The Beatitudes form our gateway to the Sermon on the Mount, the first of the great five discourses which are recounted in Matthew’s Gospel, and a beautiful invitation to be with Jesus, a programme by which we may live a Christian life. Moses ascended a mountain to be with God and to bring the Law back to the people. Now Jesus ascends this mountain and draws the people with him, both his disciples and the multitude, and here he reforms and brings new life to the Law, teaching with authority as only he can [ … ]
Jesus | Christian Prayer | Reflections On The Gospels
Prayer with Jesus Christ
We live in Christian community | Pray with Jesus
Office Of Readings | Eastertide Week 7, Saturday | A Reading From An Unknown African Author Of The Sixth Century | The Church In Its Unity Speaks In Every Language | The Holy Spirit At Pentecost
This remarkable 6th century reflection from an anonymous African author offers a rich theology of Pentecost, drawing together ecclesiology, pneumatology, and missiology with great pastoral clarity. Writing within the context of the post-Roman North African Church—one marked by persecution, doctrinal strife, and cultural transition—this author bears witness to a theology of hope, rooted in the enduring and unifying presence of the Holy Spirit [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Eastertide Week 7, Wednesday | A Reading From The Constitution Of The Second Vatican Council On The Church | The Mission Of The Holy Spirit
This passage from Lumen gentium, the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church promulgated at the Second Vatican Council, is a profound exposition on the life-giving, unifying and guiding presence of the Holy Spirit in the Church. It articulates not only doctrinal truths about the Spirit’s nature and mission but also gives pastoral encouragement to the faithful to discern and receive the Spirit’s activity in their lives [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Eastertide Week 7, Tuesday | A Reading From The Treatise Of Saint Basil The Great On The Holy Spirit | The Power Of The Holy Spirit Fills The Whole Universe
Saint Basil the Great’s Treatise on the Holy Spirit was written during a time of doctrinal instability when the Church faced serious challenges regarding the nature and divinity of the Holy Spirit. Basil’s work is both an affirmation of the Spirit’s divine identity and a profound meditation on the Spirit’s activity in creation, revelation and sanctification [ … ]
Daily Bible Verses Easter Season To Pentecost | Friday Week 6 | Rejoice! A Pregnant Woman’s Labour Pains Bring Her Great Joy
In the Old Testament of the Bible, the image of a woman giving birth is often used to express great pain. It is also often used, especially by the prophets, to signify the birth of the new messianic people – see, for example, Isaiah. Jesus recalls both the pain of the Old Testament and the hope and fulfilment expressed through the prophets. The new birth is imminent. Through the sorrow and pain of the crucifixion, we are called to God [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Eastertide Week 6, Tuesday | A Reading From The Commentary Of Saint Cyril Of Alexandria On Saint John’s Gospel | Jesus Christ Is The Bond Of Unity
Saint Cyril of Alexandria draws attention in this reading to the spiritual and sacramental union of believers with Christ and one another. His theology, formed during the height of the Trinitarian and Christological controversies of the fourth and fifth centuries, centres on the mystery of the Incarnation and the salvific unity it brings to humanity. This passage illustrates a core tenet of Cyril’s thinking: that through Christ’s incarnation and the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, the faithful are mystically united both with Jesus Christ and with each other [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Eastertide Week 5, Wednesday | A Reading From The Letter Of Diognetus | Christian Living | In The World, But Not Of The World | What It Means To Be Christian
Christians blend into society—they marry, raise children, dress, eat, and work like others—but they live with a radical spiritual orientation. Their true ‘citizenship is in heaven’ (Philippians 3:20), and they view life on earth as a pilgrimage. This tension between presence and detachment highlights the paradoxical nature of Christian witness: they fully engage with their society while simultaneously transcending its values [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Eastertide Week 5, Tuesday | A Reading From The Commentary Of Saint Cyril Of Alexandria On Saint John’s Gospel | Jesus Is The Vine
Christ calling himself the vine and believers branches reveals the nature of our intimate, organic union with Jesus. This image underscores not mere moral imitation, but ontological participation — we share in Christ’s own life. Cyril writes, ‘[T]hose who are joined to him, as branches are to a vine, share in his own nature.’ [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Eastertide Week 5, Monday | A Reading From The Addresses Of Saint Gregory Of Nyssa | Jesus Christ Is The First-Born Of All Creation
Saint Gregory of Nyssa, a 4th-century Cappadocian Father and key architect of early Christian theology, offers in this Eastertide reading a profound and poetic meditation on the transformative power of the Resurrection. Rooted in the joy of Easter, the sermon explores the cosmic and personal implications of Christ’s rising from the dead. Gregory’s theology is deeply mystical, sacramental, and steeped in scriptural imagery, and this piece reveals the vast scope of the Christian vision of renewal [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Eastertide Week 5, Sunday | A Reading From The Sermons Of Saint Maximus Of Turin | Jesus Christ Is The Day
The sermon begins with a triumphant proclamation: ‘Christ is risen! He has burst open the gates of hell and let the dead go free.’ This dramatic image immediately places the Resurrection within the context of the Harrowing of Hell, a traditional doctrine in early Christianity that sees Christ descending into the realm of the dead to liberate the righteous. The Resurrection is not limited to the physical body of Jesus—it triggers a universal release and upward movement: the dead rise, the Church is renewed through baptism, and the doors of heaven are opened [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Eastertide Week 4, Saturday | A Reading From The Commentary Of Saint Cyril Of Alexandria On The Letter To The Romans | All Are Saved Through Jesus | Opus Dei | Body Of Jesus Christ
This reflection, drawn from Saint Cyril of Alexandria’s commentary on the Letter to the Romans, richly develops the theological significance of unity, divine mercy, and the universality of salvation. The passage resonates deeply with themes central to Eastertide: renewal, reconciliation, and the triumph of divine love through the risen Christ. St Cyril, a towering figure in patristic theology and a staunch defender of orthodoxy at the Council of Ephesus, here offers a profound meditation on the body of Christ and the universal scope of redemption [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Eastertide Week 4, Friday | A Reading From The Letter Of Pope Saint Clement I To The Corinthians
The First Letter of Clement is one of the earliest post-New Testament Christian writings, dating to around 95 A.D. Clement was the third successor of Saint Peter as Bishop of Rome, and his letter was written to address a crisis in the Corinthian church, where a group of younger Christians had ousted their elders from leadership. Clement’s primary aim was to restore harmony and proper ecclesial order. Against this background, his call for unity, humility, and order takes on profound urgency [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Eastertide Week 4, Wednesday | A Reading From The Treatise Of Saint Hilary Of Poitiers On The Trinity
Saint Hilary of Poitiers (c. 310–367) was a bishop and doctor of the Church known primarily for his role in defending the Nicene faith against Arianism. This heresy denied the full divinity of Christ and therefore threatened the entire theological foundation of the Incarnation, Trinity, and Eucharist. In his principal theological work, De Trinitate (‘On the Trinity’), Hilary argues forcefully for the unity of the divine and human in Christ. The Eucharistic theology expressed in this passage reflects and supports that Christological argument [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Eastertide Week 4, Monday | A Reading From The Treatise Of Saint Basil The Great On The Holy Spirit | The Spirit Gives Life
Saint Basil the Great’s reflection on baptism and the Holy Spirit is grounded in the rich theological and liturgical tradition of the fourth-century Church, when the doctrine of the Holy Spirit was under fierce debate. Writing against those who denied the divinity of the Spirit (notably the Pneumatomachians), Basil’s On the Holy Spirit defends the Spirit’s full equality with the Father and the Son. In this passage, he focuses on baptism as the sacrament by which the believer enters into new life, through the cooperation of both water and Spirit [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Eastertide Week 3, Saturday | A Reading From The Commentary Of Saint Cyril Of Alexandria On Saint John’s Gospel | Jesus Christ Gave His Body For The Life Of All
Saint Cyril of Alexandria (c. 376–444), Patriarch of Alexandria and central figure in early Christological controversies, here articulates a robust theology of redemption grounded in the Incarnation and its sacramental outworking. Writing in the context of his conflict with Nestorius and the doctrinal developments that led to the Council of Ephesus (431), Cyril is concerned above all with affirming the unity of Christ’s divine and human natures, and the salvific power of that union. This excerpt reflects his mature theological vision, especially his emphasis on the death of Christ as the decisive means of defeating death and giving life to humanity through participation in his now-glorified body [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Easter Monday | A Reading From The Homily Of Melito Of Sardis On The Pasch | Praise Of Jesus Christ
Melito of Sardis, writing in the second century, gives us one of the earliest and most powerful reflections on the mystery of Easter. His homily, poetic and theological, offers not just a celebration of the resurrection but a sweeping vision of salvation history fulfilled in Jesus Christ. The tone is triumphant and exultant—fitting for the season of Easter—but the substance is rich with meaning. At its heart, the homily proclaims a profound truth: that in Christ, death is not the end, but the beginning of new and eternal life [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Holy Saturday | A Reading From An Ancient Homily For Holy Saturday | Harrowing Of Hell
Holy Saturday is unlike any other day in the liturgical year. It is a day suspended between death and life, darkness and light, silence and song. This ancient homily for Holy Saturday enters deeply into that liminal space—the moment when Christ, having died on the cross, descends to the realm of the dead. In doing so, it invites us into the mystery of the Harrowing of Hell: Christ’s triumphant entry into the underworld to liberate those held captive by death since the dawn of time [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Good Friday | A Reading From The Instructions Of Saint John Chrysostom To Catechumens
In this deeply moving catechesis, St. John Chrysostom leads us into the mystery of Christ’s Passion, focusing our attention on the extraordinary power and significance of his blood. For Chrysostom, this blood is not just a historical detail or a symbol of suffering—it is life itself. It is protection, healing, rebirth, and nourishment. It is the very source from which the Church is born [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Thursday Of Holy Week | Maundy Thursday | A Reading From The Homily Of Saint Melito Of Sardis On The Pasch
On Holy Thursday, the Church gathers to remember the Last Supper—the evening when Jesus, in a quiet upper room, gave his friends the gift of the Eucharist, and with it, a new covenant sealed in his blood. The reading from Saint Melito of Sardis, a bishop from the second century, helps us understand the deeper meaning of what took place that night and how it connects to the cross and the resurrection that followed [ … ]
Daily Bible Verses For Lent | The Greatest Commandment | Love Revealed By Jesus Christ | Love Your Neighbour As You Love Yourself | Kingdom Of God
Jesus has discussed the resurrection of the dead with those who question him. He has spoken truly and in accordance with the Old Testament teachings of the Bible. The scribe who now asks Jesus his question is clearly a just man; he is not seeking to test Jesus but rather to learn from him and discover the truth. Jesus sees this and makes time to speak to the scribe quite plainly. The scribe accepts what Jesus has to say and we hear of Jesus’ message sinking into his heart [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Wednesday, Lent Week 2 | From The Treatise Against Heresies By Saint Irenaeus, Bishop
In this passage from Against the Heresies, Saint Irenaeus presents a sweeping vision of salvation history, showing how God, from the very beginning, has been preparing humanity for full communion with God. Central to Irenaeus’ theology is the idea that divine pedagogy unfolds in stages, accommodating human weakness while always pointing toward Christ. Through the law, the prophets, and acts of providence, God was training his people, drawing them from earthly concerns to heavenly realities [ … ]
Office Of Readings | Week 7 Saturday | A Commentary On Ecclesiastes By Saint Gregory Of Agrigentum
In the words of Ecclesiastes: Light itself is delightful, and it is a great boon for the eye to have sight of the sun. Devoid of light, the world would be without beauty and life would be lifeless. That was why Moses, who saw God, said in anticipation: And God saw the light and said that it was good. To reflect on the true and eternal light is even more fitting for us. This light is Christ who enlightens every man who comes into the world, the savior and redeemer of the world. He is the one who became man and sank to the very depths of the human condition. As David said: Sing to God a hymn to his name, make a highway for him who rises to the west. His name is the Lord, rejoice before him! [ … ]
Prayer With Jesus | Ten Commandments | Thou Shalt Not Commit Adultery | Meditations On The Love Of Jesus Christ | Simple Prayer
Instead of objectifying others for our own gratification, Jesus invites us to see people as individuals created in the image of God, deserving of love, care, and understanding. Jesus teaches us to foster genuine connections built on mutual respect, emotional intimacy, and the desire for the well-being of others [ … ]
King David And The Coming Of Jesus Christ | The Gospel | A Boy King David Declares The Gospel | Christian Faith | Audio Bible
Like and share this collection of videos on YouTube. Each video features a young King David in the Temple, proclaiming the Gospel. Each is a striking reminder of deep connection between Jewish history, King David, and the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ. The boy king is clothed as an initiate, recalling the Gospel account of Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane [ … ]
King David And The Coming Of Christ | A Gospel Moment | A Boy King David Declares The Gospel | Parables And Miracles Of Jesus
Like and share this new collection of videos on YouTube. Each video features a young King David in the Temple, proclaiming a passage from Saint Matthew’s Gospel. Each is a striking reminder of deep connection between Jewish history, King David, and the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ [ … ]
Jesus Teaches The Lord’s Prayer | Deep And Secret Faith In Jesus Christ | Our Father | Love Our Fellow Human Beings With Jesus | Incommensurate Value Of Human Beings | Christian Love
Jesus teaches this invitation to deeper prayer. Jesus calls us to pray from the heart, in humility and intimacy with the Father. Take a moment to quiet your mind and open your heart.
I invite the Holy Spirit to guide my thoughts. How can my prayer life be more in tune with God’s will?
George Herbert | The Temple | Affliction (4) | Christian Poems | Metaphysical Poetry
George Herbert’s Affliction (4) explores a personal and spiritual journey marked by expectation, suffering, and ultimate resignation to God’s will. The poem follows Herbert’s movement from early enthusiasm and joy in his relationship with God to a period of deep suffering and questioning, before finally arriving at a state of reluctant submission. The structure and language of the poem reflect the volatility of this experience, capturing shifts in mood and understanding as Herbert struggles with divine providence [ … ]
Who Were The Different Kings Herod? | Bible Stories Disentangled
King James Audio Bible | KJV | King James Version King Herod There were several individuals named Herod who played significant roles in ancient history, particularly in the history of [ … ]
Daily Bible Verses Advent & Christmas | Elijah As John The Baptist | Christian Social Justice | Kingdom Of God
The disciples Peter, James and John have just witnessed the Transfiguration on the mountain. They have seen the glorified Christ, and now they are puzzled, because they have been taught that Elijah would come before the Messiah. These are the verses from the prophet Malachi, which are the last words of the Old Testament:
Daily Bible Verses | Prayer And Vigilance | Watch For The Son Of Man | End Times | Kingdom Of God | Jesus Is Coming Soon
Most of the signs Christ describes to his listeners in the eschatological discourse had already been realized by the time Luke’s first audience would have heard his Gospel. There had been, and were, wars, persecutions, family conflict, and Jerusalem with the Temple had been destroyed. The Christians of Luke’s time listening to these Gospel verses, of today and since Tuesday, could then have been encouraged to know that they were very close to Christ’s full revelation, his apocalypse, and so have courage to bear persecutions and other great challenges of the early Church [ … ]
Daily Bible Verses | Apocalypse | Coming Of The Son Of Man | Kingdom Of Heaven | Kingdom Of God | Eschatological Christian Faith | Parousia
Mark’s account of Christ’s eschatological discourse reaches its climax with an apocalyptic vision and Christ’s announcement of the imminence of the parousia, the second coming of Christ, who is now called, following Daniel, the Son of man [ … ]
Healing Prayer | Jesus God And Man | Jesus’ Prayer | Our Gethsemane | Spiritual Healing | God The Father, God The Son
As Jesus offers prayer to God the Father we may find ourselves trying to fathom just what it might mean for Jesus to have been God incarnate, God the Son humbling himself to be born human [ … ]
Psalm 91 KJV | Nunc Dimittis | Night Prayer
Let us bless ourselves as we seek refuge in the night’s sleep, our day’s labour done. Let us be be safe in Jesus. Let us pray. May our prayer come to God.
It is perfectly done to accompany a reading of this psalm (91/90) with a recital of the nunc dimittis, and indeed fully to pray compline – the night prayer.
Such prayer lends itself to peace and silence – a restful sleep [ … ]
Origins And History Of The Devotion To The Sacred Heart Of Jesus | Crucifixion Of The Lord | Christian History | Trust And Faith | John’s Gospel
The devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus has its origins in early Christian thought and gradually developed into a formal practice over many centuries. The devotion focuses on the heart of Jesus Christ as a symbol of Jesus’ love, particularly Jesus’ willingness to suffer and die for humanity. This devotion has evolved through biblical interpretation, theological reflection, mystical experiences, and papal endorsements [ … ]
Daily Bible Verses | A Life of Humility and Service | Is It Lawful For A Man To Put Away His Wife? | Jesus’ Teachings On Love
Jesus has told his disciples about the Passion to come for the third time, as they journey to Jerusalem, and still this grizzly series of events, of mockery, scourging and death, is quite beyond the disciples’ comprehension. It is a great testimony to the apostles’ honesty and humility that, in recounting the Gospel, they do not seek to conceal their early weaknesses; these men chosen by Jesus have yet to be transformed through grace, to become the great pillars of the Church. Now further weakness is recalled, as the disciples reveal their ambition to have a powerful and prestigious position when the Kingdom comes [ … ]
Daily Bible Verses | Follow Jesus | Kingdom Of God | King James Audio Bible | Old Testament Prophecies Of The Kingdom
It is not for us to adapt Jesus to our lives; it is for us to conform our lives to Jesus. This is a lesson of these Gospel verses. Once we have heard the call of God through Jesus, there must be no umming and ahhing, no by now secondary considerations interfering in our new relationship with Jesus. Our life should now be his. As and when it is proper, all else will follow. If it isn’t appropriate, then it won’t [ … ]
Meditations On The Love Of Jesus Christ | Ministry Of Jesus | Prayer To The Sacred Heart Of Jesus | Faith And Peace Of God
O most loving Sacred Heart of Jesus, as I meditate on your love revealed at the Last Supper, I am humbled by your act of service in washing the feet of your disciples. Help me to have a servant’s heart and to always be ready to serve others. May your words of comfort and assurance be with me always, especially in times of trial. Help me to remember your ultimate sacrifice on the Cross and to love others as you have loved me. Amen [ … ]
Meditations On The Love Of Jesus Christ | Gethsemane | Relaxing Prayer And Meditation With Jesus In Gethsemane | Audio Bible
In these Gospel verses, Jesus goes to the Mount of Olives with his disciples, and at a particular place, Jesus separates himself to pray. Jesus urges his disciples to pray against temptation. In his prayer, Jesus expresses his desire for the cup of suffering to be removed but ultimately submits to God’s will. An angel appears from heaven to strengthen Jesus, and Jesus prays with such intensity that his sweat becomes like drops of blood falling to the ground [ … read more and listen … ]






































