Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe

Before sunrise on a December morning, an ordinary man walked the road toward mass on the hill of Tepeyac. He was not a governor, not a soldier, not a spokesman for a cause. Juan Diego was simply faithful—poor, overlooked, living in a world torn open by conquest, suspicion, and fear.

That is precisely where Our Lady chose to appear.

Guadalupe does not arrive as a badge for one side. She comes as Mother—Madre de Dios—for a wounded, divided society. Her presence says: you are not merely rivals, classes, or camps. You are children. One Mother, many peoples. She speaks to Juan Diego in a way he can receive, and she sends him back into the conflict with a task larger than himself.

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Advent by Candlelight

A series of reflections on the 4 Sunday Gospels of Advent.

1st Reflection

Advent always begins in the dark.

We gather this evening by candlelight because the Church wants us to feel that darkness—not to frighten us, but to help us recognize how much we need the true light. The first Gospel of Advent places us with Jesus speaking of the days of Noah, of people going about their ordinary lives, unaware that everything is about to change. Into that scene he speaks a simple command: “Therefore, stay awake!”

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Second Sunday of Advent

Many of us might admit that this Jubilee Year of Hope has passed quietly by. It is on the Church’s calendar, but not always on our minds. Yet the very idea of a Jubilee is to interrupt ordinary time, to shake loose the dust that settles over our faith, and to let God do something new within us.

Into that same kind of spiritual drowsiness steps John the Baptist. He does not arrive gently. He is rough, strange, even unsettling: camel hair on his shoulders, the dust of the desert on his feet, wild insects for food. God chooses this man precisely because he cannot be ignored. His very presence is a question: have you grown too comfortable in your faith?

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