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15th Sunday Ordinary time 13 July 2025

12 July 2025

PRAYER FOR TODAY

Let’s pray.

Heavenly Father,
As we gather this 15th Sunday in Ordinary Time, we thank You for the gift of Your Word—living, active, and near to us, written on our hearts.

You call us to love You with all our heart, soul, and strength, and to love our neighbor as ourselves. Help us to recognize You in those we pass by, especially the wounded, the weary, and the forgotten.

Give us hearts like the Good Samaritan: willing to be moved by compassion, to pause, to serve, and to bind up what is broken. May we never walk away from need, but always draw near with mercy.

Through the intercession of St. Teresa of Calcutta, who saw Christ in the poorest of the poor, may we learn to love until it hurts—and find You there.

We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.


 

15th Sunday Ordinary time 13 July 2025

Communion Reflection:

The sparrow finds a home and the swallow a nest for her young by your altars, O Lord of hosts, my King and my God.Blessed are they who dwell in your house, for ever singing your praise.

Reflection:
Lord Jesus may your love always be the foundation of my life. Free me from every fear and selfish concern that I may freely give myself
in loving service to others, even to the point of laying my life down for their sake.

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The Law Is in Your Heart

Read: (Dt 30:10-14):
The Commandments of God are written in our hearts, as natural law. Christ is the Firstborn who models for us how to live God’s Law. The parable of the Good Samaritan teaches us how to put God’s commandment to practice.
Reflect:
When the Samaritan saw the wounded man, he was moved with compassion. The Greek word used for this being moved with compassion is “splagchnizomai.” This word, according to theologian James Allison, is “the parable’s bombshell.” The noun form “splagchna” was used in Greek literature to designate the inner parts (bowels) of a blood sacrifice. When the heart was cut out during a sacrificial ritual, it was called
a splagchna. It later became a generic term for the inner organs. Hence, using the word to refer to being moved implies a gut-wrenching reaction. In other words, the compassion of the Samaritan is not a reasoned-out, calculated decision based on an analysis of pros and cons, but an innate, spontaneous reaction emerging from his entrails, which moves him into action. “Go and do the same” is an invitation to make
empathic compassion one’s core nature.
Pray:
Pray for the grace of empathy—the capacity to be moved by the needs of others.
Act:
Do any one of the fourteen works of mercy, as taught by the Church

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FAREWELL MASS HONORING DEACON TONY & DEACON MARTIN

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