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Updated: Jun 10

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Sunday June 08, 2025


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We lock our doors against imagined threats while imprisoning ourselves behind barriers of our own making. The very mechanisms designed to protect us become the walls that isolate us—deadbolts on apartments, passwords on devices, emotional armor around hearts. We mistake security for sanctuary, control for peace.


Yet authentic presence penetrates every defense we construct. Love arrives uninvited through locked doors, disrupting our carefully curated isolation with gifts we didn't request. The peace we manufacture through control proves fragile; the peace that invades our protected spaces transforms everything. We discover that what we feared most—unwanted encounters with vulnerability—brings the connection we've been desperately seeking.


Our contemporary crisis isn't lack of security but surplus of it: we've fortified ourselves into loneliness, mistaking digital connection for human presence, professional success for personal meaning. The locked room becomes a metaphor for modern existence—protected, controlled, and profoundly empty.


Listen



Reflect


(John 20:19-23)


Consider the barriers you've constructed recently—emotional walls after disappointment, professional boundaries after failure, relational distance after hurt. These protective mechanisms often become prisons that isolate you from the very connections and opportunities that could heal and transform your circumstances.

Jesus appears through locked doors, offering peace to fearful disciples who had barricaded themselves against perceived threats. His presence doesn't honor their defensive strategies but renders them irrelevant through love that penetrates every barrier, suggesting transformation comes through encounter rather than isolation.


Reflect on where you might unlock what fear has sealed in your daily life—perhaps risking vulnerability in relationships, opening to unexpected opportunities, or allowing divine presence to penetrate the spaces where you feel most defended and afraid of genuine encounter.


Pray


Lord, you penetrate every barrier we construct in fear. Break through our locked doors of self-protection, heal our communities divided by suspicion and control, transform our world's obsession with security into courage for authentic encounter. Make us instruments of your peace that renders all defenses unnecessary.


 
 
 
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June 09 - June 14, 2025


Saint Columba (Colum Cille), abbot


Colossians 1:24-29 The readings are special for the feast. St Columba was known for the practice of severe penance. The reading from Colossians sheds spiritual light on physical sufferings.


Mark 10:17-30 This reading too is chosen to reflect on the life of St Columb. He chose a life of great simplicity, even deprivation, first of all in Ireland and later on on the beautiful and remote island of Iona.


St Ephraim, deacon and doctor of the church.


2 Corinthians 1:18-22 Here is a wonderful passages, in its simplicity and directness: God’s “yes” to us all in Jesus.


Matthew 5:13-18 How am I called to be salt? Even more, how am I called to be the light of the world?


St Barnabas, apostle


Acts 11:21-26, 13:1-3 Passages from two different chapters present the mission and ministry of St Barnabas — clearly an important figure in the first phase of the Pauline mission.


Matthew 5:17-19 This is a tricky passage to handle. The community sees itself as authentically Jewish and therefore the Torah is to be observed and not set aside. However, some new did take place in Jesus and the Torah is to be applied differently as a result.



2 Corinthians 3:15-4:1, 3-6 Paul is reflecting on things which hinder his fellow Jews from reading Scripture. The last sentence is wonderful, joining creation and resurrection.


Matthew 5:20-26 This severe Gospel invites us to go beyond mere external observances and to notices what is happening in our hearts.


St Anthony of Padua, priest and religious


2 Corinthians 4:7-15 Paul only too well aware of his human frailty. And yet, his very weakness allows the power of the Gospel to shine through him.


Matthew 5:27-32 Matthew insists on the journey inwards! He teaches that whatever hinders our full response to grace should be set aside. He know very well that the problem is not physical — my eye or my right hand — and in any case, one can’t keep lopping off limbs! It is the examination of the heart that counts.


St Davnet, virgin


2 Corinthians 5:14-21 The opening sentence — a little long — lays the foundation for the practical teaching to follow. As we have been reconciled with God, let us be bearers of reconciliation ourselves.


Matthew 5:33-37 This Gospel passage — no doubt valuable in its own day — must have a special relevance for us today when truth is under siege. We learn even as children that words can be used to distort and shift blame. Perhaps we can still learn as adults that the truth will set us free.


References

-United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. (2025ax, June 8). Pentecost Sunday. USCCB. https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/060825.cfm

-Sunday readings. (n.d.-s). Hearers of the Word. https://www.tarsus.ie/SundayReadings


 
 
 
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June 08, 2025



Empowering God, you gave the church the abiding presence of your Holy Spirit. Look upon your church today and hear our petitions:


For the Church: that the Spirit will empower us to faithfully follow Christ and bring Good News to all are burdened or who have lost hope: let us pray to the Lord.


For a renewal of the Gifts of the Spirit in our lives: that we may recognize and use all the gifts that God has given us for the good of others and the fulfillment of the mission of Jesus: let us pray to the Lord.


For a flourishing of the fruits of the Spirit: that we may manifest love, joy, peace, patience, and all the fruits of the Spirit in our lives: let us pray to the Lord.


For a renewed sense of mission: that the Spirit will inspire us in confronting the watered-down values of society and in building a society of justice and peace: let us pray to the lord.

 

For Christian Unity: that the Spirit will heal the wounds and misunderstandings that divide the Body of Christ and lead us in offering a common proclamation of the Gospel: let us pray to the Lord.


For a Spirit of love: that we may place our time, energy, and gifts at the service of others, helping them to carry their burdens and discover God’s presence: let us pray to the Lord.


For a Spirit of hope: that all who are overwhelmed by life may find new reasons to live this day and be gifted with a vision of all that could be tomorrow: let us pray to the Lord.


For a Spirit of justice in the world:  that the needy, the exploited, the abused, and the victims of war may know relief from oppression and have their dignity restored: let us pray to the Lord.


For a Spirit of forgiveness: that God will break the bonds of resentment and vengeance that hold our hearts and free us to forgive as God has forgiven us: let us pray to the Lord.


For a Spirit of reverence: that all hearts may recognize God as creator and work to protect and preserve creation, human dignity, and cooperation within the human family: let us pray to the Lord.


For an abundant growing season: that God will send seasonable weather, break the drought, and bless all who work in agriculture with an abundant harvest: let us pray to the Lord.


For an end to wildfires: that God will calm winds and send rain to quell wildfires and give strength to all who are fighting the fires: let us pray to the Lod.


For all dioceses where parishes are being reorganized: that the Spirit will guide the process, open hearts to new connections, and bring forth dynamic parishes that give witness to the Gospel: let us pray to the Lord.


For conversion of hearts: that God will break the anger and violence that grips hearts, bring an end to violence, and reveal new ways to resolve hurts and differences: let us pray to the Lord.


For Peace: that God will heal the physical and mental wounds of all who have experienced violence and console all who are grieving the death of a loved one: let us pray to the Lord.


For the Spirit of life: that God will be merciful and give eternal life to all who have died or who are approaching death: let us pray to the Lord.

 

Grant that, gathered and directed by your Spirit,we may confess Christ as Lordand combine our diverse gifts with a singular passionto continue his mission in this worlduntil we join in your eternal praise. Amen.


References

-United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. (2025ax, June 8). Pentecost Sunday. USCCB. https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/060825.cfm

-Cormier, J. (1995). Lord, Hear Our Prayer: Prayer of the Faithful for Sundays, Holy Days, and Ritual Masses.


 
 
 
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