The BreadCast

jameshkurt@gmail.com

Spirit-filled daily reflections on the Mass Readings of the Roman Catholic Church from the book Our Daily Bread by James Kurt (with imprimatur). The daily podcasts are voice only, while the podcasts for Sundays and Solemnities are produced with music and other elements. Another podcast recently added: Prayers to the Saints - a prayer to each saint on the calendar for the US. Also with imprimatur.

  1. 13H AGO

    April 5 - Easter Sunday

    (Acts 10:34a,37-43; Ps.118:1-2,16-17,22-24; Col.3:1-4 or 1Cor.5:6b-8; Jn.20:1-9 or Lk.24:13-35) "Everyone who believes in Him will receive forgiveness of sins through His name." "His mercy endures forever," brothers and sisters, and it is for us to "declare the works of the Lord": that Jesus was "raised on the third day," that He lives, that He still is "healing all those oppressed by the devil." With Peter and the apostles we must "preach to the people and testify" that "the right hand of the Lord is exalted." Yes, "they put Him to death by hanging Him on a tree," but "the stone which the builders rejected has become the cornerstone." Yes, we all bear guilt for the death of the Son, but in His rising He brings about the death of our sin. Brothers and sisters, "you were raised with Christ" and should have nothing more to do with sin. "Christ is seated at the right hand of God," and we must be seated there with Him. To Him should we raise our eyes for our "life is hidden with Christ in God." "Therefore, let us celebrate the feast, not with the old yeast, the yeast of malice and wickedness, but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth." No more should sin find place in us or grow within us unto death, but now that new life has come, we should find our place with Him. Peter and John ran to the tomb upon hearing the news that Jesus was not there. Upon entering, they "saw and believed," they "understood the Scripture that He had to rise from the dead." Upon believing, death no longer held dominion over them; and soon they would proclaim to all the world the Gospel of life and peace. Soon the cornerstone of truth would take hold of all who heard their words, and grow in time unto heaven. And His kingdom shall not be removed. Brothers and sisters, each day the Lord opens the Scriptures to us as we gather as His children. Each day we recognize Him in the breaking of the bread. Each day we are called to make known the glory of the resurrection we hold in "our hearts burning within as He [speaks] to us on the way." Here at His table we receive Him each day in Word and in Sacrament. May all men know the gift of life that is ours through the forgiveness of sins He offers. Let us pray that all will believe. Written, read & chanted, and produced by James Kurt. Music: "Every Day Is Christmas" from All One, sixth album of Songs for Children of Light, by James Kurt. ******* O LORD, He whom we crucified has been raised; the tomb is empty and His Word now burns in our souls – Alleluia! YHWH, your Son has truly been raised. Alleluia! And this stone rejected by the builders has now become the cornerstone of your Church. Let us be built up in Him and come to His glory. Alleluia! Help us, O LORD, to keep our eyes fixed on Him and on the glory to which He leads us. In Him we find the forgiveness of our sins and so become new men. Let us not turn back as we walk on the road with Him; may His Word always burn in our hearts along our way to you, and may we partake always of His precious Body and Blood until we are present with Him in your eternal kingdom. O LORD, we praise you for your glory, for your grace that has come into our lives and leads us to union with you. O let us die and be raised with Christ! Let us humbly run to the empty tomb and declare with His disciples that He has been raised. Let all hear His Word and believe in Him, and so enter into His glory. Alleluia!

    6 min
  2. 1D AGO

    April 4 - Easter Vigil

    (Gn.1:1-2:2; Ps.104:1-2,5-6,10,12-14,24,35 or Ps.33:4-7,12-13,20-22; Gn.22:1-18; Ps.16:5,8-11; Ex.14:15-15:1; Ex.15:1-6,17-18; Is.54:5-14; Ps.30:2,4-6,11-13; Is.55:1-11; Is.12:2-6; Bar.3:9-15,32-4:4; Ps.19:8-11; Ez.36:16-17a,18-28; Ps.42:3,5,43:3,4; Rom.6:3-11; Ps.118:1-2,16-17,22-23; Mt.28:1-10 or Mk.16:1-7 or Lk.24:1-12) "He is not here." The women come faithfully to the tomb early Easter morning. What do they find but that the stone is rolled back from its gaping mouth; and angel(s) in white deliver unto them the message of the ages: "He has been raised." This night, this early morning, we are led through salvation history, through our own history as human beings made in the image of God here upon the face of the earth, souls coming unto heaven. "Our soul waits for the Lord, who is our help and our shield," is the song of the Old Testament. From the beginning of Creation our hearts are set on Him. Along the way "Abraham took the wood for the holocaust and laid it on his son Isaac's shoulders," prefiguring the Father's own sacrifice of His Son for our sins and our salvation. Moses led the Israelites out of Egypt, out of the land of sin, through the Red Sea, "with the water like a wall to their right and to their left," prefiguring our Baptism as Christians; and they "sing to the Lord for He is gloriously triumphant," prefiguring our own joy. Always we are reminded by the prophets of old: "The Lord calls you back, like a wife forsaken and grieved in spirit." And he who heard the call even then sang, "O Lord, you brought me up from the netherworld; you preserved me from those going down into the pit." Yes, repeatedly the Lord calls out through His prophets: "Come to the water!… Come, without paying and without cost, drink wine and milk!" He promises, "With joy you will draw water at the fountain of salvation." We who "have forsaken the fountain of wisdom" by the sin that plagues our inheritance are called back to "the One who established the earth for all time… before whom the stars at their posts shine and rejoice"; we are called to cling to the Word of God, to Wisdom: "Turn, O Jacob, and receive her: walk by her light toward splendor." For the sake of His Name, the Lord who "scattered them among the nations" now beckons His children home. And those of faith sing with David, "Send forth your light and your fidelity; they shall lead me on and bring me to your holy mountain, to your dwelling place." Brothers and sisters, we know that "we who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into His death," the death to sin. And having been "buried with Him," we are also raised with Him this night, this morning, that "we too might live in newness of life." Now His holy dwelling place is here among us with the purest of light that rises this day. Let us be children of this holy Light. No longer in the tomb let us dwell. Written, read & chanted, and produced by James Kurt. Music: "Removing the Log from My Eye" (third part) from Listening to the Lamp, ninth album of Songs for Children of Light, by James Kurt. ******* O LORD, from the tomb your Son has been raised, and we shall be raised with Him. YHWH, your Son is no longer in the tomb, and we have escaped with Him. It is the third day and He has been raised, just as He said. The stone is rolled away and so now all souls may leave the darkness of this world behind and come with Jesus to the light of Heaven. You have led us to this day, O LORD, throughout all our history, it has always been your intention to save our souls and raise us to you, even from the time of Creation. And so you called Abraham to sacrifice his son; and so you led the Israelites out of Egypt. Your Wisdom has been upon your people every step of our way that we might be wed to you in your eternal kingdom. And now in the death and resurrection of your Son you fulfill your will among us. And now we who are baptized into His death are raised to glory with Him. Let it be declared to all, LORD, that the Christ is no longer in the tomb, but awaits us all in new life.

    6 min
  3. 2D AGO

    April 3 - Good Friday

    (Is.52:13-53:12; Ps.31:2,6,12-13,15-17,25,Lk.23:46; Heb.4:14-16,5:7-9; Jn.18:1-19:42) "He shall be raised high and greatly exalted." Here is your king: "Jesus the Nazarene, the King of the Jews," Pilate has written upon His cross. Here He is lifted up, where "many were amazed at Him – so marred was His look beyond human semblance and His appearance beyond the sons of man." Yet "shall He startle many nations; because of Him kings shall stand speechless." The Scripture passage is fulfilled: "They will look upon Him whom they have pierced." And there they shall see that He who "was spurned and avoided by people… one of those from whom people hide their faces," held in "no esteem" as He was… this same "lamb led to the slaughter" "shall divide the spoils with the mighty"; for as He has been lifted up on the cross, debased beyond all others, so He shall be raised on high in His kingdom, one with the Father in heaven. Here they "wove a crown out of thorns and placed it on His head." Here they "clothed Him in a purple cloak, and they came to Him and said, 'Hail, King of the Jews.' And they struck Him repeatedly." But there no mockery shall He know; there all shall see that He is the Son of God. Brothers and sisters, "we have a great high priest who has passed through the heavens, Jesus, the Son of God." Our weaknesses He has known in full, and now He brings us "light in fullness of days." Though on earth "He offered prayers and supplications with loud cries and tears," now has He become "the source of eternal salvation for all who obey Him." For all the tears He shed, all the scourging He underwent, all the humiliation He experienced and the death He knew, were all for our sake. "It was our infirmities that He bore, our sufferings that He endured." And having suffered in our stead for the sins of those by whom He is condemned, now He has come unto what is His own, and invites us there as well. "He shall take away the sins of many, and win pardon for their offenses." The guilt of the nations is removed by Him who had "no guilt in Him," and is known by all who "take refuge" in His wounds. And so, "take courage and be stouthearted, all you who hope in the Lord"; though we, too, may be "an object of reproach" in this world of sin, He awaits us all in His heavenly kingdom. And for this we call this Friday "good." Written, read & chanted, and produced by James Kurt. Music: "My God, My God, Why Hast Thou Forsaken Me?" (second half) from Bearing the Birth Pangs, tenth album of Songs for Children of Light, by James Kurt. ******* 96 800x600 Normal 0 false false false EN-US JA X-NONE /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable {mso-style-name:"Table Normal"; mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-priority:99; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; mso-para-margin:0in; mso-para-margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:10.0pt; font-family:"Times New Roman";} O LORD, on this day we killed your only Son – may we look upon Him whom we have pierced that our sins might be forgiven. YHWH, your Son suffers a violent death at the hands of wicked men that our sins might be taken away. All our offenses you lay upon His shoulders, and this innocent Lamb becomes expiation for our transgression. Only by His bearing the Cross will we be freed; only by His shedding of blood will we be washed clean – only by looking upon Him lifted high on the Tree will we come to realize how we have separated ourselves from you who are Life, how we have wrought our own death. And so Jesus takes upon Himself the guilt of us all; and so by His stripes we are healed. This broken, beaten Man whose divinity none can see startles all souls as He enters into His glory. O LORD, may we take our refuge in Him! There is no salvation apart from the Christ; there is no sacrifice that could atone for our sins except that made by this High Priest. LORD our God, let us know that He is One with you, and let us worship Him as our only King.

    5 min
  4. 3D AGO

    April 2 - Holy Thursday

    (Ex.12:1-8,11-14; Ps.116:12-13,15-18,1Cor.10:6; 1Cor.11:23-26; Jn.13:1-15) "This cup is the New Covenant in my blood." For this cup holds the Blood of our Lord. And, "Seeing the blood, I will pass over you," says the Lord. "When I strike the land of Egypt, no destructive blow will come upon you." As the Israelites mark each of their houses with the blood of a lamb, so our bodies are marked by the Blood of the Lamb; and so we are saved by the Lord our God and become temples of His Spirit. "How shall I make a return to the Lord for all the good He has done for me?" the psalmist cries in joy. Each day we "offer sacrifice of thanksgiving," taking up "the cup of salvation" and "call[ing] upon the name of the Lord": each day we partake of His blessed Body and Blood. And sharing in this celebration of the Eucharist we "proclaim the death of the Lord until He comes"; and so, into our midst He comes. "He poured water into a basin and began to wash the disciples' feet and dry them with the towel around his waist" as "a model to follow": "as I have done for you, you should also do." He says to His brothers in the upper room the night "His hour had come to pass from this world to the Father": "You ought to wash one another's feet." And so by this teaching, and so by His masterful lead, He multiplies His presence in the world through His twelve apostles. And so shall these souls by whom the Bread of Life is multiplied, by whom we have inheritance with the Lord, wash the feet of all His followers by their witness and the ministry they shall bring to the ends of the earth. And so shall all who have bathed in His Blood be made clean for the Holy Day. And we, as they, as the Lord, find the strength to lay down our lives in service of one another by being as our Jesus, who was "fully aware that the Father had put everything in His power and that He had come from God and was returning to Him." Any power that any have comes only from the Father, and comes only through the Son, and is known only in His Blood – which all must share, by which all must be anointed, if we are to be preserved until the coming of the Christ again into this world of darkness. Writen, read & chanted by James Kurt; produced by Carie Fortney. Music by Carie Fortney; used by permission. ******* O LORD, let us be washed clean in the blood of your Son, and so protected from all harm; let us live in His New Covenant, eating His Body and drinking His Blood. YHWH, as your Son has laid down His life, the innocent Lamb sacrificed for our sins; as He has bowed down to wash our feet that we might be made clean and have inheritance with Him; so let us be humble and serve one another in His Name. Let His blood be upon us to save us from condemnation – let us die with Him that we might live again. In His feast let us partake, of His very Body and Blood. At His table let us sit, His disciples ready to follow Him. Indeed, even as we eat let us be prepared to go out and serve, to step from the table where we have been nourished and into the way of the Cross. Far from Egypt we would be taken, LORD, far from all our sin; and others we would see follow Him in the path to the kingdom. He has died that we might live – O LORD, let us be His children!

    6 min
  5. 4D AGO

    April 1 - Wednesday of Holy Week

    (Is.50:4-9; Ps.69:8-10,21-22,31,33-34; Mt.26:14-25) "The Son of Man is departing, as Scripture says of Him." Of Him in Scripture we read, "Morning after morning He opens my ear that I may hear; and I have not rebelled, have not turned back." Even as death approaches, even as His betrayer goes forth (perhaps especially at this dark time), He sets His face "like flint" to confront those who oppose Him, those who would destroy Him. In His own voice He speaks to us in the first reading and the psalm of His trial and His resolve: "I gave my back to those who beat me, my cheeks to those who plucked my beard," though "they put gall in my food, and in my thirst they gave me vinegar to drink." And He stands alone before such blasphemy – "I looked for sympathy, but there was none; for comforters, and I found none." Though only one of the Twelve betrays Him, all abandon Him in His brokenness; none stands by His side as He "bear[s] insult" in the Name of God. But the Father does not desert Him: "See, the Lord God is my help." "For the Lord hears the poor, and His own who are in bonds He spurns not." And when He cries from the cross, it is not His fate He bemoans, but our own, whose dark separation from God He takes upon Himself as our guilt He bears. Yes, He must depart in this way; He must suffer at our hands. But that it is written so, and that by this our souls are made whole, in no way nullifies that we have sinned – sin remains the evil it is. As for Judas, yet it would have been "better for him if he had never been born," for the fires of hell are real; and as for the souls who abandon Him, as for all His disciples, it is only through similar darkness that we shall come back to His light. Tears will fill our eyes as we look upon Him whom we have pierced. Yet, fear not, for the Lord hears the cry of the "lowly ones… who seek God"; and Scripture speaks just as faithfully of the third day. ******* O LORD, zeal for your House consumes your Son, and so He is betrayed by one of His own for thirty pieces of silver. YHWH, your Son is betrayed by one who sits at table with Him, and by all He will be abandoned, left alone to die upon a cross. Yet He goes as you call Him; freely He accomplishes your will, with complete faith in your protection, with the strength found only in your love. O help us to be as He is! to bear all with patience, to so freely offer our backs for beating and our faces for spitting upon. O how shall we go from putting gall in His food to being fed at His table in the kingdom if you do not help us, O LORD our God? We have no hope if you have no mercy on our poor souls. Let us find the strength He takes in you. Only one of the Twelve betrays Him, only one hands Him over for crucifixion, but we all line the path He must tread – we are all cause for His shame. Dear LORD, in His sacrifice may we find freedom from such sin.

    5 min
  6. 5D AGO

    March 31 - Tuesday of Holy Week

    (Is.49:1-6; Ps.71:1-6,15,17; Jn.13:21-33,36-38) "I am made glorious in the sight of the Lord, and my God is now my strength!" The Lord is with His servant, with Israel, with Jesus, the Son of David, the Son of Man, the Son of God: "From my mother's womb you are my strength… O God, you have taught me from my youth." And to this "sharp-edged sword" the Lord had concealed "in the shadow of His arm," to this "polished arrow" He has hidden in His quiver, God says: "I will make you a light to the nations, that my salvation may reach to the ends of the earth." He who was called from birth, given His name in His mother's womb, prepared before all the ages, now comes to reveal the glory of God. And how is it "the Son of Man [is] glorified and God is glorified in Him"? We see in our gospel the moment the glorification begins; we see in our gospel the path by which it comes. At table at the Last Supper Jesus grows "deeply troubled," for the time of His betrayal has come. Judas eats the morsel of food dipped in the dish and "immediately after, Satan entered his heart." Then, "no sooner had Judas eaten the morsel than he went out," and, we are told, "It was night." And immediately upon Judas' leaving, the Lord proclaims His glorification has begun. Here begins the Passion. Here begins the first of the three days Jesus will spend in the belly of the earth. How unlike the days the Servant spent in His mother's womb these days shall be! And yet it is precisely these days and in this way that what God has prepared for Him and for all creation shall come to its fulfillment. Now shall the arrow be sharpened fully and shot forth to pierce all men's hearts with truth – even as the nails pierce His hands and the sword His side. Through the depths of such absolute darkness, light shall shine forth, and this light shall in time reach to the ends of the world. Now the time has come. Now all shall abandon Him. Now by the Suffering Servant shall all be saved. ******* O LORD, make us glorious in your sight, even as your Son has been glorified by His sacrifice. YHWH, now the darkness falls upon your Son and He is prepared to be glorified. In the death He must endure He will be revealed as the light of the world. Though we cannot follow Him now, let us soon follow where He leads. Help us, dear God, to lay down our lives with Him that we might come to Heaven. He has been hidden for all ages, concealed in the shadow of your arm, LORD; but now this arrow is shot forth, this sword unveiled for all eyes to see. Now is the time for all to be justified by His holy sacrifice. O let us join with Him! Let us not fear the darkness which sets upon this corrupted earth but suffer its betrayal with the patience of the Son of Man. In Him let us take our refuge, LORD; let us be one with your Servant. To this world help us bring His light, you who have been our trust from our Mother's womb.

    5 min
  7. 6D AGO

    March 30 - Monday of Holy Week

    (Is.42:1-7; Ps.27:1-3,13-14; Jn.12:1-11) "I formed you, and set you as a covenant of the people, a light for the nations." He has come "to open the eyes of the blind, to bring out prisoners from confinement, and from the dungeon, those who dwell in darkness." "He establishes justice on the earth," and this justice is His bringing light to our darkness. But He could not release us from the dungeon unless He Himself had entered the dungeon. How else could light penetrate the darkness? And so He not only enters the veil of flesh, humbling Himself to be born as a man, but also gives Himself up to the death we all must die – in our own form He pays the wages of our sin, that we might be released from its prison. How could we "be stouthearted" "when evildoers come at [us] to devour [our] flesh," we who are so weakened by the scourges of sin, if He had not strengthened us by standing in our stead? How could we truly say with David, "Though war be waged upon me, even then will I trust," if He had not defeated the enemy which comes against us? We can say, "The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom should I fear?" only because Jesus has brought God's justice into our very midst, to our flesh and to our bone, by entering into the world of darkness we have created and taking upon Himself the death we deserved. Lazarus, who sits at table with Jesus a week before His own death, is a sign of our release from the dungeon, from the tomb of our sin. As "Jews were going over to Jesus and believing in Him on account of Lazarus," so should all be drawn to the promise of new life which the Lord shall fulfill now in His death and resurrection. And as we enter Holy Week, as we prepare ourselves for the great mysteries of our faith, how appropriate for Jesus to sit at table "in the land of the living" with this dead man. See that He will sit with us all just so in the kingdom of heaven. Now the light comes; now justice is done. The aromatic fragrance of His holy sacrifice fills this house, and darkness shall be banished forever. ******* O LORD, your Son is the light which saves us even from death; let us die and rise with Him. YHWH, as Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead, so all who believe will be raised with Him and sit at His table in Heaven. As He defended Mary from Judas' attack, so He will advocate for us all against the accusations of the evil one, so we will be protected from all condemnation and come into the light of your presence. Though we dwell as if in a dungeon here, release we shall soon find in the offering of your Son. From all our enemies we shall be saved; let us stand fast with Jesus. The fragrance of the Spirit fills our souls even as darkness closes in. O LORD, your promise to us is sweet indeed and gives us courage in this world. For what victory has our Savior not won, what power has withstood His justice? And so, even death He tramples underfoot as in a tomb He is laid.

    5 min

About

Spirit-filled daily reflections on the Mass Readings of the Roman Catholic Church from the book Our Daily Bread by James Kurt (with imprimatur). The daily podcasts are voice only, while the podcasts for Sundays and Solemnities are produced with music and other elements. Another podcast recently added: Prayers to the Saints - a prayer to each saint on the calendar for the US. Also with imprimatur.