In our meditation this week, Fr. Peter Armenio shares a reflection to help us pray and go deeper in our understanding of the Eucharist and our call to be living monstrances, the sacred vessels in which the Blessed Sacrament is exposed for veneration.
In this meditation, Fr. Leo Austin contemplates the transformative experience of the Holy Spirit beginning at Pentecost and the command to go out into the world and transform it with the fire and love of our faith.
In our meditation of the week, Fr. Fred Dolan beautifully transports us to the Upper Room where Mary, the holy women, and the Apostles awaited the promised coming of the Paraclete.
In this meditation, Fr. Peter Armenio delves into Christ’s new commandment to love one another as he has loved us emphasizing the “vertical” and “horizontal” aspects of this commandment, likening it to the shape of a Cross.
In this meditation, Fr. Peter Armenio delves into the profound significance of the Resurrection challenging the notion that the Christian’s life is one defined by suffering alone.
In this meditation, Fr. Peter Armenio inspires our prayer this Easter season reminding us that the heart of our calling as Christians is to always be credible witnesses to the Resurrection.
In this meditation, Fr. Peter Armenio offers a reflection on Easter– the highest celebration of Our Lord’s life and victory. But, we must never forget that we wouldn’t have that victory without the Cross.
In this meditation for Easter Sunday, Fr. Javier del Castillo invites us to contemplate the Resurrection of Christ and our personal encounter with Jesus Christ.
In this meditation, Fr. Peter Armenio reflects on the five sorrowful mysteries to help us slow down and go deeper as we pray each decade of the Holy Rosary.
In this meditation: Fr. Javier del Castillo explains the great lesson Jesus teaches us in the gospel for the Fifth Sunday of Lent (John 12:20-33), which is that we have to die– to self and in this world– in order to really see who he is.
In this meditation: Fr. Javier del Castillo reflects on the revolutionary teaching of St. Paul who preached that Our Lord who is rich in mercy will always forgive us (Ephesians 2:4-10).
In this meditation: Fr. Javier del Castillo helps us to contemplate the Gospel of the Mass for the Third Sunday of Lent— Jesus cleansing the Temple (John 2:13-25).
In this meditation: Fr. Javier del Castillo helps us to contemplate the scene of the Transfiguration of Jesus on Mount Tabor, which we read in the Gospel of the Mass for the Second Sunday of Lent.
In this meditation: Fr. Peter Armenio helps us to enter into the season of the Lent with a desire for becoming good repenters. And he shares the easy steps for coming back to Christ and beginning again.
In this meditation: Fr. Peter Armenio helps us to pray about the sacrificial and redemptive true presence of Jesus Christ in the Mass and in the Eucharist, and how we should make the greatest treasure of the universe the center of our life.
In this featured mini-series on the St. Josemaria Institute podcast, Msgr. Fred Dolan gives three talks on vocation and marriage, and the importance of carefully examining the insights of Pope St. John Paul II in order to establish a rock-solid foundation for a lasting marriage.
In this meditation: Fr. Peter Armenio reflects on how holiness is like the seeds that Jesus speaks about in the Gospel. Holiness grows in each one of us, but it grows by being in a constant state of converting; that is, we are all a work in progress.
In this meditation: Fr. Javier del Castillo reflects on the lives of the early Christians and martyrs and the way they gave witness to their faith through the simple actions of everyday life.
In this meditation: Msgr. Fred Dolan speaks to us about our love for a good vocation story– that amazing moment when someone’s life is changed radically. There is something very special about people who have discovered what it is that God has in store for them.
In this meditation for Christmas Day: Fr. Leo Austin helps us to contemplate the first nativity scene. Entering into Bethlehem and the stable, he invites us to look first of all to Mary and Joseph and to learn from them.
