Liturgy of the Word introduction Archives - Full-of-Grace

The Age of Radical Inclusion – Pentecost Sunday, Year A: Biblical Background

The Spirit of Pentecost does not arrive to rebuild your reality. It arrives to change what your tongue can taste of this one. This biblical background traces the age of radical inclusion through all five liturgical texts – Acts 2's dismantling of the temple system, the Hebrew nefesh of Psalm 104, Paul's throwaway sentence that is actually the heart of everything, John's locked-room breath, and the Wisdom antiphon that has been saying it all along: the Spirit has already filled the whole world. What changes at Pentecost is not the Spirit's presence. It is our capacity to recognise it – by name, in our own language, from inside our own life.

Two Stories of Two Fathers 4 Advent Year A – Background

Two fathers. Both in the Davidic line. Both offered divine signs about sons. Both at impossible thresholds. Ahaz: Refuses the sign. Trusts political alliances. Sacrifices his biological son. Represents control, calculation, visible power. Joseph: Receives the sign. Trusts the dream. Adopts his non-biological son. Represents receptivity, surrender, invisible faith. And the good news that God works through the whole broken lineage—the refusers and the receivers both. Emmanuel comes anyway. We are called to belong.

The Last Ordinary Sunday – 33 OT (Year C) Background

Deep biblical context for the 33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year C. Explores Malachi's post-exile questioning, Luke's narrative of Jesus in his final week before crucifixion, the widow's radical trust versus temple-admirers, and Paul's teaching on table fellowship. Includes detailed historical context, theological insights, optional read-aloud introduction text for Liturgy of the Word, and reflection on Christ's loneliness when we perform worship instead of showing up in our poverty.

The impossible promise and Insomniac servants – journeying from the crossroads to the Promised Land. (19 OT Year C): Reflection

The bread we encounter at Mass exists beyond anything we could discover in Haran—beyond the crossroads of religious achievement and spiritual grief, transcending all the liturgical preparations we might offer. Jesus himself represents the difference between tent-dwelling (temporary, provisional, always anticipating something better) and promised-land living (complete, satisfying, eternally fulfilling).