Wisdom, the Fulfillment of Our Heart

Seventeenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Treasures steal our hearts, creating desires that drive us beyond our abilities. Driven, we comb the world looking for that one treasure which fulfills all our desires. It is the priceless pearl, the golden vessel, pandoras box? This one treasure, so hard to find, yet so satisfies we will do anything to obtain and indulge in such ecstasy.

Riddles

Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Riddles reveal mysteries. Yet riddles confuse sharp minds stupefying even the ingenious. Stupefied, many reject riddles discounting them as absurd becoming hardened not only in heart but also in mind. Minds and hearts hardened, they no longer ponder or wonder about the riddles especially those that offer incredible insights concerning life.

Cryptic

Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Knowledge creates power. Powerful knowledge comes at a cost. That cost disciplines our minds, hearts, and wills to delve deeply into the mysteries hidden from the foundations of the world. Delving into these mysteries, Wisdom, the mind and heart of God, becomes visible and real. Wisdom “knows and understands all things” (Wis 9:11), but more than just knowing and understanding, “She will guide me wisely in my actions and guard me with her glory” (Wis 9:11).

Journey into the Mind of Christ

Thirteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

St. Bonaventure, a Franciscan Friar of the 13th Century took the place of St. Francis of Assisi, as the leader of this new and strange order, the Friars Minor. They became known as the Mendicants or literally, the ones who beg. Before becoming the head of the newly formed religious order, he was a professor in Paris, along with St. Thomas Aquinas and other great masters of the time.

Anxiety

Twelfth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Who knows the desires of one’s heart? Deceitful, “desperately corrupt” Jeremiah tells us (Jer 17:9) The depths and breadth of our desires bewilder us. Lost in this space, anxiety grows for we do not know the direction our heart should take. As St. Paul cries out, “I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I do” (Rom 7:19)…

Koinonia

Corpus Christi Sunday

Koinonia, a term with many meanings but they all express a communion, a participation, an inheritance of the other. Maybe the term, intercourse, graphically defines Koinonia. We enter into an intimate relationship with the other becoming one. In union, our characteristics and personalities blend making us indistinguishable with the other. This is Koinonia.