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4th Sunday of Lent

by ©LPi — Father John Muir  |  03/30/2025  |  Gospel Meditation

A man looking a bit downtrodden approached me as I filled my car’s gas tank. He asked, “May I share with you my testimony about how good God is?” “OK,” I skeptically answered. He went on to tell me that he had been an alcoholic and drug addict, and that God had healed him; now he was four years sober. He said, “I didn’t deserve it, but now I’m a different person. God is so good! Have a terrific Tuesday!” A few minutes later, as I drove away, I saw him smiling and handing a homeless person some money. I was confronted with a choice: either he was a total fraud or God had changed him. Something had happened to him, and it didn’t seem fake. Maybe it was God.

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jesushandtous

Believe in Him

by ©LPi — Father John Muir  |  03/23/2025  |  Gospel Meditation

My childhood best friend was Xander Price. He was the fastest runner in school, an excellent baseball player and Jewish. Though his family wasn’t intensely religious, I felt totally at home with them despite our religious differences. Everything about their Judaism seemed to undergird and strengthen my own experience of being a Catholic. I knew they didn’t believe in Jesus like my family did, but I intuited somehow that Jesus was “hiding” in their religion. Like a cat moving under a blanket, ready to emerge at any moment, the Lord was hidden there in a special way.

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2nd Sunday of Lent

by ©LPi — Father John Muir  |  03/16/2025  |  Gospel Meditation
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St. Thomas Aquinas said that friends share three things: time, possessions and secrets. For example, how do I know if you're my friend? Well, let's say we've been to Mexico together, you've tried my shaky attempts at pasta carbonara, and you know what ridiculous costume I wore in a music video I filmed in my early twenties. We, dear reader, are definitely friends. We've shared time, possessions and secrets.

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First Sunday of Lent

by ©LPi — Father John Muir  |  03/09/2025  |  Gospel Meditation

One of the most fascinating moments in American history is when George Washington could have become the king of the newly liberated United States and didn’t. At the height of his power and fame, on Dec. 23, 1783, he resigned his commission as Commander-in-Chief, and went home. The astonished King of England remarked that in doing so, Washington was “the greatest man in the world.” Greatness is often defined by what we could do but don’t. Greatness is measured by the temptations we overcome.

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From the Pastor's Desk - March

by Fr. Chad King  |  03/05/2025  |  News

Thank you to the 78 families (as of writing this) who have given so far to the annual Diocesan Charity and Development Appeal (CDA).

As I announced a couple weeks ago, the parish goal hasn't changed for many years. This year, however, we've been given the goal of $151,562 (based on 3yr. avg revenue), which is almost $50k more than 187 families gave last year. As you can see, in order to reach our goal, it will take every family to do their part! Every gift matters, no matter how big or small, and each family is called to give what they can- in proportion to how God has blessed them. I personally have not given yet, but I plan to give this week. How about you?

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Bear the Fruit of God's Love

by ©LPi — Father John Muir  |  03/02/2025  |  Gospel Meditation

One of the things that older pastors and younger priests occasionally quarrel about is the proper balance between work and prayer. I know one pastor who complains that his younger associate ignores the people and the parish because he wants to spend more time in prayer. And the young priest complains that the pastor gives him too much work to do and no time to pray. The Lord’s words this Sunday speak into this tension with an image that can help us find a proper balance between life and prayer.

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7th Sunday in Ordinary Time

by ©LPi — Father John Muir  |  02/23/2025  |  Gospel Meditation

One of my favorite new singers/songwriters is Noah Kahan. I’m a little biased because, like me, he is originally from Vermont. In a fine song entitled “Stick Season,” he sings of his hope to “cancel out the darkness I inherited from dad.” This lyric articulates his painful recognition of a dark spiritual “inheritance” from his father, and his hope to be free of it. We all inherit some degree of evil from our earthly forebears. It’s easy to feel doomed to repeat their darknesses.

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6th Sunday in Ordinary Time

by ©LPi — Father John Muir  |  02/16/2025  |  Gospel Meditation

I craved four things as a teenager: success in sports, food, fun and the attention of popular people. However, I noticed that as I acquired them, I was more unsatisfied than before. So, I’d strive even more energetically, achieve more, and the sense of emptiness was greater still. These four things started to feel like burdens or even curses. Soon after, I encountered Christ in my high school youth group. Experiencing his love was totally different than anything those four things previously produced. It produced a lasting happiness.

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Free for New Chapters

by ©LPi — Father John Muir  |  02/09/2025  |  Gospel Meditation

My parents’ garage is full of old junk that no longer serves any purpose in my life. As a 46-year-old man, I admit that’s pretty lame. Either due to my sentimentality or laziness (or both, probably), I just couldn’t get myself to throw things away. But a few days ago, by a grace of God, I thought: “I’ll hire my nephew Ryan to throw a bunch of my stuff away — he couldn’t care less about my junk!” And you know what? It worked. In one day, Ryan chucked the majority of his uncle’s useless stuff. I feel so free, ready for a new junk-free chapter in my life.

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From the Pastor’s Desk - February

by Fr. Chad King  |  02/05/2025  |  News

It's been a while since I have written to all of you. I think it’s important to communicate with you often, therefore I am making a conscious effort to do so on a regular basis. My goal is to write at least once a month.

Please pray for Fr. Tim this month as he is taking his annual vacation and is back home in Africa through the end of the month. Please pray for safe travels for him, and strength for me. Please also extend thanks to Fr. Bona, who is helping with 2 Masses on weekends.

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maryspiercedheartblog

Ponder Mary's Pierced Heart

by ©LPi — Father John Muir  |  02/02/2025  |  Gospel Meditation

What is the secret to sharing in God’s power to overcome our difficulties? Mary teaches us this in the prophecy of her pierced heart. This Sunday, the old man Simeon, prophecies that when her son faces opposition, Mary’s soul will be pierced by a sword. The seemingly pointless agony of a mother helplessly watching her son be mocked, tortured, killed and then cruelly desecrated in death by a spear — somehow this piercing of her heart releases a power by which “the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed” (Luke 2:35). What to make of this?

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manholdingbible

God's Gift and God's Delivery

by ©LPi — Father John Muir  |  01/26/2025  |  Gospel Meditation

A young couple in my parish told me they were expecting their second child, a baby boy. I knew that their five-year old only child Emma had been desperately wanting to be a big sister for years, so I said, “Emma must have been so happy when you told her the news.” “Actually,” they said, “she burst into tears. She wanted a baby sister!” How often in life God wonderfully fulfills our desires and we are sad because we don’t approve of the way he does it. We want to control the gift and the delivery method.

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Keeping the Good Wine

by ©LPi — Father John Muir  |  01/19/2025  |  Gospel Meditation

A friend invited me to an invitation-only wine-tasting event. There were over two hundred varieties of wine. Having no idea how to approach such a massive selection, I wandered aimlessly among the tables, sipping this and that. At the end of the evening my friend asked if I had tried some of the exceptionally expensive wines. I hadn’t. “The really good stuff disappears first,” he said. “My man, you missed out on some amazing vino.” I was so disappointed. I wasted my chance for amazing once-in-a-lifetime wine. The wine I tasted was, well, blah.

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The Baptism of the Lord

by ©LPi — Father John Muir  |  01/12/2025  |  Gospel Meditation

In my second year of theology studies, I went to confession to a priest visiting the seminary for a three-day retreat. My heart wasn’t in it. I was going through the motions. I confessed my sins and waited for his response. The priest said, “For your penance, I’d like you to go into the chapel and repeat the words ‘You are my beloved Son, with you I am well pleased’ (Luke 3:22) until they mean something to you.” Easy penance, I thought.

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The Epiphany of the Lord

by ©LPi — Father John Muir  |  01/05/2025  |  Gospel Meditation

Have you ever wondered why the magi had gold, frankincense, and myrrh? Matthew’s Gospel tells us, “Then they opened their treasures and offered him gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh” (Matt. 2:11). Why are these things their “treasures”? One possible answer is they were magicians and astrologers, and these three items were the tools of their questionable trade. In offering them to Christ, they demonstrate that they will cease using such items to predict or control life. They place this baby-king, the God of Israel, at the center of their lives, and not their own devices of control, manipulation and prediction.

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