August 10, 2024

This post deals with the Gospel for the Eleventh Sunday after Trinity (a.k.a. the Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time), as celebrated on 11 August, 2024 (Year B, week 19). This continues from last week’s Gospel; here’s a link for any who missed it! I’m going to assume my readers have already read that part and its notes (and have therefore left out stuff about αἰών [aiōn] and the like that I might otherwise have made textual notes about). Beginning of... Read more

August 6, 2024

This post deals with the Gospel for the Tenth Sunday after Trinity (a.k.a. the Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time), as celebrated on 4 August, 2024 (Year B, week 18). Talk Versus Homily Portion of a map of the area around the Sea of Galilee. Note Bethsaida to the north and Capernaum on the northwestern shore. The miraculous feeding took place somewhere near Bethsaida,1 the hometown of SS. Peter, Andrew, and Philip. With this passage, we move to the “Bread of... Read more

July 30, 2024

This post deals with the Gospel for the Ninth Sunday after Trinity (a.k.a. the Seventeenth Sunday in Ordinary Time), as celebrated on 28 July, 2024 (Year B, week 17). The Bread of Life Discourse Beginning this past Sunday, and lasting I believe through the final Sunday of August, we are back in the Fourth Gospel, reading about the first of the two miraculous feedings and the homily containing one of Jesus’ famous “I am” statements, I am the bread of... Read more

July 26, 2024

This post deals with the epistle and Gospel for the Eighth Sunday after Trinity (a.k.a. the Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time), as celebrated on 21 July, 2024 (Year B, week 16). This past Sunday’s Gospel called for very few notes. By contrast, commentary on the epistle turned out to be a doozy! Not in itself, but its background. That also gave me one of my favorite things—namely, a pretext to talk about ecclesiastical architecture—so I went HAM (hence its lateness).... Read more

July 12, 2024

Ambassadors An ikon of the Twelve I’ve laid things out a little unusually in this post. Instead of just addressing the Gospel reading, I’m analyzing it together with its parallels in other Gospels. These are all about the mission of the Twelve Apostles. This is not the Great Commission; that comes later, after the Resurrection. This is when the Twelve were sent on their first “solo project” (solo in the sense that Jesus wasn’t physically present there). It was a... Read more

July 8, 2024

Saint Paul Needs a Prequel Miniseries I wound up with about twice as much “front matter” in this post as I expected! Counting the heading right above this paragraph as the first, the passage proper begins after the fifth heading. Skip to there if you want to jump right in. We all “know about” St. Paul, to the point that none of us know about him. I am in no position to offer an adequate primer on him here and... Read more

July 2, 2024

A Good Thing Came Thence A mosaic depicting Nazareth in the former Chora Church (now the Kariye Mosque) in Istanbul, Turkey. This gospel is both shorter and simpler than average. Accordingly, if I get the chance to, I’m hoping to translate this week’s epistle as well (II Corinthians 12.7-10, a fascinating passage)—no promises! Mark 6.1-6, RSV-CE He went away from there and came to his own country;a and his disciples followed him. And on the sabbath he began to teach... Read more

July 1, 2024

“Skip a Bit, Brother” Brother Maynard (right), accompanied by his brother, Brother Maynard’s Brother. Image from the Monty Python Wiki, used under a CC BY-SA license (edition unspecified—source). I was honestly quite miffed to discover that the Gospel for this Sunday was not Mark 5.1-20, the next pericope1 in sequence. That passage (especially in combination with this week’s actual text!) builds beautifully on the question last week’s Gospel concluded with: “What kind of man is this, then, that even the... Read more

June 24, 2024

Witnesses Not officially, but by informal custom, Trinitytide is divided into five parts. The first corresponds to the “Apostles’ Fast” observed in the East; the second lasts until Assumption (15 Aug.); the third, colloquially called “St. Michael’s Lent,” runs till Michaelmas Eve (28 Sep.); the fourth, “Hallowtide,” runs from Michaelmas until All Saints’ Day (1 Nov.) inclusive; and the fifth, “Doomtide,” runs from 2 Nov. (All Souls’ Day) until the beginning of Advent and the new liturgical year.* This week... Read more

June 22, 2024

A Thimbleful of Fire There’s a band out of Philly that I like, mewithoutYou [sic], that just wrapped up their farewell tour a couple years ago. Their musical style was a weird blend of lo-fi folk with punk that sometimes approaches screamo (which of course means they’re generally described as “rock”). But what’s stranger than that was their lyrics. The band’s core members and lyricists, Aaron and Michael Weiss, are brothers: their father was Jewish, and their mother had grown... Read more


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