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New Roads Messages

Author: New Roads Catholic Community

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We are New Roads Catholic Community, two Roman Catholic parishes in the Archdiocese of Boston working to renew our church centered around the mission and message of Jesus. We hope the messages here inspire you to take the next step in your faith journey.
308 Episodes
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In the Gospel story of the man born blind, Jesus doesn’t simply heal–he invites participation. This message explores how we often swing between either trying to control everything or waiting for God to fix everything, and how faith calls us into something different.
We all carry a quiet thirst–a longing for security, love, and meaning that nothing in this world seems to fully satisfy. In this message, we explore how that thirst isn’t a flaw to eliminate but a sign pointing us toward God.
We often chase information because it makes us feel safe, but Jesus offers something better than certainty. In this message, we reflect on how the disciples’ fear on the mountain meets not an explanation, but a touch. We are not meant to know everything. We are meant to trust the One who does.
This week we explore the oldest temptation of all: the pressure to prove we are enough. Looking at Adam & Eve in the garden and Jesus in the desert, we discover that being fully human isn’t about overcoming our limits, but trusting God within them.
In this preview of our Lent series, we look at how Lent isn’t mainly about giving something up–it’s about transformation of the heart. In this message, we explore our desire for independence and how God created us for community. Real transformation begins when we stop trying to do life alone and choose to walk with others.
What if your everyday life matters more than you realize? Jesus calls ordinary people to be salt and light in the real world: at work, at home, and in every relationship. This message invites us to stop waiting for big moments and start shining right where we are.
What if the Beatitudes aren’t instructions, but an invitation to see the world differently? In this message, we reflect on how Jesus calls us to notice the dignity, struggle, and suffering of the people around us–and how learning to see this way can transform our everyday lives.
What does following Jesus actually look like on a Monday morning? In this message, we look at Jesus’ simple invitation (“Follow me”) and how it reshapes the way we live, work, and relate to others. Rather than big, dramatic moments, discipleship often begins with small, everyday choices that allow God to quietly transform us from the inside out.
Work can feel overwhelming–like everything depends on us. In this message, we explore where that pressure comes from and how today’s Gospel speaks directly into it. What if there’s another way to carry the weight of our work and daily responsibilities?
Before Jesus heals a person or preaches a sermon, he hears these words from his Father: “This is my beloved Son with whom I am well pleased.” This message explores how our identity as God’s beloved comes before our work–and how living from that identity can change how we show up on Mondays, not trying to prove ourselves but grounded in who we already are.
In this message, we look at the story of the Magi and how God meets them through their ordinary work. As we begin this series, we’re invited to pay attention to where God may already be present in the work of our everyday lives.
When life turns out differently than we hoped, hope can feel fragile or even lost. This week, we look at Joseph’s story and discover that hope isn’t about getting the life we planned, but trusting that God is still present and at work in the life we didn’t. Even in disappointment, the thrill of hope is this: Emmanuel—God is with us.
Even the strongest believers (including John the Baptist) experience doubt and discouragement. This week we explore how God meets us in the struggle, and how patience, honesty, and bringing our questions into the light can steady our hearts. Hope doesn’t eliminate the waiting; it transforms it.
God’s renewal often begins not with dramatic change but with something small–like a shoot growing from a stump. Isaiah invites us to look for those tiny signs of new life, and John the Baptist calls us to “repent,” not in shame, but by waking up to God’s nearness and turning toward what God is already growing in us. This week, discover the small beginning God may be planting in you, and take one simple step to turn toward it.
Hope isn’t wishful thinking or optimism; hope is trusting that God is at work even when we can’t see how. This week we explore Isaiah’s call to “climb” toward hope and Paul’s reminder to wake up to God’s presence. We end with a simple Advent challenge: identify where you need hope and ask God each day to awaken hope there.
On the Feast of Christ the King, we remember what kind of King Jesus is: merciful, self-giving, and still inviting us to build with him. In a world obsessed with building our own brand and comfort, we’ll ask the bigger question: What if your life could help bring God’s Kingdom to earth right now?
Building anything that matters–faith, family, or purpose–always gets messy. When life feels shaky, Jesus reminds us that these are the very moments our faith can speak the loudest. This week we look at how to build a faith that bears witness, even when life gets hard.
God isn’t just helping us build our own lives–he’s building his Church. In today’s Gospel, Jesus clears out the clutter to make space for what’s sacred. He’s inviting us to do the same: to put him back at the center and to invest in what lasts. When we give, serve, and invest in our local church, we’re not just “keeping the lights on.” We’re joining God in creating a place where people can encounter hope and light for generations to come.
Life is short, but what we build with it doesn’t have to be. On All Souls Day, we’re reminded that love–not titles, money, or accomplishments–is what endures. This week we explore what it means to live with the end in mind and invest in the kind of legacy that outlives us.
We often try to build our lives on performance and comparison–doing enough, looking good enough, proving we’re better than someone else. Jesus says there’s a better foundation: humility. This week we explore how an honest, open posture before God reshapes us and why serving others lays the bricks of a life God can use.
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