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.
1010 Episodes
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Friends, we come to the Fourth Sunday of Easter, known as Good Shepherd Sunday. Jesus says in the Gospel, “I am the good shepherd. A good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep.” What is it about that image that sings to us across the ages, from the pages of the Bible to the present day? What I want to do is reflect on this image of the shepherd—first, in relation to Jesus, then second, in relation to leadership in the life of the Church.
Friends, this week, on the Third Sunday of Easter, we have a passage from that magnificent twenty-fourth chapter of Luke—one of the appearances of the risen Christ to the Apostles. When we’re talking about the Resurrection, we’re talking about the central point of Christian faith, the hinge upon which the whole of Christianity turns. So to understand what we’re dealing with here is exceptionally important. What I want to do is reflect on the different views about what happens to us when we die that were floating around the eastern Mediterranean in the first century—and how none of them is on offer here.
Friends, on the Second Sunday of Easter, we have the inexhaustible reading from the twentieth chapter of John—one of the accounts of the Resurrection appearances of Jesus. These are in many ways the core texts of our Christian faith, so it behooves us to spend some careful time looking at them. This week, I want to reflect on the shalom (peace) that the risen Christ offers his disciples—and the struggle of one disciple, who was not present, to believe.
Friends, a very happy and blessed Easter! We come to the climax of the Church’s year, the feast of feasts, the very reason for being of Christianity. Everything in Christian life centers around the Resurrection. And the Church gives us, every year, the account of Easter morning from the Gospel of John. I want to bring out just one feature that John especially draws attention to—namely, the burial cloths left behind in the tomb. These strange and wonderful cloths that opened the door to faith long ago could perhaps do the same thing today.
Friends, we have the great privilege on Palm Sunday of reading from one of the Passion narratives, and this year, we read from the Gospel of Mark—the very first one written. But what I want to do today is something a little bit different: instead of putting the focus on Jesus, I want to focus on a series of people around him as they react in different ways to the events of the Passion, putting ourselves in the scene. Who do we identify with in this story as Jesus comes toward his death?
Friends, on this Fifth Sunday of Lent, we hear one of the most pivotal passages in the Old Testament: Jeremiah 31:31. Jeremiah knew the long Israelite history of covenant and blood sacrifice, but he prophesies, “The days are coming, says the LORD, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah.” This passage will find its fulfillment about six centuries later at a Passover supper, where a young rabbi—the covenant in person—offers his own lifeblood for his people to drink.
Face Your Fears

Face Your Fears

2024-03-0514:181

Friends, the Gospel on this Fourth Sunday of Lent includes one of the most famous verses in the Bible: “For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him might not perish but might have eternal life” (John 3:16). In many ways, this verse is the Gospel in miniature. But we can isolate this line too much and miss the real import of it when we don’t attend to what happens right before—namely, Jesus’ reference to the serpent in the desert.
Friends, on this Third Sunday of Lent, the Church asks us to look at one of the great texts in the Old Testament—namely, the Ten Commandments from the book of Exodus. Lent is a time of getting back to basics spiritually, and walking through the Ten Commandments is a great way to do it. Go back to this text in Exodus, commit the Commandments to memory if you haven’t, and use them to examine your conscience.
Friends, we come now to the Second Sunday of Lent, and we’re on both dangerous and very holy ground with the first reading from the twenty-second chapter of Genesis. The ancient Israelites referred to it as the “Akedah,” which means the “binding”: Abraham binds and is ready to sacrifice Isaac at God’s command. It’s hard to imagine another text in the Old Testament that has stirred up more puzzlement and opposition. I am with Søren Kierkegaard: if you don’t experience “fear and trembling” having read this text, you have not been paying attention. And it’s naming something of absolute centrality in the spiritual life.
Friends, we come now to the holy season of Lent. The Gospel for this First Sunday of Lent is Mark’s laconic version of the temptation of Jesus in the desert. Mark does not give us the details we find in Matthew and Luke, but we do hear this mysterious observation: “He was among wild beasts, and the angels ministered to him.” We are given here a kind of icon of the union of the spiritual and the material, the soul and the body, in the human being—both the glory and the agony of human life. And a really good way to pray through Lent is reflecting on our own struggles in light of that icon.
Friends, this week, our Gospel is the marvelous passage from Mark about Jesus curing a leper. These moments of healing stayed so deeply in the imaginations of the first Christians. What do we make of this particular healing of a leper? Let’s look at it from three angles: life on the margins of society, the shame of our own sin, and the absence from right worship.
Friends, the Gospel of Mark is a fascinating literary work. St. Mark seems to write in a breathless, staccato, even primitive manner, but the deeper you look, the more his Gospel appears iconic. He presents scene after scene in a very concentrated way, telling us some rather deep truths about the faith. Our Gospel for today from the first chapter is a good example of this. We see on clear display here what Pope Benedict described as the three essential tasks of the Church: it worships God, it serves the poor, and it evangelizes.
Friends, the first reading from Deuteronomy today is of signal importance. Moses, speaking to the people before they enter the Promised Land, says, “A prophet like me will the LORD, your God, raise up for you from among your own kin; to him you shall listen.” These words haunted the mind of Israel. Moses was the supreme authority; there was no figure in the Old Testament more important. Who could be greater than Moses? We find the answer in the Gospel: Jesus of Nazareth, the Holy One of God, who speaks on his own authority.
Friends, though the book of Jonah is only a few pages long, there is something inexhaustible about it. It’s a biblical commonplace that God speaks to certain people and gives them missions, as he does with Jonah in our first reading. But God also speaks to us all the time, precisely in the voice of our conscience. Do you listen to the voice of God or not? Do you listen to what your conscience is telling you or not? If you do, you become a vehicle of grace for yourself and for all those around you. If you don’t, chaos ensues.
The Voice of Conscience

The Voice of Conscience

2024-01-0814:432

Friends, we commence now with the Second Sunday in Ordinary Time, and our first reading is one of my favorites in the Old Testament: the account, in the First Book of Samuel, of the call of Samuel, who as a young man hears the voice of the Lord for the first time. In the history of salvation, in the lives of the saints, occasionally God really does speak in a voice that can be heard, but I think what’s being described here is the word of God in the voice of the conscience, and what to do when we hear it.
Friends, we come to the wonderful Feast of the Epiphany and the great account in the Gospel of Matthew of the journey of the three magi. This marvelous, puzzling story, which has so beguiled the poets, artists, and preachers over the centuries, bears a very profound theological truth, and it has to do with the relationship of the national and the transnational.
Go to Joseph

Go to Joseph

2023-12-2715:191

Friends, we come to the wonderful Feast of the Holy Family. Over the years on this feast day, I’ve certainly preached on the dynamics of the Holy Family, on Mary, and of course on the Lord, but I don't think I’ve ever focused on St. Joseph. Well, that ends today. Let’s look at four dimensions to the holiness of this greatest male saint in the history of the Church.
He Will Rule Forever

He Will Rule Forever

2023-12-1913:15

Friends, we come to the fourth and final Sunday of Advent, falling this year on the very day before Christmas. And today, the Church invites us in our readings to think about David. Jesus is the fulfillment of the Torah, the fulfillment of the temple, the fulfillment of all of the longings of the prophets and patriarchs of Israel. And he is, perhaps above all, the new and definitive David, the King and Priest who will “rule over the house of Jacob forever.”
Friends, for this Third Sunday of Advent, the Church asks us to focus on John the Baptist, who of course is one of the great Advent figures. It’s as though John stands on a kind of frontier or border: all of the human longing for God, in all its various expressions over the centuries and across the cultures, is summed up in this man. “Among those born of women there has been none greater than John the Baptist.” Yet what does he say? “I am the voice of one crying out in the desert, ‘make straight the way of the Lord.’” At the limit of human religiosity, summing up all that we can bring to the table, this figure looks to another.
Friends, great writers, from Aristotle to Shakespeare to Melville, put a lot into their opening line, which often sets the tone for the whole work. This week we have the privilege of hearing the very opening of the Gospel of Mark, which, by scholarly consensus, is the first of the Gospels written: “The beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ the Son of God.” In the manner of those great writers, this line matters a lot; in fact, every bit of it matters. And what sounds to us like familiar spiritual language was, in the first century, an edgy proclamation of the true Emperor to the powers that be.
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Comments (21)

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
Reply (1)

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
Reply (1)

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
Reply (1)

E J

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

Dec 12th
Reply (1)

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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Donovan Kira Burrell

awesome

Jul 27th
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