DiscoverBishop Barron’s Sunday Sermons - Catholic Preaching and Homilies
Bishop Barron’s Sunday Sermons - Catholic Preaching and Homilies
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Bishop Barron’s Sunday Sermons - Catholic Preaching and Homilies

Author: Bishop Robert Barron

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A weekly homily podcast from Bishop Robert Barron, produced by Word on Fire Catholic Ministries.
1082 Episodes
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Friends, for this Twenty-Third Sunday of Ordinary Time, we’re reading from the fourteenth chapter of Luke—and it is very serious spiritual business. A lot of us sinners are satisfied with a low-level spirituality of following the commandments. But in this extraordinary Gospel, Jesus challenges us to move into the upper levels of the spiritual life: “If anyone comes to me without hating his father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters, and even his own life, he cannot be my disciple.” This is meant to be a kind of shock therapy—a deeply challenging message about what serious discipleship entails.
Friends, for this Twenty-second Sunday of Ordinary Time, I want to talk to you about a very important theme—namely, pride and its antidote. I don’t know a spiritual teacher who doesn’t say that the fundamental problem we have is pride; it is the most deadly of the deadly sins. The opposite of pride is humility—and whereas the proud person is caved in around himself, the humble person leaves the black hole of self-regard and enters into reality. In our Gospel for today, Jesus tells us a great story that’s right to this point.
Does God Punish Us?

Does God Punish Us?

2025-08-2015:14

Friends, I want to focus this week on the second reading, which is from the marvelous Letter to the Hebrews. It addresses a very important and very controversial topic—namely, the divine punishment. You would be hard-pressed to say that this is not a motif in the Bible. That’s simply not the case; in fact, it’s a rather major motif. How do we make sense of this theme of divine punishment without falling back into a terrible view of God as an arbitrary, capricious tyrant? This little passage from Hebrews gives us the interpretive key.
Friends, the title of my ministry, Word on Fire, came from our Gospel for today. Jesus says to his disciples, “I have come to set the earth on fire, and how I wish it were already blazing!” This is not the lighting of a cozy campfire. This is closer to, if you want, Sodom and Gomorrah—to fire and brimstone. It is a dangerous and divisive fire. Christ is the light of the world, the divine luminosity—but to the degree that we are still in darkness, we will experience that light as something difficult, off-putting, even torturous.
What Is Faith?

What Is Faith?

2025-08-0515:003

Friends, on this Nineteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time, our second reading from the Letter to the Hebrews offers us a great biblical description of faith. I stand with Paul Tillich, the Protestant theologian, who said that faith is the most misunderstood word in the religious vocabulary. Critics of religious say that faith is accepting things on the basis of no evidence; it’s believing any old nonsense; it’s naïveté; it’s superstition. But this has nothing to do with what the Bible means by faith.
All Things Must Pass

All Things Must Pass

2025-07-2915:033

Friends, George Harrison once sang, “All things must pass; all things must pass away.” Almost every major religious figure and philosopher the world over has intuited this great truth about our world. It’s good, and there are good things in it—a beautiful sunset, an enjoyable meal, a great conversation—but they don’t last. With that in mind, let’s turn to our readings for this Eighteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time, which are about the theme of detachment.
Lord, Teach Us to Pray

Lord, Teach Us to Pray

2025-07-2315:181

Friends, we have the great privilege this week of reading, in our Gospel, Luke’s account of the Lord’s Prayer. This is a very sacred moment: Jesus himself—not just a spiritual guru or someone we admire, but the very Son of God—teaches us how to pray. And we become so familiar with the Our Father that we forget its spiritual power.
Friends, on this Sixteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time, our Gospel is the Martha and Mary story, and in my years of preaching, I’ve found that it tends to bother people a lot. With the first reading about Abraham in mind, we can better understand what this passage means—and doesn’t mean. Rather than playing one sister off the other, we should read Martha and Mary together: When we focus on the “unum necessarium,” the one thing necessary, all the many things that preoccupy us find their proper place. 
The Natural Law

The Natural Law

2025-07-0815:16

Friends, in our first reading from the book of Deuteronomy this week, Moses says to the people, “For this command that I enjoin on you today is not too mysterious and remote for you. . . . No, it is something very near to you, already in your mouths and in your hearts; you have only to carry it out.” This is a master text for what we call in the Catholic tradition “the natural law.” It means that there is within us a kind of deep moral intuition by which we know the right thing to do; there are intuitions of value that give us a sense of meaning, purpose, and direction in life.
Friends, as we resume Ordinary Time, it’s appropriate that we’re looking at a portrait of the Church, because we’re coming back, if you want, to the ordinary work of the Church up and down the ages to the present day. Our Gospel from the tenth chapter of Luke gives us our marching orders—from going on mission together and staying rooted in prayer, to trusting in providence and supporting the work of the Church, to curing the sick and proclaiming the kingdom of God.
Friends, this year, the feast of Saints Peter and Paul falls on a Sunday, and I want to spend some time reflecting especially on Saint Peter. Around the year 64, Shimon Bar Yonah, a fisherman from Galilee, was put to death brutally in the Circus of Nero. But while the Roman Empire is long gone and the successor of Nero doesn’t exist, the empire of this fisherman, Peter the Apostle, is everywhere, and in May, his 266th successor walked out onto the loggia of Saint Peter’s Basilica, built over the very spot where he was buried. 
Friends, every year we have Trinity Sunday followed by today’s wonderful Solemnity of Corpus Christi—two of the highest theological mysteries of our faith, the Trinity and the Eucharist, back to back. As we reflect today on the Body and Blood of Jesus, I want to explore the deep connection between temple sacrifice, the altar of the cross, and the Mass.
Friends, today is Trinity Sunday—one of my favorite feast days of the year because I can put my old theologian’s cap on. Looking first at one of the greatest of the medieval theologians, Saint Bonaventure, and then at maybe the greatest figure in Western theology, Saint Augustine, I’d like to reflect with you on the dynamics of the Trinitarian life—the very matrix into which we’re inserted through baptism.
The Fruit of the Spirit

The Fruit of the Spirit

2025-06-0516:342

Friends, this is the great feast of Pentecost, the feast of the Holy Spirit. In the First Reading, the Spirit manifests himself as a strong driving wind, and while you can’t see the wind directly, you can see its effects. The text I want to reflect on today is not in the readings but is one of my favorites: Galatians 5:22–26, when St. Paul talks about “the fruit of the Spirit.” And it’s precisely to this same point: What are the signs that the Holy Spirit is operative in us?
Friends, getting the Ascension of the Lord right is very important for understanding many aspects of the Church’s life. So I want to dwell on that a little bit with you today, and I want to do so under two headings: the first I’m going to call more political, and the second more liturgical. They are both hinted at in the great statement in the Creed that we recite week after week: “He ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father.”
Friends, we come to the Sixth Sunday of Easter, and as the Church readies us for Pentecost, the readings begin to talk about the Holy Spirit. In today’s Gospel, Jesus, speaking to his disciples the night before he dies, says, “The Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you everything and remind you of all that I told you.” In the beginning was the Word, and the Word became flesh. But God spoke his Word into human minds that take it in, mull it over, and look at it from different angles, the idea developing across space and time. And so we need a divine interpreter of the divine Word.
Friends on this Fifth Sunday of Easter, we have an extraordinary Gospel that is at the heart of the Christian thing. Jesus, at the beginning of a lengthy and incredibly rich monologue he gives the night before he dies, says to his disciples, “I give you a new commandment: love one another. As I have loved you, so you also should love one another. This is how all will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.” This is not a sentimental or psychological banality. To understand Jesus here, we have to understand what a strange thing love is—and the way the word is being used.
Friends, on this Fourth Sunday of Easter, we have this marvelous, short but very punchy reading from the Gospel of John: Jesus referring to himself as the good shepherd. This is a remarkably apt metaphor for how God reaches out to us—knows us personally—and how we are able to discern and follow his voice. But how do we hear the voice of the shepherd? In a lot of ways—but I wonder if the clearest way isn’t through the conscience, which John Henry Newman called the aboriginal Vicar of Christ in the soul.
Friends, on this Third Sunday of Easter, we have the magnificent Gospel from the very end of the Gospel of John, chapter twenty-one, which is so rich theologically. We see here, on full display, what it means for us—who are all ambiguous characters—to stop resisting the cross of self-denial and love and to walk the way of the Lord.
Everything Has Changed

Everything Has Changed

2025-04-2314:521

Friends, we enter now into the Easter season, and here is the thing I want you to know: We misunderstand Easter dramatically when we think primarily of spring festival time, the weather getting nicer, and Easter bunnies and bonnets. All of that is great; but if you don't understand Easter as a revolution—as an earthquake that has changed the entire world—you have not understood it.
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Comments (25)

Monica Popovici

God seems to use suffering or the lack of, to shows what's in our hearts. We can see someone suffering and we can interpret it as a punishment. Or we can see someone doing something bad and not getting punished and we can interpret that as God doesn't love that person.

Aug 20th
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Matt Sweeney

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Jun 17th
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Olga

Amazing explanation

Mar 27th
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Olga

Thank you for this reflection on Scripture, Bishop Barron. It made me think of the passage that says that Christ is the corner stone and the passage that says that the Church has the apostles for its foundation. They form part of the building of the Church, which has to have walls, since walls are part of a building. It makes me think of walls as necessary part of a building, to hold people, rather than walls as partitions to separate people???

Jan 27th
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ID17341010

Unbelievably, there seem to be no comments. Let it not be that the power of the cancellers has shut the mouth and hearts of the Disciples of Christ. Congratulations Bishop Baron on the courage to use your education, talent and passion in this timely way to feed the hungry. May we catch the courage you show to step up as people of the scripture in a world bult on so much sand. Br John Verhoeven, NSW. Austraila

Oct 15th
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David Fatimehin

great message.

May 8th
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Elizabeth Twente

be blessed

Apr 28th
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Elizabeth Twente

I needed this word today

Nov 26th
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Elizabeth Twente

be blessed

Nov 9th
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Elizabeth Twente

be encouraged

Nov 2nd
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Alondra Avila

I am reconnecting to my catholic roots in seek of a spiritual connection and the explanation of lent and our desires really opened my eyes and clarified the meaning. Thank you Bishop Barron!!

Mar 16th
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Stephanie Green

Thank you bishop. Great homily. Truly something to think and meditate on.

Jul 23rd
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Christopher McNally

Very interesting, insightful and inspiring.

Apr 22nd
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Christopher McNally

Is there further support for the intended historicity of the Gospels comes at the opening of Luke 1:1-4: "Forasmuch as many have taken in hand to set forth in order a narration of the things that have been accomplished among us, according as they have delivered them unto us, who from the beginning were eyewitnesses and ministers of the word: It seemed good to me also, having diligently attained to all things from the beginning, to write to thee in order, most excellent Theophilus, that thou mayest know the verity of those words in which thou hast been instructed." Is it likely - or even possible - that a group of people who advocated and practiced a radical system of ethics, including radical honesty and truthfulness, would have succeeded by founding the Church upon a lie? And a lie told, literally, in the first sentence of the first paragraph of its history?

Apr 11th
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Joe

"Because Jesus is who He says He is, what He says is."

Mar 29th
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Debra Andrus

Bishop Barron: Thank you, thank you for your depth of insight into the Word, and for the passionate delivery that holds my wandering mind. You give me hope that someday I'll be able to read Scripture with an iota of understanding.

Mar 26th
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E J

Love this podcast

Jan 24th
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E J

Very informative episode. I had no idea that Herod was hunting Joseph. That's terrible. Herod didn't want Jesus to have a chance to live. I wonder why I am so surprised by this?

Dec 26th
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E J

If you are interested in being happy, this guys sermons might help.

Dec 12th
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Gerry Castellani

Fr. Barron Thank you for this sermon. I often feel a sort of frustration with friends and others who challenge my Catholic faith. I empathize with them and yet out respect for the other I find myself tip toeing around their belief in what they think the bible says to them. In the end, I pray for enlightenment from heaven above for myself and others. And so I wait, but often I'm pushed to exhort another's opinion and I attempt to point with my words and deeds to truth of our one holy catholic church. Most of my attempts are then met with anger, resentment and ultimately a friendship or relationship devoid of charity. What in the world is the bridge of unity? I am seeking unity but unity is not the others intent. I'm training in apologetics, studying the bible, attending mass, adoration, and praying the rosary mostly daily and waiting....Have a beautiful day Fr. Barron I appreciate your Institute, sermons, and show. You picked a gem in Brandon Vogt. I enjoy his gentle yet determined sp

Feb 13th
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