, symbolized by the water flowing from Jesus’ side, and all 12 of you will eat and drink of our Lord’s Body and Blood, symbolized by the blood flowing from His side.
• Just as the side of Adam was opened up so that, from one of His ribs, Eve, his bride could be formed, so too does our Lord allow His own side to be opened so that His bride, the Church, may be born through the Sacraments.
• In giving you the precious gift of His very self, our Lord asks those of you standing at the foot of His cross to make a commitment to Him: simply to live in a manner that makes you worthy of the promise of eternal salvation!
• Knowing full well the weaknesses of human flesh, of our propensity to allow the black holes of concupiscence to dominate us, He gives us the sacraments to strengthen us.
• While Baptism frees us from our sins, Confirmation strengthens within us the gifts of the Holy Spirit: wisdom, knowledge, counsel, understanding, piety, courage, and fear of the Lord, so that we might live our Catholic faith with integrity.
• Our confirmation gives us the ability to proclaim our faith boldly as good soldiers for Christ, even to the point of suffering death for the Faith!
• What’s more, in receiving the Eucharist, we are nourished with our Lord’s own Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity, so that we might draw closer in union with Him and receive the antidote to our daily venial sins.
• And for those times that we fail to love our Lord as we should, He gives us the Sacrament of Reconciliation by which we can repent of our sins and receive His mercy and forgiveness!
• As such, the sacraments give us all the grace we need to live our beautiful faith well!
• My brothers and sisters, in rising from the dead, Jesus gives us all the hope of eternal
life! The Paschal candle burning beside me tonight as I stand in this pulpit is the sign of
the light of Christ burning brightly – even in the terrible darkness of our fallen world.
• The candle that you carried with you tonight as we entered the church, and which we
will soon light again at the renewal of our baptismal promises, is the sign of the light of
Christ burning within your own soul through the grace of baptism.
• It is a light powerful enough to dispel even the darkness of the black holes within us.
• Having been enlightened by Christ, may we all walk always as children of the light and
keep the flame of faith alive in our hearts. When the Lord comes again, may we go out to meet Him with all the saints in the heavenly kingdom.”

© Reverend Timothy Reid

Fr. Reid is the pastor of St. Ann Catholic Church, Charlotte, NC

Homilies from June 17, 2012 onward have audio.
To enable the audio, lease go directly to Fr. Reid’s homily homilies and select the matching date.

Link to Homilies:
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Good Friday

In 05 Homilies by Fr. Reid on 2016/03/24 at 12:00 AM

• With today’s reading of our Lord’s passion, we are presented once again with the desolate panorama of human sinfulness in all of its heartbreaking ugliness.
• Our Lord’s Passion demonstrates for us the depths of depravity to which man can fall. It is a stark reminder that within all of us lies the capacity for great wickedness.
• Fittingly, our Lord’s passion begins in a garden. Just as our Lord was betrayed in a garden by Adam and Eve in times primordial, so too is He betrayed again in a garden by Judas and the leaders of the Jewish people.
• Thus, what should be a place of natural beauty and peace becomes the scene of man’s greatest display of true ugliness and division.
• But in our Lord’s Passion we also see the comparatively greater beauty of love manifested in patient courage and sacrifice as we witness Jesus willingly embracing the sufferings foretold in the Scriptures that were the necessary price for man’s salvation.
• This is why when Judas and a band of soldiers and guards from the chief priest and the Pharisees approached our Lord in the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus answers without hesitation that He is the One Whom they are looking for.
• Moreover, Christ knew full well what awaited Him in submitting to arrest.
• And yet so pure and courageous was our Lord’s declaration of His identity and His
willingness to suffer, that St. John records that Judas and the cohort of guards turned
away and fell to the ground when our Lord said, “I AM.”
• In this small detail from Scripture we are given a foreshadowing of the great power of
love to conquer evil. And this is a detail of which we must not lose sight today.
• One of the defining traits of the devil is that he is a liar. Indeed, satan is the father of lies. In fact, all evil is in some sense a lie, for evil stands against and counterfeits that which is good and true and beautiful.
• One of the lies that the evil one constantly manufactures is that he is stronger and more powerful than God, and that evil has the power to conquer truth, goodness, and beauty. And at first glance, it may seem that our Lord’s suffering and death bear this out.
• But the evil and bitter hatred that we see poured out upon our Lord by Judas, the chief priests, the Pharisees, and the Romans is effective only to the degree that our Lord allows it to be so.
• When we examine the story closely, St. John shows us that while Jesus is the victim of the evil machinations of His foes, He is a victim only because He is also the priest who offers Himself. His death is completely voluntary and at His own command.
• Yes, Jesus is the victim, the One immolated on the altar of the cross for our sins. But He is also the great high priest who offers Himself willingly up to death so that we might live!
• When He mounts that cross, Jesus does so as a king mounting a throne. And in His suffering on that cross, Jesus reigns in majesty! What we learn from the Passion is that our Lord allows evil to happen only to draw a greater good from it, viz., our salvation.
• St. John of the Cross once wrote that: “Love is repaid by love alone.” In creating us in love as He did, our Lord desired that His creatures would love Him in return.
• To this end, God has given us the capacity to choose. He has given us freedom, for there can be no love that is not freely chosen; love requires a free act of the will.
• Thus, the proper end to which our free will should be directed is God’s will. God has given us the power to choose so that we will choose Him. Of course human history shows us that man often fails in this regard.
• Yet God’s omnipotence is never thwarted. While we may fail to follow His will, and even while we may commit evil that is completely contrary to God’s explicit will, evil can never overpower, outwit, or undermine our Lord. God always wins in the end.
• And Easter is our yearly reminder of this simple, immutable truth: our Lord is all- powerful, even over sin and death!
• My brothers and sisters, let us therefore commit ourselves today to being good subjects to Christ our King! Let us recognize His power and authority, and willingly submit to His humble yoke so that we may enjoy His protection and love.
• While the temptation to sin may always be with us, let us not fall prey to the lies and machinations of the evil one, who has no power over us, except what is given him.
• May Jesus Christ, Who is both priest and victim, be praised now and forever.

© Reverend Timothy Reid

Fr. Reid is the pastor of St. Ann Catholic Church, Charlotte, NC

Homilies from June 17, 2012 onward have audio.
To enable the audio, lease go directly to Fr. Reid’s homily homilies and select the matching date.

Link to Homilies:
http://stanncharlotte.org/content/index.php?option=com_content&view=section&id=8&Itemid=61