Routines are a part of everyday life. We do the same thing when we wake up and get ready for the day. Probably we drive the same way to work. So would it be fair to say that our relationships are also subject to a routine? We greet and say goodbye to people the same way. Some people we shake hands with, and others we give a hug.
Our relationship with the Lord also follows a routine. We pray at the same time, most likely using the same prayers. Without realizing it, we can develop a static view or understanding of who God is to us. It was blasphemous for Jesus to show his mercy to the paralyzed man in today’s gospel. The paralytic’s sinful state was a greater priority to Jesus than his paralysis.
Oblivious to what people thought, Jesus absolved his sins. When He was accused of being blasphemous, Jesus asked his critics: “Which is easier, to say, ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or to say, ‘Rise and walk’?” Breaking the routine of how people saw Jesus, He first absolved and then healed the paralytic.
Without absolving his sin, the paralytic could have walked physically but not in the way of the Lord. When you pray, do you ask God to do something? What is God asking you to do to walk with him more generously throughout the day? Do not be afraid if your routine with God changes. Just walk with Him. He knows where He’s leading you and how to get there.
March 9, 2026, Luke 4:24-30 https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/030926.cfm Homecoming. When I returned home from my studies in England, my family warmly greeted me at the airport terminal.
March 7, 2026, Luke 15:1-3, 11-32 https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/030726.cfm Home at Last. How heart-wrenching it is to stray from our Father’s loving embrace. Like the younger son
March 6, 2026, Matthew 21:33-43, 45-46 https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/030626.cfm Someone is Missing. Mother Teresa recounts a story about a young drug addict she and her sisters met
March 20, 2025, Luke 16:19-31 https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/030526.cfm One Small Step. One Giant Leap. On July 20, 1969, Neil Armstrong became the first person to walk on
Thursday 13th Week in Ordinary Time 2022
Fr. Rick’s Two Minute Homily for Thursday 13th Week in Ordinary Time 06-30-2022
Thursday 13th Week in Ordinary Time 2022
Matthew 9:1-8 https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/063022.cfm
THERE IS NOTHING ROUTINE ABOUT JESUS.
Routines are a part of everyday life. We do the same thing when we wake up and get ready for the day. Probably we drive the same way to work. So would it be fair to say that our relationships are also subject to a routine? We greet and say goodbye to people the same way. Some people we shake hands with, and others we give a hug.
Our relationship with the Lord also follows a routine. We pray at the same time, most likely using the same prayers. Without realizing it, we can develop a static view or understanding of who God is to us. It was blasphemous for Jesus to show his mercy to the paralyzed man in today’s gospel. The paralytic’s sinful state was a greater priority to Jesus than his paralysis.
Oblivious to what people thought, Jesus absolved his sins. When He was accused of being blasphemous, Jesus asked his critics: “Which is easier, to say, ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or to say, ‘Rise and walk’?” Breaking the routine of how people saw Jesus, He first absolved and then healed the paralytic.
Without absolving his sin, the paralytic could have walked physically but not in the way of the Lord. When you pray, do you ask God to do something? What is God asking you to do to walk with him more generously throughout the day? Do not be afraid if your routine with God changes. Just walk with Him. He knows where He’s leading you and how to get there.
IGNITE THE FIRE!
Fr. Rick Pilger, IC
www.bscchurch.com
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