liturgy practice Archives - Full-of-Grace

You Are the One They Went to Call: 4th Lent Year A: Experience

This embodied penitential rite for the Fourth Sunday of Lent Year A centres on one claim: God chose David knowing exactly who he would become — adulterer, the man who covered sin with death, the man who wept on the floor. And still called him a man after God's own heart. From that starting point, the rite moves into a participatory Psalm 23 where each person in the congregation speaks their own name into the gaps — stripping the familiar psalm back to something personal, unavoidable, and true.

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 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).