June 2, 2024

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Fr. Mike Schmitz

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

Ascension Presents

RECENT

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The Eucharist is not just a symbol, but is actually Jesus’ body, and realizing this truth can transform indifference into a deep love and devotion for God.

FR. MIKE'S INSIGHTS w/ Timestamps
  • 00:00 Ignorance is a lack of knowledge, but indifference is a cold heart, and indifference is worse when it comes to God.
  • 00:46 God has always wanted to feed us, as shown by Jesus at the Last Supper, but many of us know what he wants but don't care.
    • Adam and Eve knew God was good and wanted to feed them, but Eve still chose to eat the forbidden fruit.
    • God sets the people of Israel free from slavery in Egypt, leads them into the Wilderness, and feeds them with bread from Heaven every single day, but at some point they stop caring.
    • God wants to feed us, as shown by Jesus at the Last Supper, but many of us know what he wants but don't care.
  • 02:59 Realizing the true presence of Jesus in the Eucharist transformed the speaker's life from indifference to caring about God.
    • Priests are passionate about the Eucharist and there is a strong belief in the presence of Jesus in the mass.
    • Realizing the true presence of Jesus in the Eucharist transformed the speaker's life from indifference to caring about God.
  • 05:03 The Eucharist is not just a symbol, but is actually Jesus' body, as stated in John chapter 6, and this truth changed the speaker's life.
    • The Eucharist is not just a symbol, but is actually Jesus' body, as stated in John chapter 6.
    • Jesus meant it when he said "this is my body" and he reaffirmed it in John chapter 6, emphasizing the literal, not symbolic, nature of the Eucharist.
    • Jesus makes it clear that the bread and wine he gives is actually his body and blood, and this truth changed the speaker's life.
  • 07:41 The speaker emphasizes the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist and how God shows its importance through Eucharistic miracles, such as the Lanciano and Soka, Poland miracles.
    • The speaker emphasizes the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist and how sometimes God breaks through to show the importance of it through Eucharistic miracles.
    • In various Eucharistic miracles, the host has turned into flesh and the wine into blood, with scientific experiments confirming the presence of human flesh and rare blood type, such as in the case of the Lanciano miracle from the year 700 and the Soka, Poland miracle in 2008.
  • 10:02 The Eucharist is a gift and mystery, with miracles reflecting God's knowledge of our indifference and the impact of devotion on people's lives.
    • The host in the safe changed to human flesh and blood, and the priests kept it a secret for a couple of years.
    • The Eucharistic miracles consistently show heart tissue and type AB blood, reflecting God's knowledge of our indifference and the need to care more.
    • People's devotion to the Eucharist, even to the point of sacrificing their lives, made the speaker realize its significance and impact on their lives.
  • 12:57 The Eucharist is truly Jesus' body, blood, soul, and divinity, and the church needs hearts melted and transformed by it, as seen through unique communion experiences and a 12-year-old girl's adoration in China.
    • The Eucharist is truly Jesus' body, blood, soul, and divinity, but what the church needs even more is a heart that has been melted and transformed by the Eucharist.
    • In college, the speaker witnessed a unique way of receiving communion with unleavened bread, but the problem was that there were crumbs on the floor, which a man in his class would eat after Mass.
    • A priest in China knelt and prayed as the Eucharist was scattered on the ground, and a 12-year-old girl from his parish came to adore Jesus.
  • 16:00 Moving from indifference to love for Jesus in the Eucharist is emphasized, as shown by a woman risking her life to preserve it.
    • A woman risked her life to preserve the Eucharist, receiving it on the ground with her tongue and was eventually beaten to death by soldiers for doing so.
    • The speaker emphasizes the importance of moving from indifference to love for Jesus in the Eucharist, rather than just seeking knowledge about it.

Deacon Peter McCulloch

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

Deacon McCulloch

RECENT

On Food for the Journey

Food is such an important part of life. Many years ago, when our children were small, my wife and I bought a picnic basket. It held everything we needed to sustain us on a daytrip.

Picnicking, we found, was a wonderful way for our young family to connect, to enjoy each other’s company and to explore the world.

In every culture, food plays an important role. It underpins our health and well-being; children learn at mealtimes and social eating helps build relationships. That’s why we so often form friendships and do business over coffee or a meal.

CONTINUE READING

FOOTNOTES:

[i] The Latin word viaticus means ‘of or pertaining to a road or journey’.

[ii] America Magazine

[iii] Dominic Grassi & Joe Paprocki, Living the Mass. Loyola Press, Chicago, 2011:148-149.

[iv] Cardinal Saliege, Spiritual Writings. St Pauls Publications, Bucks. 1966:57. 

[v] Richard Leonard, Preaching to the Converted. Paulist Press, New York. 2006:180-181.

Fr. Andrew Ricci

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

Fr. Austin Fleming

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

CONCORD
PASTOR

HOMILIES
VIDEOS

You Are What You Eat

At least that’s what people say. In fact, they’ve been saying that since 1826 when a Frenchman,
Anthelme Brillat-Savarin, wrote,

“Tell me what you eat and I will tell you what you are.” Dis-moi ce que tu manges et je te dirai ce que tu es. (Everything always sounds better in French!)

Today’s feast of the Body and Blood of Christ celebrates the sacramental reality of Christ’s presence in the gifts of bread and wine we offer every time we celebrate Mass, – what we eat and drink when we celebrate the Eucharist.

Homiletic Pastoral Review

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

The Most Holy Body and Blood fo Christ (Corpus Christi)

On the first Sunday after Pentecost of each liturgical year, the Church bids us celebrate in a special manner “the central mystery of the Christian faith and life,” the mystery from which “all the other mysteries of the faith flow” (CCC 234). The mystery in whose name we sign ourselves with the sign of the cross and receive the Sacrament of Baptism. The mystery of God in Himself. That is, the mystery of the Most Holy Trinity. The mystery that God is one in three and three in one. One in essence and three in persons — Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. “One God in Trinity, and Trinity in Unity” as the Athanasian Creed tells us.

Basilica of the National Shrine

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception

2024 Year B
2021 Year B
2018 Year B

Dominican Blackfriars

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

DOMINICAN FRIARS – ENGLAND & WALES, SCOTLAND

HOMILIES

ARCHIVE

Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ (B)  |  Fr Greg Murphy on the Eucharist as medicine that heals and changes the Christian people.

Bishop Robert Barron

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

KEY INSIGHTS w/ Timestamps

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Fr. Peter Hahn

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

SAINT LEO THE GREAT LANCASTER, PA

YOUTUBE

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The Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ

KEY INSIGHTS w/ Timestamps

The Eucharist is not just a symbol, but the sacramental presence of Christ's sacrifice, meant to establish an intimate union with Christ and unite us more fully with His infinite love.

  • 00:00 The greatest moments in life revolve around love shared with family and friends, intimate experiences with spouses or children, and lighthearted moments with long-time friends.
  • 01:02 We are made in God's image and find fulfillment in love, celebrating the wondrous gift of the Holy Eucharist that unites us with God and each other.
  • 02:18 The sacrament of holy communion is truly the body and blood of Jesus, fulfilling the symbolism of the Passover meal.
  • 03:38 The Son of God institutes the sacrament of his blood, which makes his passion, death, and resurrection present for all humanity.
  • 04:14 Remain vigilant and careful to not adopt any perspective that distorts the truth of the Eucharist.
  • 04:37 The Eucharist is not just a symbol, but the sacramental presence of Christ's sacrifice, and we should be overwhelmed with awe and wonder.
  • 05:30 The Eucharist is meant to establish an intimate union with Christ, preserving and renewing grace to unite us more fully with His infinite love.
  • 07:30 Priests are ordained to bring us to the altar where we receive the Living God and are united to him, giving us a glimpse of perfect communion with God.

Fr. Charles E. Irvin

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

Diocese of Lansing

HOMILIES

God is Love

The fact that it is truly the Body and Blood of Jesus is of supreme importance. The fact that you receive the true Body, and the true Blood of Jesus Christ in Holy Communion is likewise of supreme importance because in receiving it you and I are receiving the permanent and irrevocable gift of God himself to you, not in a merely symbolic gesture but in actual fact.

Fr. Joe Jagodensky, SDS

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

SOULFUL MUSE

RECENT

Home’s Morsels

The Body and Blood of Christ are but a morsel and a sip to bring us back and remind us about of our eternal home, where we all began. You bow and hold out your hand to me wanting a piece of Christ to eat but it really ought to be tossed over your shoulder to show you the way back home. I bless the young ones unable to eat the morsels because they still take home for granted. But time quickly changes that. Home is where sincerity, trust and hope each has their own room, either in their absence or in practice – or both. The attic is where unexpected surprises reside and the basement is full of dusty regrets. Each location explains its usage.

Fr. Jude Langeh, CMF

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

Fr. George Smiga

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

BUILDING
ON THE WORD

ARCHIVE

Eating as We Wait

The Eucharist is not simply about what we have. It is also about what we are waiting for. Jesus makes this very clear in today’s Gospel because on the eve of his passion and death, even as he tells his disciples, “Eat my body, drink my blood,” he also points to what he is waiting for. He says: “I will never again drink from the fruit of the vine until that day when I drink it new in the Kingdom of God.” Therefore, this Eucharistic meal is not only a meal that we celebrate today, but a meal that points to a future hope; to the establishment of God’s Kingdom. There we will share in the full blessings of God with Christ. This meal, then, is not simply about what we have, but what we are waiting for.

The Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ (Year B) Homilies

Why Christ is Present in the Eucharist
In Memory of Him
The Perfect and Imperfect Meal
Being Ready to Take
Sabbath
Tasting the Love

Fr. Anthony Ekpunobi, C.M.

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

CONGREGATION
OF THE MISSION,
PROVINCE OF
NIGERIA

HOMILIES

Msgr. Joseph Pellegrino

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

DIOCESE OF
ST. PETERSBURG, FLORIDA

HOMILIES

The Covenant of Eucharist

The Solemnity of the Body and Blood of the Lord: The Covenant of Eucharist Today’s first reading presents a significant scene from the Book of Exodus. This is the people’s acceptance the Covenant of the Law of God, the Covenant of the Ten Commandments. A sacrifice was used to seal the covenant. Young bulls were slain. As a sign of the people’s acceptance, all the people were sprinkled with the blood of the bulls, the blood of the sacrifice. Strange, but significant. The people were not to be mere observers. They were to be intimately involved in the covenant.

Msgr. Charles Pope

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

ARCHDIOCESE OF WASHINGTON D.C.

HOMILIES

No Homily Available

Three Teachings on Corpus Christi

The feast of Corpus Christi affords us an opportunity to renew our understanding of the Holy Eucharist and Sacred Liturgy. It also helps us clarify certain errors that have crept into our thinking. Let’s look at the readings today under three headings: The Righteousness of our Worship, the Reality of our Worship, and Readiness of our Worship.

I.  The Righteousness of our Worship
II. The Reality of our Worship

III. The Readiness of our Worship

Bishop John Louis

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

AUXILIARY BISHOP
ARCHDIOCESE OF
ACCRA, GHANA

HOMILIES

Fr. Michael Chua

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

ARCHDIOCESE OF KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA

HOMILIES

Life Issues

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

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REFLECTION TRANSCRIPT

As possible launching points for preaching on the sanctity of life on Corpus Christi, I offer you the following text from our brochure “The Pro-life Commitment is Eucharistic.”

Our commitment to defend our pre-born brothers and sisters is shaped by our faith in the Eucharist as a sacrament of faith, unity, life, worship, and love.

The Eucharist is a sacrament of faith. The Consecrated Host looks no different after the consecration than before. It looks, smells, feels, and tastes like bread. Only one of the five senses gets to the truth. As St. Thomas Aquinas’ Adoro Te Devote expresses, "Seeing, touching, tasting are in Thee deceived. What says trusty hearing that shall be believed?" The ears hear His words, "This is My Body; this is My Blood," and faith takes us beyond the veil of appearances..

Christians are used to looking beyond appearances. The baby in the manger does not look like God; nor for that matter does the man on the cross. Yet by faith we know He is no mere man. The Bible does not have a particular glow setting it off from other books, nor does it levitate above the shelf. Yet by faith we know it is uniquely the Word of God. The Eucharist seems to be bread and wine, and yet by faith we say, "My Lord and My God!" as we kneel in adoration.

The same dynamic of faith that enables us to see beyond appearances in these mysteries enables us to see beyond appearances in our neighbor. We can look at the persons around us, at the annoying person or the ugly person or the person who is unconscious in a hospital bed, and we can say, "Christ is there as well. There is my bother, my sister, made in the very image of God!" By the same dynamic we can look at the pre-born child and say, "There, too, is my brother, my sister, equal in dignity and just as worthy of protection as anyone else!" Some people will say the child in the womb, especially in the earliest stages, is too small to be the subject of Constitutional rights. Is the Sacred Host too small to be God, too unlike Him in appearance to be worshipped? The slightest particle of the Host is fully Christ. Eucharistic Faith is a powerful antidote to the dangerous notion that value depends on size.

The Eucharist is also a Sacrament of Unity. "When I am lifted up from the earth," the Lord said, "I will draw all people to myself" (Jn.12:32). He fulfills this promise in the Eucharist, which builds up the Church. The Church is the sign and cause of the unity of the human family.

Imagine all the people, in every part of the world, who are receiving Communion today. Are they all receiving their own personalized, customized Christ? Are they not rather each receiving the one and only Christ? Through this sacrament, Christ the Lord, gloriously enthroned in heaven, is drawing all people to Himself. If He is drawing us to Himself, then He is drawing us to one another. St. Paul comments on this, "We, many though we are, are one body, since we all partake of the one loaf" (1 Cor. 10:17). When we call each other "brothers and sisters," we are not merely using a metaphor that dimly reflects the unity between children of the same parents. The unity we have in Christ is even stronger than the unity of blood brothers and sisters, because we do have common blood: the blood of Christ! The result of the Eucharist is that we become one, and this obliges us to be as concerned for each other as we are for our own bodies.

Imagine a person who receives Communion, accepts the Host when the priest says, "The Body of Christ," says "Amen," and then breaks off a piece, hands it back, and says, "Except this piece, Father!" This is what the person who rejects other people may as well do. In receiving Christ, we are to receive the whole Christ, in all his members, our brothers and sisters, whether convenient or inconvenient, wanted or unwanted.

As St. John remarks, Christ was to die "to gather into one all the scattered children of God." Sin scatters. Christ unites. The word "diabolical" means "to split asunder." Christ came "to destroy the works of the devil" (1Jn.3:8). The Eucharist builds up the human family in Christ who says, "Come to me, feed on My Body, become My Body." Abortion, in a reverse dynamic, says, "Go away! We have no room for you, no time for you, no desire for you, no responsibility for you. Get out of our way!" Abortion attacks the unity of the human family by splitting asunder the most fundamental relationship between any two persons: mother and child. The Eucharist, as a Sacrament of Unity, reverses the dynamic of abortion.

The Eucharist is the Sacrament of Life. "I am the Bread of Life. He who eats this bread will live forever. I will raise Him up on the last day." (See Jn.6:47-58) The Eucharistic sacrifice is the very action of Christ by which He destroyed our death and restored our life. Whenever we gather for this sacrifice we are celebrating the victory of life over death, and therefore over abortion. The pro-life movement is not simply working "for" victory; we are working "from" victory. As the Holy Father said in Denver in 1993, "Have no fear. The outcome of the battle for life is already decided." Our work is to apply the already established victory to every facet of our society. Celebrating the Eucharist is the source and summit of such work.

The Eucharist is the Supreme act of Worship of God. Two lessons each person needs to learn are, "1.There is a God. 2. It isn't me." The Eucharist, as the perfect sacrifice, acknowledges that God is God, and that "it is [His] right to receive the obedience of all creation." (Sacramentary, Preface for Weekdays III). Abortion, on the contrary, proclaims that a mother's choice is supreme. "Freedom of choice" is considered enough to justify even the dismemberment of a baby. Choice divorced from truth is idolatry. It is the opposite of true worship. It pretends the creature is God. Real freedom is found only in submission to the truth and will of God. Real freedom is not the ability to do whatever one pleases, but the power to do what is right.

The Eucharist is, finally, the Sacrament of Love. St. John explains, "This is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life for us" (1Jn.3:16). Christ teaches, "Greater love than this no one has, than to lay down his life for his friends" (Jn.15:13). The best symbol of love is not the heart, but rather the crucifix.

Abortion is the exact opposite of love. Love says, "I sacrifice myself for the good of the other person. Abortion says, "I sacrifice the other person for the good of myself." In the Eucharist we see the meaning of love and receive the power to live it. The very same words, furthermore, that the Lord uses to teach us the meaning of love are also used by those who promote abortion: "This is my body." These four little words are spoken from opposite ends of the universe, with totally opposite results. Christ gives His body away so others might live; abortion supporters cling to their own bodies so others might die. Christ says "This is My Body given up for you; This is My Blood shed for you." These are the words of sacrifice; these are the words of love.

In Washington in 1994 Mother Teresa said that we fight abortion by teaching the mother what love really means: "to be willing to give until it hurts...So, the mother who is thinking of abortion, should be helped to love, that is, to give until it hurts her plans, or her free time, to respect the life of her child."

Gustave Thibon has said that the true God transforms violence into suffering, while the false god transforms suffering into violence. The woman tempted to have an abortion will transform her suffering into violence unless she allows love to transform her, and make her willing to give herself away. The Eucharist gives both the lesson and the power. Mom is to say "This is my body, my blood, my life, given up for you my child."

Everyone who wants to fight abortion needs to say the same. We need to exercise the same generosity we ask the mothers to exercise. We need to imitate the mysteries we celebrate. "Do this in memory of me" applies to all of us in the sense that we are to lovingly suffer with Christ so others may live. We are to be like lightning rods in the midst of this terrible storm of violence and destruction, and say, "Yes, Lord, I am willing to absorb some of this violence and transform it by love into personal suffering, so that others may live."

Indeed, the Eucharist gives the pro-life movement its marching orders. It also provides the source of its energy, which is love. Indeed, if the pro-life movement is not a movement of love, then it is nothing at all. But if it is a movement of love, then nothing will stop it, for "Love is stronger than death, more powerful even than hell" (Song of Songs 8:6).

The Body of Christ Is Us (Corpus Christi)

Proclaim Sermons
Since the time that Jesus presided at what the church came to call the first celebration of the Eucharist, Christians have argued over many aspects of the sacrament. However, it’s clear that when we ingest the body and blood of Christ, the purpose is to give us strength and a commitment to minister to the very ones about whom Jesus spoke so often – the poor, needy, bereft and victims of injustice.

SOURCE: LifeIssues.net Homily Archive

Fr. Phil Bloom

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

ST. MARY OF THE VALLEY
ARCHDIOCESE OF
SEATTLE

HOMILIES

It’s Good to Have a Body

Bottom line: Even though our bodies decline and finally fail, it’s good to have a body because they enable us to receive Jesus physically.

RELATED HOMILIES:

2018 (Year B): It’s Good to Have a Body
2017 (Year A): Life in Christ Week 10: High Point
2016 (Year C): Not a Prize for the Perfect
2015 (Year B): Through Him Week 1: A Dynamic Presence
2014 (Year A): Like Someone Dying of Hunger
2013 (Year C): Eucharistic Coherence 2012 (Year B): Afflicted with Hunger
2011 (Year A): Most Precious Possession
2010 (Year C): Why Do I Have To Go To Mass?
2009 (Year B): What Have I Given You?
2008 (Year A): Who May Receive Communion?
2007 (Year C): Our Daily Bread
2006 (Year B): Language of the Body
2005 (Year A): Reverence for Eucharist
2004 (Year C): Communion for Kerry?
2003 (Year B): To Worship His Body and Blood
2002 (Year A): Broken Bread
2001 (Year C): The Eucharist Makes It Through
2000 (Year B): Combatting Impatience
1999 (Year A): Notes for Homilist
1998 (Year C): This is My Body
1997 (Year A): Jesus: True Bread of Life (How to Receive and Reverence the Eucharist)

Fr. Vincent Hawkswell

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

Fr. Tommy Lane

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

BIBLE STUDY,
PRAYER AND HOMILY
RESOURCES

DIOCESE OF
CLOYNE, IRELAND

HOMILIES

Jesus’ Continuing Presence in the Eucharist

Jesus’ continuing presence with us cost him dearly. It cost him his body and blood. The first and second reading today remind us in particular of Jesus shedding his blood. We make an agreement now by signing our name. In the ancient near east, the two people making an agreement walked on animals’ blood to signify they deserved death if they broke the covenant. In the first reading (Exod 24:3-8) we heard Moses sprinkled the people with animals’ blood at Sinai to seal the covenant. The second reading from the Letter to the Hebrews (9:11-15) describes Jesus’ death like no other New Testament document. It describes Jesus’ death as a liturgy in which he took his blood to heaven and presented it before the Father to atone for our sins. Jesus’ blood sealed the New Covenant. Our celebration of Corpus Christi today is a very joyful celebration of Jesus continuing to be present with us. But it cost Jesus his body and blood.

Fr. John Kavanaugh, S.J.

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

JESUIT HOMILIST,
SCHOLAR AND AUTHOR (1941-2012)

HOME

An Embodied God

The feast of Corpus Christi—now called the Body and Blood of Christ—has had, over centuries, special associations. Its origins seem to be in the thirteenth century’s cultic response to eucharistic controversies of the previous century. Until then, focus on the Eucharist centered on the sacrificial action of the sacrament rather than on the real presence apart from the Mass. As the reception of Communion became rarer among the body of believers, the impulse to adore from afar was intensified through devotion to the enthroned sacrament. The piety of holy men and women, including the likes of Aquinas, also called attention to the Blessed Sacrament until it became an official celebration of the church at the beginning of the fourteenth century.

Fr. Leon Ngandu, SVD

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

BIBLE TEACHER AT
SAINT AUGUSTINE CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL IN THE ARCHDIOCESE OF NEW ORLEANS

HOMILIES

From the Old Covenant to the New Covenant

Today, we celebrate the solemnity of the Holy Body and Blood of Christ, popularly known as Corpus Christi. The first reading we heard discussed the ratification of the Old Covenant between God and the people of Israel through the bloody sacrifice at Mount Sinai. The sacred author of the second reading lets us understand that the people of Israel transgressed the covenant commitments, and as a result, they were all under the curse of death. Then, Jesus’ death took place for deliverance from transgression under this first covenant. Jesus is the mediator of a New Covenant so that all people who are called may receive the promised eternal inheritance (Heb 9:15). We heard in the Gospel passage how Jesus celebrated the Jewish feast of Passover for the last time before his arrest and death, which introduced us to a New Covenant with God through his blood shed on the cross. 

Bishop Frank Schuster

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

AUXILIARY BISHOP
ARCHDIOCESE OF
SEATTLE

HOMILIES

YEAR B

Beware of False Communion

There is a highly envied demographic in society that is statistically more likely to experience more physical, mental and financial problems than the average American, can you guess which enviable demographic I am thinking of? Survey says: Lottery winners! Yes, it is true. Three to five years after winning a lottery, these so called “winners” will be several times more likely to be bankrupt than the average American with all the stress, heartache, and even physical maladies that can come with this. I don’t even have to cite a study for you. You can easily research this for yourself. When I first learned about this, it made me very, very curious. If winning the lottery will most likely make a person unhappy in comparison to others in society,what kind of occupations make people happier than most? This was easy to research as well, and with all the studies I saw, evidently being a priest or minister is very high on the list of occupations that report the most happiness. That discovery made me smile. I could have told you that. And so you kids out there, take notice! Religious sisters, priests and deacons are typically happier people than most. Consider that at the next job fair! As I come close to the end of my tenure at Saint Teresa of Calcutta, I hope that is a message I delivered effectively to our young people during my time here. The Church needs young people to follow Jesus and to care for his flock. If that is you, answer the call. If you are a parent of a young person considering a vocation,be supportive like my family was and continues to be for me

Franciscan Renewal Center

Body and Blood of Christ (Year B)

Diocese of Phoenix

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