Saturday, February 7, 2026

Salt and Light

5th Sunday, A

“You are the salt of the earth. You are the light of the world.”

Thus the Lord Jesus – after the Beatitudes, at the beginning of the Sermon on the Mount – describes to us, his disciples, our identity and our task in this world.

Let’s take the light first.

Saturday, January 31, 2026

Citizens of the Kingdom

(4th Sunday in Ordinary Time, A, updated and revised from the homily I gave eighteen years ago on this day!)

Last Sunday we heard the beginning and core message of Jesus’ preaching: “The Kingdom of God is at hand.” The Kingdom of God, which is the destiny of all creation, us included, and is mysteriously present among us even now, is the heart of the Gospel.

Today, in Matthew’s Beatitudes, we hear a description of the citizens of this Kingdom.

First of all, the citizens of the Kingdom of God are “blessed.” The word in the original Greek here is makarios, and it’s just as easily translated as “happy.” My dictionary defined makarios as “blessed, happy, or fortunate.” That’s the first thing to know about being a Christian, a citizen of the kingdom of God: we are blessed, happy, and fortunate for the call we have received to Holy Communion with God in Christ. And that’s why the primary attitude of the Christian is always gratitude. As our own Blessed Solanus Casey put it, “gratitude is the first sign of a thinking, rational creature.”