Saturday, March 7, 2026

3rd Sunday of Lent @ Ss. Francis and Clare, Birch Run

The Well of Mercy: Finding Living Water in a Thirsty World

Dust and Desperation at Warner Springs

In the late spring of 1997, before I deployed overseas to Japan, I found myself in the high desert of Warner Springs, California. I was a Sailor undergoing Navy SERE School (Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape). The high desert is a landscape of brutal contradictions—scalding heat by day that evaporates the very soul out of your pores, and a bone-chilling cold at night that makes you forget what warmth feels like.


During the "Evasion" phase, we moved through the cactus-choked hills, trying to stay low and silent. Our canteens had been empty for hours.


In that desert, my entire world shrunk down to one singular, agonizing need: water.


And while there were periodic water stations, there were still people who ended up dehydrated or even in one case over-hydrated — all with the expected consequences. It was hard in that situation to find a middle-ground. Obviously, I stand here, 30 years later — a survivor.


In reflection, it can be seen that the physical thirst I felt then was just a physical echo of a deeper, more permanent human condition. We are all, in some way, "evading" the truth or "surviving" a spiritual desert. We are thirsty for more. And today’s readings meet us right there—in the heat, in the dust, to the side of a well.


From the Wilderness to the Well

The Grumbling at Meribah (Exodus 17:3-7)

In our first reading, the Israelites are in their own version of SERE school, but their "deployment" has lasted much longer than a few days — they’ve been at it for years. They are in the wilderness, and they are terrified.


Their thirst leads them to "grumble." In the Hebrew, this isn't just a light complaint; it’s a demanding legalistic protest. They are putting God on trial. They ask the question that every one of us has whispered in the middle of a personal crisis: "Is the Lord among us or not?"


When life gets "dry"—when a marriage struggles, when a medical diagnosis comes back positive, or when the loneliness of creeps in—we tend to do what the Israelites did. We demand that God prove Himself. We want a miracle on our terms. Yet, look at God’s response. He doesn't strike the people for their lack of faith. He tells Moses to strike the rock.


The rock, a symbol of hardness and deadness, yields life-giving water. St. Paul later tells us that this rock was Christ. It is a foreshadowing: the "struck" rock would one day be the side of Jesus pierced by a lance, from which flowed blood and water—the sacraments of the Church.


The Encounter at High Noon (John 4:5-42)

This brings us to the longest, most intimate conversation Jesus has with anyone in the Gospels: the Samaritan woman at the well.


The timing is crucial. It is the "sixth hour"—high noon. In the ancient world, no one went to the well at noon if they could help it. You went at dawn or dusk when it was cool. The woman is there at noon because she is "evading" her neighbors. She is an outcast, a woman with a "reputation," and she would rather endure the 100-degree sun than the cold stares and gossip of the townspeople.


Jesus is there, "tired from his journey." Think about that: the Creator of the universe is exhausted. He sits by the well and initiates the conversation with a humble request: "Give me a drink." In this moment, Jesus breaks every social "SERE" protocol of His day. He is a Jew speaking to a Samaritan (racial barrier). He is a man speaking to a woman in public (gender barrier). He is a holy man speaking to a "sinner" (moral barrier). He crosses the desert of human prejudice to reach one thirsty soul.


The Shift to "Living Water"
As the dialogue unfolds, Jesus performs a "spiritual reconnaissance" of her heart. He tells her, "If you knew the gift of God and who is saying to you, ‘Give me a drink,’ you would have asked him and he would have given you living water."


The woman is literal-minded, much like I was in Warner Springs. She thinks of buckets and depths. But Jesus is talking about a different kind of dehydration. He points to her five husbands—not to shame her, but to identify the "mirages" she has been chasing. She has been trying to quench a spiritual thirst with human relationships, moving from one "well" to another, only to find herself back in the heat of the noon sun, still thirsty.


When Jesus reveals He is the Messiah, the woman does something symbolic: She leaves her water jar. That jar was her security, her source of survival, and her identity as a water-carrier. By leaving it, she signals that she has found a source that doesn't require a bucket. She becomes a "well" herself, running back to the very people she was avoiding to tell them about the Man who "told me everything I ever did."


Surviving Our Own Desert

So, what does a 30-year-old Navy training exercise and a 2,000-year-old well have to do with us today? Whether you are preparing for a deployment, raising a family, or navigating your golden years, the "desert" is a reality we all face.

1. Identify Your "Mirages"

We all have "water jars"—things we carry that we think will finally satisfy us. For some, it’s professional success; for others, it’s the perfect body, the perfect house, or the approval of strangers on the internet. This week, I want you to look at your "water jar." Is it actually quenching your thirst, or are you just going back to the same dry well every day at noon?

Identify one "mirage" in your life—a habit or an obsession that promises happiness but leaves you dry—and consciously choose to "leave the jar" at the feet of Jesus in prayer this week.

2. Embrace the "High Noon" of Honesty

The Samaritan woman’s life changed because she stopped hiding. She allowed the light of Christ to shine on the parts of her story she was most ashamed of.

Lent is our "High Noon." It is the season to stop "evading" and start "encountering." Approach the Sacrament of Reconciliation. Don’t just list your sins like a grocery list; talk to the Lord about your thirsts. Tell Him where you are hurting and where you are dry. There is no healing without honesty.

3. Be a "Point of Distribution"

In the military, we talk about "PODs"—Points of Distribution—where life-saving supplies are given out. After her encounter, the Samaritan woman became a point of distribution for her entire village.

There are people at work, at school, or even at home who are "hallucinating" from spiritual dehydration. They are desperate for a kind word, for hope, or for a sense of belonging. This week, be the "living water" for someone else. Perform one concrete act of mercy for someone you usually avoid—the "Samaritan" in your life. 


The Hope That Does Not Disappoint

As St. Paul tells us in the second reading, "The love of God has been poured out into our hearts." That word "poured" isn't a trickle; it’s a flood.


None of us can survive a desert alone. Today, Christ sits at the well of this altar. He isn’t asking about our past, our attachments, or our wanderings. He only cares about your thirst.


Don't waste time chasing mirages in the sand. Come to the Water. Leave the jar. And let the Lord turn the desert of your heart into a garden.

Saturday, February 28, 2026

2nd Sunday of Lent @ Ss. Francis and Clare, Birch Run

A Glimpse of the Summit: The Grace of the Ascent

The Chaplain’s Ascent: Croagh Patrick, August 2018

In August of 2018, I found myself in County Mayo, Ireland, standing at the base of Croagh Patrick—the "Holy Mountain" where Saint Patrick is said to have fasted for forty days in the year 441. I was there as the chaplain for a group of young adult pilgrims. As we looked up at the daunting, mist-shrouded peak, I think we all felt a bit of that ancient Lenten trepidation. The mountain stands as a silent, stony sentinel over the Atlantic, and its history of penance is etched into every jagged rock.


At 56 years old, I was acutely aware that I wasn’t the youngest or the most athletic member of our group. I watched the twenty-somethings stretching their hamstrings and checking their high-tech gear, feeling every bit of my five-and-a-half decades. As we began the ascent, the grueling reality of the mountain set in. If you have ever climbed "The Reek," you know that the final stretch—the infamous "cone" near the summit—is a punishing wall of loose, shifting grey scree. This is not a stable path; it is a river of vertical stones. For every two steps forward, the sliding rocks seemed to pull you one step back. My lungs were burning, my knees were protesting, and a thick, damp Irish mist had swallowed the trail, making the summit feel like a distant, invisible myth.

There was a moment, leaning heavily on my walking stick and blinking back the mist, where I seriously considered calling it a day. Why am I doing this? I thought. The young people are probably miles ahead of me by now; I should just wait here for them to come back down. The temptation to settle for "good enough" is the greatest enemy of the spiritual life.

But a strange thing happens when you find your rhythm in prayer and persistence. Mustering a final reserve of strength, I pushed through that last vertical scramble. Suddenly, the terrain leveled out, the grey fog thinned, and I realized with a shock that I was standing next to the small, white summit chapel. I looked around, expecting to see my group of young adults already resting—but the summit was quiet. Somehow, at 56, the chaplain had made it to the top first.


In that moment, the heavy mist broke completely. Standing there on the ridge, I was gifted with a breathtaking, sunlit panorama of Clew Bay, with its legendary "365 islands" gleaming like emeralds in the deep blue water. The silence was absolute, broken only by the wind. In that single moment of transcendent beauty, every ounce of the preceding struggle suddenly made perfect sense. I needed that glimpse of glory to understand why I had made the climb.

As a "spiritual scout" for that group, I realized that my role wasn't just to keep up, but to prove that the summit was possible—that the view was worth the grit. This is exactly what the Liturgy of the Word does for us today. It reminds us that no matter our age or our fatigue, the climb toward God is never a fool’s errand.


From the Unknown to the Unveiled Glory

The readings for this Second Sunday of Lent (Cycle A) weave together a profound tapestry of divine calling, the necessity of endurance, and the promise of future glory. They remind us that the journey of faith is rarely easy, but the destination is more glorious than we can imagine.


The Call into the Unknown: Genesis 12:1-4a

Our journey begins with the Call of Abram. God says to him, “Go forth from the land of your kinsfolk... to a land that I will show you.” Notice the profound vulnerability God asks of him. He does not provide a map, a GPS coordinate, or a guaranteed timeline. He simply says, Go. Crucially, the verse immediately following our reading tells us that Abram was seventy-five years old when he departed Haran. If I felt the weight of a mere half-century on the slopes of Croagh Patrick, imagine Abram at 75, being asked to leave his security and his past to become a wanderer for God. At an age when most people are looking for stability, Abram is asked for mobility. His story reminds us that "retirement" is not a biblical concept in the spiritual life. God’s call is always "now." Whether we are 20 or 75, the "mountains" God calls us to climb require us to leave our comfort zones behind, trusting that the Lord who calls us will also sustain us.


Enduring the Valley: 2 Timothy 1:8b-10
Because the journey of faith involves leaving comfort behind, it inevitably involves suffering. St. Paul makes this clear to Timothy. Writing from a cold, damp prison cell, Paul does not sugarcoat the Christian life. He says, 

Bear your share of hardship for the gospel with the strength that comes from God.

Paul knew the valleys of life intimately. He knew what it was like to feel the "scree" of rejection and physical pain. Yet, he is not writing a letter of despair. He reminds Timothy that Christ Jesus "destroyed death and brought life and immortality to light." Paul is telling us that the hardships we face—whether they are the voluntary penances of Lent or the involuntary crosses of illness and grief—are not the end of the story. We can bear the "hardship" because the light of the Resurrection is already burning in the distance.


The Glimpse of Glory: Matthew 17:1-9

This brings us to the Transfiguration. Just prior to this moment, Jesus had revealed that He must go to Jerusalem to suffer and be killed. The disciples were devastated. They were entering a dark forest of doubt, and they wanted to turn back. They wanted a Messiah of immediate victory, not a Messiah of the Cross.


Knowing their faith was shaken, Jesus takes Peter, James, and John up a high mountain. There, He is transfigured. His face shines like the sun; His clothes become white as light. Moses and Elijah appear, representing the Law and the Prophets, all pointing to Jesus as the fulfillment of history.


Why does Jesus do this? He does it to give them a "Tabor moment"—a brief, dazzling revelation of His divine glory. He is essentially saying, When you see me on the cross, remember me on the mountain. When the mist of Good Friday swallows the world, remember this light. Peter is so overwhelmed he wants to stay—he wants the summit without the descent. But the Father’s voice interrupts: "This is my beloved Son... listen to him." When they fall in fear, Jesus touches them and says, "Rise, and do not be afraid." They cannot stay on the mountain; they must carry that light back down into the valley of the shadow of death.


Carrying the Light into the Valley

The scriptures today are a direct blueprint for our own spiritual lives. As we continue this Lenten hike, how do we respond?

1. Reclaim Your "Tabor Moments" 

In the spiritual life, we all experience "desolation"—when God feels distant and the climb feels pointless. In those moments, you must be like a hiker who keeps a photo of the summit in his pocket. Look back at your life. Recall the moments when God's presence was undeniable—a retreat, a moment of deep peace in prayer, or a time when grace carried you through a crisis. Hold onto those memories. God gives us those glimpses of glory precisely to sustain us when the trail gets dark and the rocks shift under our feet.

2. Be a Scout for Others 

Just as I found myself at the top of Croagh Patrick ahead of my group, some of you are "spiritual scouts" for your families, your children, or your coworkers. Your persistence in faith, despite your age or your struggles, serves as a beacon. When others see you continuing to "climb"—continuing to pray, to serve, and to hope despite the "scree" of life—it gives them the courage to keep going. Your grey hair or your years of experience are not barriers; they are your credentials as a witness that the mountain can be conquered.

3. Listen and Rise 

Finally, we must heed the command of the Father: "Listen to Him." To listen to Jesus is to align our pace with His. Lent is our time to tune out the noise of the world and listen to the voice of the Master. And then, we must heed the words of Jesus: "Rise, and do not be afraid." We cannot build tents on the mountain. We are called to take the grace we receive at this altar and carry it down into our homes and workplaces.


The hike of Lent continues. The trail may be steep, and the "cone" of our personal struggles may feel insurmountable. But do not turn back. Lift up your eyes, remember the radiant face of Christ on Tabor and the sun over Clew Bay, and keep climbing. The glory of Easter is waiting just beyond the ridge.

Saturday, February 21, 2026

First Sunday of Lent @ Ss. Francis and Clare Parish, Birch Run, MI

The Master of the Cosmic Scam

The Modern Phishing Scam 

Imagine, for a moment, that you receive an email from a wealthy overseas prince. He has millions of dollars trapped in a frozen bank account, and for some inexplicable reason, he has chosen you—yes, you—to help him get it out. All he needs is your bank account routing number and a small wire transfer of a thousand dollars to cover his administrative fees. In return, he promises to split the fortune with you.


Today, we recognize this immediately as a classic phishing scam. It is almost comical in its predictability, and most of us simply hit "delete" and move on.


But consider the underlying psychology of a scam. A successful con artist never approaches you wielding a weapon. They don’t force your hand. Instead, they approach you with a friendly smile, armed with exactly what you secretly desire. They study human nature. They identify a vulnerability—be it greed, pride, loneliness, or insecurity—and they exploit it by offering a shortcut. The con artist pitches a reality that looks incredibly appealing on the outside but is completely hollow on the inside. The trap only springs shut when the victim, blinded by the shiny promise, willingly hands over the keys.

The Original Deception 

This morning, as we step into the barren landscape of the First Sunday of Lent, the Church introduces us to the original con artist, the master of the cosmic scam, and shows us exactly how to defeat him.


The Garden: Where the Lie Began

In our first reading from the Book of Genesis, we are taken back to the world's very first phishing scam. The setting is the Garden of Eden, a place of total perfection, innocence, and abundance. Notice how the serpent, described as the most cunning of all animals, approaches the woman. He doesn't arrive as a terrifying monster; he arrives as a curious conversationalist. And his strategy is brilliant in its subtlety.


First, he plants a seed of doubt about God’s goodness: “Did God really tell you not to eat from any of the trees in the garden?” It is a twisted exaggeration. God had given them the entire garden to enjoy, save for one single tree. But the serpent shifts the focus from God's overwhelming generosity to the one minor restriction, painting God as a tyrant who is holding out on them.


Then comes the pitch, the false promise: “You certainly will not die! ... you will be like gods.” The serpent sells them a shortcut to greatness. Eve looks at the fruit. It is pleasing to the eye; it looks like exactly what she needs. She takes the bait. She eats, and she shares it with Adam. But the moment the transaction is complete, the illusion shatters. They don't become gods. Instead, their eyes are opened to their own spiritual poverty. They realize they are naked. They are left with profound shame, fear, and a pathetic attempt to cover themselves up by sewing itchy fig leaves together. The con was successful.


The Fallout: Inheritance of Vulnerability

In our second reading from his letter to the Romans, Saint Paul explains the devastating, lingering fallout of this ancient deception. “Through one man sin entered the world, and through sin, death.” Adam and Eve’s susceptibility to the con broke human nature. We inherited their vulnerability. Left to our own devices, we are incredibly gullible to the whispers of the enemy. We are constantly tempted to believe that God is keeping us from true happiness, and that we can find power and identity apart from Him.


But Paul doesn't leave us in despair. He introduces the turning point of human history: "how much more will those who receive the abundance of grace... come to reign in life through the one Jesus Christ."


The Desert: The New Adam Stands Firm

This brings us to the breathtaking drama of today’s Gospel. If Adam was the man who had everything and still fell for the scam, Jesus is the New Adam—the man who has voluntarily surrendered everything, yet absolutely refuses to take the bait.

Jesus is led by the Spirit into the desert. He has fasted for forty days and forty nights. He is physically exhausted, isolated, and incredibly hungry. He is, humanly speaking, in the most vulnerable state possible. The stage is set for the tempter to return, employing the exact same playbook he used in Eden.

The devil approaches and again, starts with doubt: “If you are the Son of God…” He demands proof. Then come the pitches, the shiny shortcuts:

  • The Physical: Turn these stones into bread and satisfy your hunger right now.
  • The Spectacular: Throw yourself off the temple and claim instant fame.
  • The Political: Bow down to me, and I will hand you the magnificent power of all the kingdoms of the world.

The Strategy of Victory: "It is Written"

Notice the profound contrast between the first Adam and the New Adam. In the Garden, Eve engaged the devil in a debate. She relied on her own reasoning to outsmart the master of lies, and she lost. Jesus, however, refuses to entertain the tempter’s logic. He doesn't rely on His own human hunger or feelings. In response to every single temptation, Jesus deflects the attack with the objective truth of Scripture: “It is written.”

Jesus defeats the original con artist not with a display of terrifying divine lightning, but with radical, unwavering obedience to the Father. Where the first Adam grasped at divinity and fell, the New Adam humbles Himself and stands firm, reversing the curse of Eden and forging a path of victory for all of us.


Recognizing the Modern Whisper 

My brothers and sisters, today we step into the forty days of Lent. We are walking into the desert with Jesus. Make no mistake: the con artist is still active in our world, and his tactics have not changed. He still whispers that God's commandments are meant to restrict your joy. He still pitches shiny shortcuts to happiness—be it through material wealth, illicit relationships, numbing addictions, or prideful ambition. He still tries to convince you that you can be your own god.


Our Lenten Battle Plan 

This Lent, we are called to stop taking the bait. How do we do this? We must follow the exact model of the New Adam:

  1. Fast with Intention:
    Just as the empty calories of a worldly scam leave us spiritually starving, we must intentionally strip away the comforts that dull our spiritual senses. Choose a penance that actually challenges you. Let your physical hunger point you toward your much deeper hunger for God.
  2. Immerse in the Word:
    You cannot say "It is written" if you do not know what is written! Commit to reading the Scriptures for ten minutes every day this season. Let the truth of God's Word be your armor against the subtle lies of the enemy.
  3. Drop the Fig Leaves:
    Adam and Eve tried to hide their shame from God. This Lent, bring your shame to Him. Go to the Sacrament of Reconciliation. Expose the dark areas where you have fallen for the enemy's scams, and let the sheer, overflowing grace of Jesus Christ wash you clean.

Conclusion 

The desert is harsh, but we do not walk it alone. We walk it with the Savior who has already conquered the tempter. Do not listen to the lies. Trust in the obedience of the One who loves you, and let this Lenten journey lead you, purified and victorious, to the glory of Easter.