A Reflection for the Thursday of the First Week of Lent, by Colleen Dulle
Scripture
The Transfiguration shows us that evil does not win in the end
God’s moral creation, though it suffers the assaults of evil, will not be shaken nor become unbalanced. The good will prevail.
God had to ask Jonah twice (and it was all right)
A Reflection for the Wednesday of the First Week of Lent by Tim Reidy
How do we pray when it seems like God has forgotten us?
A Reflection for the First Tuesday of Lent, by Kerry Weber
Thank God for Commandments
A Reflection for the First Monday of Lent, by Joe Hoover, S.J.
What are the signs of transformation?
Mar. 13, 2022, the Second Sunday of Lent: Prayer can help us be more ready for connections with God and others.
This Lent, take up Jesus’ dinner-table habits
If Catholics want to protect the integrity of the Eucharist, then studying Jesus’ habits around the dinner table, written plainly on the pages of the Gospels, is a good place to start.
Lent is about being broken open—not broken down
Lent is about daring to peek outside that castle, trying to be more vulnerable and exposed.
Our Lenten sacrifices don’t make God love us more. So why do we do it?
In Lent, we fast, we pray and we give to the poor. God does not love us more for doing these things. God cannot love us more. So why do we bother?
Ash Wednesday reminds us that nothing (except God) stays the same
We know that nothing stays the same, yet we live as though nothing ever changes.
