Sunday and Weekday Homilies
Saturday, 6 December 2025
Advent Week 1 Saturday
Friday, 5 December 2025
Advent Week 1 Friday
Thursday, 4 December 2025
Advent Week 1 Thursday
Readings: Isaiah 26:1-6; Psalm 117; Matthew 7:21,24-27
Where yesterday we were invited to think about weakness and a compassionate Lord ensuring that the people's hunger would be satisfied, today we are presented with images of strength and resistance. Isaiah speaks of a strong city, with gates and walls, ramparts and towers, and a citadel brought down by an everlasting rock. It is an image of sanctuary and security for some, of destruction for others.
In the gospel reading Jesus explains that the basis of the distinction between a house that stands and a citadel that falls is the builder's relationship with the Word of God. Persons who not only listen but who act on the Word that Jesus teaches are building solidly and securely. They are doing the will of the Father and their house (that is, their soul) will withstand rain, floods, gales and whatever else life throws at it.
The person who listens, and perhaps even teaches others (saying 'Lord, Lord') but who does not in practice act on the teaching of Jesus is like a person building a house on sand: in the day of trouble it will not stand.
Isaiah says that the people who are faithful, steadfast, trusting and peaceful can enter the strong city: the gate opens for them. The ones who do not live in those ways, no matter if they listen and even if they repeat back what is required, are not building wisely. They may seem to be secure in their tower but will it stand?
So the message is simple and clear and there is no need to labour it. Advent is a kind of 'Lent lite' in which we are given time to return to the practice of God's Word. And what it asks us to do is equally clear: be faithful, be steadfast, be trusting, be peaceful. Then your house, your soul, will be like a strong city where you will live in security and in confidence. You will be a tower of strength, built not out of pride and ambition but constructed in the power of Christ's love, he who is the cornerstone of everything that endures.
Wednesday, 3 December 2025
Advent Week 1 Wednesday
Readings: Isaiah 25:6-10; Psalm 22; Matthew 15:29-37
All three readings speak of the Lord feeding His people. The fish and bread of the miraculous feeding recounted in the gospel might seem a long way from the rich and juicy food and the fine strained wines of which Isaiah speaks in the first reading. Nor do fish and bread seem right as a menu for the banquet which we hear about in the psalm. Unless of course ...
Unless what? Well in Ireland we say that hunger is the best sauce. Food that in times of plenty will seem poor and unappetising, in times of shortage or great need will be received as very satisfactory, and even desirable. As long as it is wholesome it will certainly be welcomed by a hungry person. One Lent I spent some time in a monastery which was observing a strict fast. After three days the humble breakfast of bread and butter with coffee had become for me a banquet.
The gospel reading tells us that the people had been with Jesus for the same length of time, three days. They will therefore have worked up an appetite, carrying their sick relatives and friends to Jesus, hopeful but still anxious, perhaps having traveled long distances.
So what counts as a banquet depends also on the hunger of those who need to eat. And perhaps this is also a way of describing the work of Advent: we are given this time to work up an appetite for the One who is coming. The point is not just how glorious and splendid will be that coming. It will pass us by if we are not disposed to receive it, if we have no appetite for it, if we are satisfying the hunger of our souls on more immediate, fancier perhaps, but less wholesome food.
The Lord is coming to save us but what if we have no need for a Saviour? What if we already find salvation enough elsewhere? Fish and bread might seem like nothing compared with the juicy food and fine wines we get elsewhere. But if we are lame or crippled, blind or dumb, if we are hungry and needy, anxious and tired having travelled already so far - well then His coming will be wonderful and we will appreciate it. It will be enough to have Him with us. The fish and bread he offers will be glorious and fulfilling because we will recognise Him in these gifts, food from heaven, containing every pleasure, every delight, every blessing.
The Lord who is coming is full of compassion for struggling humanity: the gospel today also tells us this, from the lips of Jesus. May God give us a clear sense of our need, a keen awareness of our deepest hunger, so that we will rejoice and exult when that need is met and when that hunger is sated by the Lord for whom we are longing.
Tuesday, 2 December 2025
Advent Week 1 Tuesday
Monday, 1 December 2025
Advent Week 1 - Monday
Sunday, 30 November 2025
Advent Week 1 Sunday (Year A)
We have tested and tasted too much, lover –
Through a chink too wide there comes in no wonder.
This note of joyful expectation and keen wonder is sounded throughout the liturgy of the Advent season. Let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, rejoicing as we approach his house. Swords will be turned into ploughshares, spears into sickles. There will be no more training for war. Wake up because it will soon be daylight and the time of dreary darkness will be over. Stay awake! Stand ready! Be alert and keen and expectant because the coming of the Son of Man will be sudden and full of significance.
Often people say that Christmas is for children. It is more true to say that Christmas is for adults who have not forgotten what it means to be a child. It is for those who have suffered ‘the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune’ and have not allowed it to destroy their wonder or joy or hope. Christmas is a time to rekindle our faith that our God will return, paving a way through the valleys and mountains of our lives, making possible what seemed impossible. He is, after all, the God who raises the dead.
The child in us has no difficulty believing such wonders and all we need do is trust that that child is seeing something true. We are to be the adult children of our Heavenly Father, charming back the luxury of the child’s soul through prayer and reconciliation, penance and right living. It is not really a luxury, this child’s soul in us. It is essential for our maturity since unless we become as little children, we shall not be ready to enter the kingdom of heaven when He comes.