Tag: Year A lectionary
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This Is Whose I Am – The Blessing of Hands
We have stopped noticing our hands entirely — until something goes wrong with them. But hands carry more of a human life than almost anything else: the work, the encounters, the belonging, the prayer. This week's practice begins with simply looking at what is already there.
The Burden Audit: Blessing On Your Shoulders
In my years of massage work, I learned early what shoulders don't lie about. They are the accumulation point — the place where the day settles in. Not the crises. The micro-weights. Each one, taken separately, seems like almost nothing. Together, they can make it hard to breathe. This week we listen to what they've been holding.
Making Room for God: Living Out the Blessing Over the Heart
What is the difference between a busy car park and your heart? The greatest lie of the spiritual life is the belief in the empty slot – that we can prepare ourselves perfectly before letting God in. This week's reflection invites you into something more honest, and more restful: learning to waste time with God.
Before the First Sip
There is a moment before the day remembers to land on you. Before the list, before the phone, before the good version of you shows up for work. This week lives there. Two lines from Psalm 139. Seven practices. One honest look at what the promise sounds like when your own voice says it — and what your actual life looks like when you hold it up to the light.
A Garment for the Society of Impossible Things
You have been nominated for membership in the First International Secret Society of Impossible Things. Should you be accepted, you will never have to work again — and nothing, from this point forward, will be impossible. Your only task: show the tailor what to make.
Divine Mercy Sunday: We hear before we see: Resources
Complete free Sunday toolkit for Divine Mercy Sunday, Second Sunday of Easter, Year A (April 12, 2026). This week opens the Born to Recognise series – a seven-week Easter journey through the blessing of the senses toward Pentecost. Week 1 is the ear: the Shema, Thomas’s refusal of secondhand faith, the enephysesen as second creation, and the community breathed into by the risen Christ as the body through which hearing becomes possible. Includes biblical background, three-part embodied liturgy experience, Prayer of the Faithful centred on listening, and a personal reflection from the Scattered to Whole pillar.
Divine Mercy Sunday: The Story Beneath the Story: Biblical Background
Biblical background for Divine Mercy Sunday Year A (April 12, 2026). Acts 2 gives us the community that has already been breathed into – their response is exultant, embodied, common. 1 Peter addresses those who have not seen, and tells them their joy exceeds description. And John gives us Thomas: the body-knower who refuses secondhand faith, and the Christ who comes back through locked doors to meet him exactly where his body is. Research and exegesis for liturgy teams, homilists, and Bible study groups.
Divine Mercy Sunday: Open My Ear: Experience
This week’s Sunday Experience is distributed across three moments of the Mass: a thirty-second prayer before the Liturgy of the Word inviting the assembly to close their missalettes and receive the Word through the ear alone; a two-to-three minute somatic exercise after communion, placing the community in the upper room in the moment before Jesus breathes, attending to the quality of their own auditory anticipation; and at the Final Blessing, the ancient formula from the Rite of Christian Initiation – “Receive the sign of the cross on your ears, that you may hear the voice of the Lord” – spoken as the assembly traces the cross on their own ears. Full script with pacing notes for presiders and ministers.
Divine Mercy Sunday: Turned Toward the Voice: Prayer of the Faithful
A complete Prayer of the Faithful for Divine Mercy Sunday (Second Sunday of Easter, Year A, April 12, 2026), with celebrant introduction and conclusion. This week’s intercessions are centred on the sense of hearing: praying for the Church’s attentiveness, for leaders who must learn to listen, for all whose vocation is to receive another person’s reality, for confessors emerging from the Easter season, for those who confessed at Easter, for families, and for each person making room for the breath of God. Includes practical notes for readers and presiders.
