288 afleveringen

Fr. Roger J. Landry, Diocese of Fall River

Catholic Preaching Father Roger Landry

    • Religie en spiritualiteit

Fr. Roger J. Landry, Diocese of Fall River

    Remembering Jesus as St. John Neumann Did and Sought to Help Others Do, St. Peter the Apostle Church, Philadelphia, June 1, 2024

    Remembering Jesus as St. John Neumann Did and Sought to Help Others Do, St. Peter the Apostle Church, Philadelphia, June 1, 2024

    Fr. Roger J. Landry

    St. Peter the Apostle Church

    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

    June 1, 2024

     

    This homily was given during first Vespers for the Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of the Lord in the Redemptorist Church of St. Peter the Apostle, built over the Shrine of St. John Neumann, the fourth bishop of Philadelphia. 

    https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/catholicpreaching/6.1.24_St._John_Neumann_and_the_Eucharist_1.mp3

     

    The Visitation, The Holy Innocents and the Eucharist, Holy Innocents Parish, Philadelphia, May 31, 2024

    The Visitation, The Holy Innocents and the Eucharist, Holy Innocents Parish, Philadelphia, May 31, 2024

    Fr. Roger J. Landry

    Holy Innocents Parish

    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

    May 31, 2024

     

    This was a bilingual homily during a holy hour. The first seven minutes were in Spanish, preaching about the connection between the Mystery of the Visitation and the Holy Eucharist. The rest of the homily, in English, was about the connection between the Holy Innocents and the Holy Eucharist. To listen to the homily, please click below:

    https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/catholicpreaching/5.31.24_Visitation_and_Holy_Innocents_1.mp3

     

    Most Holy Body and Blood of the Lord (B), Conversations with Consequences Podcast, June 1, 2024

    Most Holy Body and Blood of the Lord (B), Conversations with Consequences Podcast, June 1, 2024

    Fr. Roger J. Landry

    Conversations with Consequences Podcast

    Homily for Most Holy Body and Blood of the Lord, Vigil

    June 1, 2024

     

    To listen to an audio recording of this short Sunday homily, please click below: 

    https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/catholicpreaching/6.1.24_Landry_ConCon_1.mp3

     

    The following text guided the homily: 



    * This is Fr. Roger Landry and it’s a privilege for me to be with you as we enter into the consequential conversation the Risen Lord Jesus wants to have with each of us on Corpus Christi, the Feast of the Body and Blood of the Lord. In some ways, it’s the most important conversation a human being can have. Jesus takes bread and says to the apostles in the Upper Room, and to us each day, “Take it; this is my body.” Then he takes wine in a chalice and says, “This is my blood of the covenant, which will be shed for many.” These words would have been shocking to the apostles on Holy Thursday in the Upper Room. The wonder should never wear off. As we sing in the Panis Angelicus, “O res mirabilis! Manducat Dominum pauper et servus humilis.” “O what a mind-blowing reality: a poor and humble servant eats the Lord!” But that dialogue that leads to our drawing our life from Jesus in the Holy Eucharist just as he draws his life from God the Father leads to the possibility of a conversation that, incredibly, can continue every day in prayerful Eucharistic adoration when we have a chance to listen to God whisper to us interiorly, to bring to him our praise, thanks, sorrow, prayers for others and for ourselves, and learn how to abide in him and him in us. That existential conversation is then able to overflow into the whole of our life as we seek to love others as he has loved us first, giving us his body, blood and very life, and seek to be his instruments to bring others — our family members, friends, coworkers, fellow students and everyone we meet — into a similar dialogue, a similar communion of love and life.

    * In the Gospel this Sunday, before we get to the words of institution or consecration, Jesus speaks with his disciples about preparations for the Passover, and Jesus gives them detailed instructions about how to find the room where he intended to fulfill the ancient Passover rite as the definitive Lamb of God and how to get everything ready. It’s a good reminder to us of how we’re supposed to “prepare to eat the Passover,” to arrange our life to enter with Jesus into the new and eternal Covenant. A Catholic should be ever in a state of preparation to meet Jesus in the Eucharist, because the Eucharist is the supreme manifestation of the love of God for us. Jesus’ taking on our humanity and entering into the world through the fiat of the Blessed Virgin Mary wasn’t enough. His being born in poverty, hunted down as an infant by assassins, living three decades in relative obscurity weren’t enough. His whole public ministry — preaching, healing, exorcising, even raising three people from the dead — wasn’t enough. Not even his passion, death, and resurrection were enough. Jesus loved us so much that he willed to become our very food. He promised as he gave his valedictory address before ascending to the Father that he would remain with us always until the end of time and he does so by his real and substantial presence in the most holy Eucharist, outside of us in our tabernacles and monstrances for us to come to be with him, and inside of us in holy communion. That’s why Jesus in his apparitions to St. Margaret Mary Alacoque, and the Church in her documents, refers to the Eucharist as the Sacramentum Caritatis, as the efficacious sign instituted by Christ himself to give us his love. He not only laid down his life for us on Calvary,

    Bringing People like St. Andrew to the Eucharistic Jesus, St. Andrew’s Church, Newtown, PA, May 30, 2024

    Bringing People like St. Andrew to the Eucharistic Jesus, St. Andrew’s Church, Newtown, PA, May 30, 2024

    Fr. Roger Landry

    St. Andrew Church

    Newtown, Pennsylvania

    May 30, 2024

     

    https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/catholicpreaching/5.30.24_St._Andrew_Newtown_1.mp3

     



     

    The Eucharistic Path to Holiness, St. Augustine of Canterbury Parish, Kendall Park, NJ, May 28, 2024

    The Eucharistic Path to Holiness, St. Augustine of Canterbury Parish, Kendall Park, NJ, May 28, 2024

    Fr. Roger J. Landry

    St. Augustine of Canterbury Parish

    Kendall Park, New Jersey

    May 28, 2024

     

    To listen to an audio recording of tonight’s reflection, please click below: 

    https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/catholicpreaching/5.28.24_Eucharistic_Path_to_Holiness_1.mp3

     

    A Pilgrim Church on Earth: The Christian’s Lifetime Procession with the Eucharistic Lord, Cathedral of St. Francis of Assisi, Metuchen, NJ, May 27, 2024

    A Pilgrim Church on Earth: The Christian’s Lifetime Procession with the Eucharistic Lord, Cathedral of St. Francis of Assisi, Metuchen, NJ, May 27, 2024

    Fr. Roger J. Landry

    Cathedral of St. Francis of Assisi

    Metuchen, New Jersey

    May 27, 2024

    To listen to an audio recording of the talk, please click below:

    https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/catholicpreaching/5.27.24_the_pilgrim_church_on_earth_Metuchen.mp3

     

    To watch it on the Cathedral’s YouTube page, please click below: 



     

Top-podcasts in Religie en spiritualiteit

Kind van God
Hanneke van Zessen
De Ongelooflijke Podcast
NPO Radio 1 / EO
Dit is de Bijbel
NPO Luister / EO
KUKURU
Giel Beelen
Eerst dit
NPO Luister / EO
De Verwondering Podcast
NPO 2 / KRO-NCRV

Suggesties voor jou

Godsplaining
Dominican Friars Province of St. Joseph
The Road to Emmaus with Scott Hahn
Scott Hahn
The Liturgy of the Hours: Sing the Hours
Paul Rose
Bishop Barron’s Sunday Sermons - Catholic Preaching and Homilies
Bishop Robert Barron
Letters From Home
St. Paul Center
Catholic Bible Study
Augustine Institute