Sunday Liturgy Planner (updated weekly) for celebrants, lectors, musicians, and anyone who wants to be more prepared for Mass. This week: xxxxxxxxxxx.

Liturgy Notes, Sunday Prep, Planning for Mass

Liturgy Notes, Sunday Prep, Planning for Mass

Top rated No. 1 Resource on the web for hundreds of FREE infographics updated weekly for homily planning, websites, bulletins, Bible study and class presentations.

January 11, 2026

January 11, 2026

Baptism of the Lord (A)

SUNDAY PREP
BISHOP GOLKASOCIETY OUR LADY OF TRINITYWORD ON THE WORDJEFF CAVINSKNOW BEFORE YOU GOCATHOLIC WOMEN PREACHPRIESTS FOR LIFE

Video courtesy of
the Diocese of
Colorado Springs

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TWTW infographic highlighting key points in the video

THE WORD THIS WEEK infographics are created using using GOOGLE’S AI Gemini 2.5 Pro. You are free to use the above infographic in any non-profit ministry. Please give credit to TheWordThisWeek.net and Diocese of Colorado Springs video series.

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TWTW infographic highlighting key points in the video

THE WORD THIS WEEK infographics are created using using GOOGLE’S AI Gemini 2.5 Pro. You are free to use the above infographic in any non-profit ministry. Please give credit to TheWordThisWeek.net and Society of Our Lady video series "Liturgy Prep."

Video courtesy of
Eternal Word
Television Network

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TWTW infographic highlighting key points in the video

THE WORD THIS WEEK infographics are created using using GOOGLE’S AI Gemini 2.5 Pro. You are free to use the above infographic in any non-profit ministry. Please give credit to TheWordThisWeek.net and EWTN video series "The Word on the Word."

Video courtesy of
Ascension Press
Faith Formation Leader

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TWTW infographic highlighting key points in the video

THE WORD THIS WEEK infographics are created using using GOOGLE’S AI Gemini 2.5 Pro. You are free to use the above infographic in any non-profit ministry. Please give credit to TheWordThisWeek.net and Sundays with Ascension video series "Encountering the Word."

YouTube player

TWTW infographic highlighting key points in the video

THE WORD THIS WEEK infographics are created using using GOOGLE’S AI Gemini 2.5 Pro. You are free to use the above infographic in any non-profit ministry. Please give credit to TheWordThisWeek.net and Dominican Friars, Province of St. Albert the Great.

Video courtesy of
Catholic Women
Preach

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TWTW infographic highlighting key points in the video

THE WORD THIS WEEK infographics are created using using GOOGLE’S AI Gemini 2.5 Pro. You are free to use the above infographic in any non-profit ministry. Please give credit to TheWordThisWeek.net and Catholic Women Preach video series.

Video courtesy of
Frank Pavone at
Priests for Life

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TWTW infographic highlighting key points in the video

THE WORD THIS WEEK infographics are created using using GOOGLE’S AI Gemini 2.5 Pro. You are free to use the above infographic in any non-profit ministry. Please give credit to TheWordThisWeek.net and PRIESTS FOR LIFE.

LITURGY PLANNING

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for Fr. Lawrence Mick
Infographic

Create a single-file HTML infographic in a one-column format with multiple 'card' sections, using large fonts that give the core liturgical theme for xxxxxxxx Sunday in Year C , Key Liturgical notes, and bullet list of suggestions for Liturgical Atmosphere and rites for this Sunday. Use the 'Merriweather' font for headings and 'Open Sans' for body text, based on the following color theme: Page Background: Light cream (#f7f3e9) Card Backgrounds: White (#ffffff) Headings: Deep red (#4a0e0e) Body Text: Dark gray (#333) Accent Text: XXXXXXXXX ensure all bold formatting is handled using the explicit HTML tag and not through Markdown syntax.

Screenshot

Fr. Lawrence Mick

Create an infographic with images for Fr. Lawrence Mick's Liturgy Planning Notes for XXXXXXXXXXXX based on his weekly column XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX.

2025 infographic based on Fr. Lawrence's 2013 column

Fr. Lawrence Mick was a priest of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, columnist, workshop leader on parish renewal and the author of many books on the liturgy. He is a long-time contributor to Celebration and other national publications.

MUSIC - OCP

Ken Canedo

Create an 8.5x11 inch vertical infographic with a clean, two-column layout. The theme should be Catholic Liturgy, using a palette of soft blues, sage greens, and a cream/parchment background with a subtle gold border. Use high-contrast, large, readable fonts.

1. Header Section:

Main Title: "Feast of the Holy Family" (Large, Bold, Blue)

Subtitle: "OCP Liturgy Podcast (2019)" (Smaller, Dark Blue)

2. Body Layout (6 Horizontal Rows):

Left Column: Contains a large, flat-style vector icon representing the part of the Mass.

Right Column: Contains the text for the specific Chant/Hymn and the book references.

Alternating Backgrounds: Alternate the background color of the rows between light blue and light green/white for readability.

3. Row Details:

Row 1 (Entrance Chant): Icon of a Church or Procession.

Row 2 (Responsorial Psalm): Icon of a Bible.

Row 3 (Gospel Acclamation): Icon of a Dove.

Row 4 (Presentation): Icon of Bread and Wine/Altar.

Row 5 (Communion): Icon of a Chalice/Host.

Row 6 (Sending Forth): Icon of Angels or Church. T

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I've God a River

Tom Booth

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Psalm 29

LECTOR TIPS - VIDEOS AND NOTES

Top Two
Online Resources
for Lectors

FIRST READINGSECOND READING

1st Reading Lector Tips

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Lisa Bellecci's Videos

Create an **8.5x11 inch vertical infographic** in an **ornate, illuminated manuscript style** with glowing gold and jewel-toned borders and light effects, matching the aesthetic of the reference image.

**Header Section:**
* **Main Title:** "[YOUR MAIN TITLE HERE]" (Large, bold, glowing gold and blue text).
* **Subtitle:** "[YOUR SUBTITLE HERE]" (Smaller, clear text).

**Top Panel (Purple/Orange Theme):**
* **Panel Title:** "[YOUR TOP PANEL TITLE HERE]" (Bold text on a purple banner).
* **Left Illustration:** A glowing, detailed illustration of **[DESCRIBE THE ILLUSTRATION HERE, e.g., a diverse group sharing a meal]**.
* **Right Bullet Points:** Three bullet points with small, glowing icons (e.g., heart, dove).
* **[ICON]** [BULLET POINT 1 TITLE]: [Bullet Point 1 Text] * **[ICON]** [BULLET POINT 2 TITLE]: [Bullet Point 2 Text] * **[ICON]** [BULLET POINT 3 TITLE]: [Bullet Point 3 Text]

**Bottom Panel (Teal/Blue Theme):**
* **Panel Title:** "[YOUR BOTTOM PANEL TITLE HERE]" (Bold text on a teal banner).
* **Left Illustration:** A glowing, detailed illustration of **[DESCRIBE THE ILLUSTRATION HERE, e.g., a lector consulting a priest in a church]**.
* **Right Bullet Points:** Three bullet points with small, glowing icons (e.g., checkmark, question mark).
* **[ICON]** [BULLET POINT 1 TITLE]: [Bullet Point 1 Text] * **[ICON]** [BULLET POINT 2 TITLE]: [Bullet Point 2 Text] * **[ICON]** [BULLET POINT 3 TITLE]: [Bullet Point 3 Text]

**Background:**
* A rich, patterned background with interwoven Celtic or classical motifs, illuminated with warm and cool light streaks.

Historical Situation / Theological Background: View

Proclaiming It One Way: I recommend that the lector try to evoke one or both of two mysteries here. In the first place, Israel is being challenged to reach outside itself, and to become God's instrument in a mission to other peoples. This was not a welcome development. However, it's a logical consequence of what has gone before. If Israel's Lord is the only "real" god, then the Lord is God over the pagan worshipers of other gods, and the Jews, willing or not, are the only people qualified to show the pagans this truth. In your proclamation, this calls for an emphasis on the "mission" aspects, on "nations," "the earth," "coastlands," and "the people."

Proclaiming It Another Way: Secondly, since this is the feast of the first public manifestation of the mission of the adult Jesus, the lector might try to "get into Jesus' head" as he grappled with this passage in his own heart. Don't assume that Jesus knew the future in detail, and always had a clear career-path in mind. After all, he indisputably submitted to John's baptism. Ask how Jesus "found himself" in this Scripture passage. You might proclaim it as if you were Jesus reading it aloud to himself and mulling it over as he prepares to go public.

2nd Reading Lector Tips

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Lisa Bellecci's Videos

Theological Background: View

Proclaiming It: For Peter, it wasn't meditation on Isaiah 42 that proved this. It was his relationship with Jesus, and his meditation on Jesus' life, from his baptism through his resurrection. So proclaim this like Peter delivered it originally, with the conviction of one who has had the "Aha!" experience, who finally sees it all clearly.